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Improvement of TCP Throughput in Wireless Networks with High Delay Round-Trip Time


Affiliations
1 Department of IT, Sri Ramkrishna Institute of Technology, Coimbatore 10, Tamilnadu, India
2 Department of MCA, Sri Ramkrishna Institute of Technology, Coimbatore - 10. Tamilnadu, India
     

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Highly variable round-trip times (RTTs) in wireless networks can induce spurious timeouts, thus unnecessarily degrading throughput for the Transmission Control Protocol (TCP). In this paper, we propose and study two effective ways to improve TCP throughput in wireless networks. The first technique is to select a retransmission timeout (RTO) threshold higher than that in the de facto standard. Simulation reveals that the proposed method reduces timeouts and provides a relative throughput gain up to 13.7% based on RTT measurements in a commercial 3G network and in a simulated network environment. The second technique is an appropriate use of selective repeat (SR) and go-back-N (GBN) as retransmission policies upon packet timeout. We find that when RTTs have reasonable temporal correlation and packets can arrive out-of-order at the receiver, GBN can improve throughput over the SR policy. Specifically, based on the RTT measurements in the 3G network, our results show that GBN provides a 12% throughput gain over the SR policy.


Keywords

End-To-End Performance, Split TCP, TCP, Timeout, Throughput, Wireless Networks.
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  • Improvement of TCP Throughput in Wireless Networks with High Delay Round-Trip Time

Abstract Views: 218  |  PDF Views: 3

Authors

R. Kumar
Department of IT, Sri Ramkrishna Institute of Technology, Coimbatore 10, Tamilnadu, India
S. Saravana Kumar
Department of MCA, Sri Ramkrishna Institute of Technology, Coimbatore - 10. Tamilnadu, India

Abstract


Highly variable round-trip times (RTTs) in wireless networks can induce spurious timeouts, thus unnecessarily degrading throughput for the Transmission Control Protocol (TCP). In this paper, we propose and study two effective ways to improve TCP throughput in wireless networks. The first technique is to select a retransmission timeout (RTO) threshold higher than that in the de facto standard. Simulation reveals that the proposed method reduces timeouts and provides a relative throughput gain up to 13.7% based on RTT measurements in a commercial 3G network and in a simulated network environment. The second technique is an appropriate use of selective repeat (SR) and go-back-N (GBN) as retransmission policies upon packet timeout. We find that when RTTs have reasonable temporal correlation and packets can arrive out-of-order at the receiver, GBN can improve throughput over the SR policy. Specifically, based on the RTT measurements in the 3G network, our results show that GBN provides a 12% throughput gain over the SR policy.


Keywords


End-To-End Performance, Split TCP, TCP, Timeout, Throughput, Wireless Networks.