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IPv6 in Practice: A Unixer's Guide to the Next Generation Internet

Benedikt Stockebrand

Resumen/Descripción – provisto por la editorial

No disponible.

Palabras clave – provistas por la editorial

Computer Systems Organization and Communication Networks; Computer Communication Networks; Computer System Implementation; Software Engineering/Programming and Operating Systems

Disponibilidad
Institución detectada Año de publicación Navegá Descargá Solicitá
No detectada 2007 SpringerLink

Información

Tipo de recurso:

libros

ISBN impreso

978-3-540-24524-7

ISBN electrónico

978-3-540-48001-3

Editor responsable

Springer Nature

País de edición

Reino Unido

Fecha de publicación

Información sobre derechos de publicación

© Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2007

Tabla de contenidos

Tunnel Basics

Benedikt Stockebrand

The IEEE 802.15.3 WPAN (Wireless Personal Area Network) has been designed to provide a very high-speed short-range transmission capability with QoS provisions. The unidirectional channel allocations for the guaranteed time slots, however, often result in poor throughput when a higher layer protocol such as TCP requires a full-duplex transmission. In this paper we propose a mechanism, called TCP transfer mode, that provides the bidirectional transmission capability between TCP sender and receiver for the channel time allocations (CTAs) of the high-rate WPAN. As our scheme does not require additional control messages nor additional CTAs, the throughput of a TCP connection on the high-rate WPAN can be greatly improved. Our simulation results show that the proposed scheme outperforms any methods of TCP transmission according to the current standard of the WPAN.

Part III - Tunnels and Related Topics | Pp. 143-147

IP-in-IP Encapsulation

Benedikt Stockebrand

The IEEE 802.15.3 WPAN (Wireless Personal Area Network) has been designed to provide a very high-speed short-range transmission capability with QoS provisions. The unidirectional channel allocations for the guaranteed time slots, however, often result in poor throughput when a higher layer protocol such as TCP requires a full-duplex transmission. In this paper we propose a mechanism, called TCP transfer mode, that provides the bidirectional transmission capability between TCP sender and receiver for the channel time allocations (CTAs) of the high-rate WPAN. As our scheme does not require additional control messages nor additional CTAs, the throughput of a TCP connection on the high-rate WPAN can be greatly improved. Our simulation results show that the proposed scheme outperforms any methods of TCP transmission according to the current standard of the WPAN.

Part III - Tunnels and Related Topics | Pp. 149-180

Other Tunneling Methods

Benedikt Stockebrand

The IEEE 802.15.3 WPAN (Wireless Personal Area Network) has been designed to provide a very high-speed short-range transmission capability with QoS provisions. The unidirectional channel allocations for the guaranteed time slots, however, often result in poor throughput when a higher layer protocol such as TCP requires a full-duplex transmission. In this paper we propose a mechanism, called TCP transfer mode, that provides the bidirectional transmission capability between TCP sender and receiver for the channel time allocations (CTAs) of the high-rate WPAN. As our scheme does not require additional control messages nor additional CTAs, the throughput of a TCP connection on the high-rate WPAN can be greatly improved. Our simulation results show that the proposed scheme outperforms any methods of TCP transmission according to the current standard of the WPAN.

Part III - Tunnels and Related Topics | Pp. 181-187

Advanced Tunneling Issues

Benedikt Stockebrand

The IEEE 802.15.3 WPAN (Wireless Personal Area Network) has been designed to provide a very high-speed short-range transmission capability with QoS provisions. The unidirectional channel allocations for the guaranteed time slots, however, often result in poor throughput when a higher layer protocol such as TCP requires a full-duplex transmission. In this paper we propose a mechanism, called TCP transfer mode, that provides the bidirectional transmission capability between TCP sender and receiver for the channel time allocations (CTAs) of the high-rate WPAN. As our scheme does not require additional control messages nor additional CTAs, the throughput of a TCP connection on the high-rate WPAN can be greatly improved. Our simulation results show that the proposed scheme outperforms any methods of TCP transmission according to the current standard of the WPAN.

Part III - Tunnels and Related Topics | Pp. 189-198

The Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP)

Benedikt Stockebrand

The IEEE 802.15.3 WPAN (Wireless Personal Area Network) has been designed to provide a very high-speed short-range transmission capability with QoS provisions. The unidirectional channel allocations for the guaranteed time slots, however, often result in poor throughput when a higher layer protocol such as TCP requires a full-duplex transmission. In this paper we propose a mechanism, called TCP transfer mode, that provides the bidirectional transmission capability between TCP sender and receiver for the channel time allocations (CTAs) of the high-rate WPAN. As our scheme does not require additional control messages nor additional CTAs, the throughput of a TCP connection on the high-rate WPAN can be greatly improved. Our simulation results show that the proposed scheme outperforms any methods of TCP transmission according to the current standard of the WPAN.

