Performance evaluation of data communication systems
- 1 January 1982
- journal article
- Published by Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) in Proceedings of the IEEE
- Vol. 70 (2) , 171-196
- https://doi.org/10.1109/proc.1982.12261
Abstract
This paper is a tutorial and a survey of analytical methods in the evaluation of data communication networks. The major mathematical methods are Markov chains applied to discrete time systems and queueing theory. Emphasis is placed on the applications of the mathematical tools. The discussion follows the framework of the layered architecture. In the section on data link control, rigorous as well as "engineering" approaches are highlighted. In this area, models of great accuracy have been developed. In the path-control or routing layer, the major model is provided by Kleinrock's delay analysis of packet networks. Finite buffer pools still pose many problems. The method of the homogeneous network is introduced, a method which reduces complexity originating from the network topology in favor of more realistic protocol features. This thought is expanded into the layer of end-to-end protocols where the tandem-queue model is introduced and its application to the flow-control problem discussed.Keywords
This publication has 84 references indexed in Scilit:
- Batch Throughput Efficiency of ADCCP/HDLC/SDLC Selective Reject ProtocolsIEEE Transactions on Communications, 1980
- An Analytic Evaluation of the Performance of the "Send and Wait" ProtocolIEEE Transactions on Communications, 1978
- Stability and Optimal Control of the Packet Switching Broadcast ChannelJournal of the ACM, 1977
- The Output of an M/D/1 QueueOperations Research, 1975
- Decomposability, instabilities, and saturation in multiprogramming systemsCommunications of the ACM, 1975
- On Approximate Computer System ModelsJournal of the ACM, 1975
- Synchronous data link control: A perspectiveIBM Systems Journal, 1974
- Estimates of distributions of random variables for certain computer communications traffic modelsCommunications of the ACM, 1970
- Two queues in series with a finite, intermediate waitingroomJournal of Applied Probability, 1968
- Jobshop-Like Queueing SystemsManagement Science, 1963