Abstract
The resource reservation capabilities offered by modern wide area networks, such as ESnet and Internet2, create a new network utilization model that coexists but drastically differs from the standard best-effort network paradigm. These capabilities enable the dedication of network resources to specific users/applications that may suffer from interruptions and other adverse effects because of the default best-effort behavior of networks. Extending the new capabilities through the local area networks of end sites and making them available to end users and applications in a useful, transparent, and scalable manner is a variation of the "last mile" problem. The TeraPaths project at Brookhaven National Laboratory is pioneering a framework that takes advantage of the new capabilities to establish and manage on-demand true end-to-end QoS-aware network paths dedicated to authorized data flows. In this paper, we examine the issues raised by the new end-toend resource reservation-based networking paradigm and the implications/benefits for end users and applications. © 2009 IEEE.
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CITATION STYLE
Katramatos, D., Shroff, K., Yu, D., McKee, S., & Robertazzi, T. (2009). Establishment and management of virtual end-to-end QoS paths through modern hybrid WANs with TeraPaths. In 1st International Conference on Evolving Internet, INTERNET 2009 (pp. 39–45). https://doi.org/10.1109/INTERNET.2009.13
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