Part III - Tunnels and Related Topics | Pp. 199-207

More on Addresses

Benedikt Stockebrand

The IEEE 802.15.3 WPAN (Wireless Personal Area Network) has been designed to provide a very high-speed short-range transmission capability with QoS provisions. The unidirectional channel allocations for the guaranteed time slots, however, often result in poor throughput when a higher layer protocol such as TCP requires a full-duplex transmission. In this paper we propose a mechanism, called TCP transfer mode, that provides the bidirectional transmission capability between TCP sender and receiver for the channel time allocations (CTAs) of the high-rate WPAN. As our scheme does not require additional control messages nor additional CTAs, the throughput of a TCP connection on the high-rate WPAN can be greatly improved. Our simulation results show that the proposed scheme outperforms any methods of TCP transmission according to the current standard of the WPAN.

Part IV - Additional Base Features | Pp. 211-231

Advanced Routing with Quagga

Benedikt Stockebrand

The IEEE 802.15.3 WPAN (Wireless Personal Area Network) has been designed to provide a very high-speed short-range transmission capability with QoS provisions. The unidirectional channel allocations for the guaranteed time slots, however, often result in poor throughput when a higher layer protocol such as TCP requires a full-duplex transmission. In this paper we propose a mechanism, called TCP transfer mode, that provides the bidirectional transmission capability between TCP sender and receiver for the channel time allocations (CTAs) of the high-rate WPAN. As our scheme does not require additional control messages nor additional CTAs, the throughput of a TCP connection on the high-rate WPAN can be greatly improved. Our simulation results show that the proposed scheme outperforms any methods of TCP transmission according to the current standard of the WPAN.

Part IV - Additional Base Features | Pp. 233-262

Multicasts Beyond the Link-local Scope

Benedikt Stockebrand

The IEEE 802.15.3 WPAN (Wireless Personal Area Network) has been designed to provide a very high-speed short-range transmission capability with QoS provisions. The unidirectional channel allocations for the guaranteed time slots, however, often result in poor throughput when a higher layer protocol such as TCP requires a full-duplex transmission. In this paper we propose a mechanism, called TCP transfer mode, that provides the bidirectional transmission capability between TCP sender and receiver for the channel time allocations (CTAs) of the high-rate WPAN. As our scheme does not require additional control messages nor additional CTAs, the throughput of a TCP connection on the high-rate WPAN can be greatly improved. Our simulation results show that the proposed scheme outperforms any methods of TCP transmission according to the current standard of the WPAN.

Part IV - Additional Base Features | Pp. 263-288

The Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCPv6)

Benedikt Stockebrand

The IEEE 802.15.3 WPAN (Wireless Personal Area Network) has been designed to provide a very high-speed short-range transmission capability with QoS provisions. The unidirectional channel allocations for the guaranteed time slots, however, often result in poor throughput when a higher layer protocol such as TCP requires a full-duplex transmission. In this paper we propose a mechanism, called TCP transfer mode, that provides the bidirectional transmission capability between TCP sender and receiver for the channel time allocations (CTAs) of the high-rate WPAN. As our scheme does not require additional control messages nor additional CTAs, the throughput of a TCP connection on the high-rate WPAN can be greatly improved. Our simulation results show that the proposed scheme outperforms any methods of TCP transmission according to the current standard of the WPAN.

Part IV - Additional Base Features | Pp. 289-298

Bridging the DNS Gap

Benedikt Stockebrand

The IEEE 802.15.3 WPAN (Wireless Personal Area Network) has been designed to provide a very high-speed short-range transmission capability with QoS provisions. The unidirectional channel allocations for the guaranteed time slots, however, often result in poor throughput when a higher layer protocol such as TCP requires a full-duplex transmission. In this paper we propose a mechanism, called TCP transfer mode, that provides the bidirectional transmission capability between TCP sender and receiver for the channel time allocations (CTAs) of the high-rate WPAN. As our scheme does not require additional control messages nor additional CTAs, the throughput of a TCP connection on the high-rate WPAN can be greatly improved. Our simulation results show that the proposed scheme outperforms any methods of TCP transmission according to the current standard of the WPAN.

Part IV - Additional Base Features | Pp. 299-308