Pathological behaviors for RLM and RLC

Legout, Arnaud; Biersack, Ernst W
NOSSDAV 2000, 10th International Workshop on Network and Operating Systems Support for Digital Audio and Video, 26-28 June, 2000, Chapel Hill, USA

RLM [4] and RLC [7] are two well known receiver-driven cumulative layered multicast congestion control protocols. They both represent an indisputable advance in the area of congestion control for multimedia applications. However, there are very few studies that evaluate these protocols, and most of the time, these studies conclude that RLMand RLC perform reasonably well over a broad range of conditions. In this paper, we evaluate both RLM and RLC and show that they exhibit fundamental pathological behaviors. We explain in which context these pathological behaviors happen, why they are harmful, and why they are inherent to the protocols themselves and cannot be easily corrected. Our aim is to shed some light on the fundamental problems with these protocols .


Type:
Conférence
City:
Chapel Hill
Date:
2000-06-26
Department:
Sécurité numérique
Eurecom Ref:
422
Copyright:
© EURECOM. Personal use of this material is permitted. The definitive version of this paper was published in NOSSDAV 2000, 10th International Workshop on Network and Operating Systems Support for Digital Audio and Video, 26-28 June, 2000, Chapel Hill, USA and is available at :
See also:

PERMALINK : https://www.eurecom.fr/publication/422