IEEE International Conference on Communications, 2003. ICC '03.
DOI: 10.1109/icc.2003.1204172
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Should QoS routing algorithms prefer shortest paths?

Abstract: Abstract-Multimedia traffic and real-time e-commerce applications can experience quality degradation in traditional networks such as the Internet. These difficulties can be overcome in networks which feature dynamically set up paths with bandwidth and delay guarantees. The problem of selecting such constrained paths is the task of Quality of Service (QoS) routing. This paper considers link-state routing, and the choice of cost metric used to implement QoS routing.There are two schools of thought regarding the … Show more

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Cited by 23 publications
(31 citation statements)
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“…In [9] we show that this statement is not always true and that for networks with low connectivity, the LD approach is in general much better solution than RC algorithms, even if the network load is high. On the other hand, at the low loads in highly connected networks, the resource conserving approach performs as well as load balancing does.…”
Section: Load Distribution (Ld) Vs Resource Conservation (Rc)mentioning
confidence: 91%
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“…In [9] we show that this statement is not always true and that for networks with low connectivity, the LD approach is in general much better solution than RC algorithms, even if the network load is high. On the other hand, at the low loads in highly connected networks, the resource conserving approach performs as well as load balancing does.…”
Section: Load Distribution (Ld) Vs Resource Conservation (Rc)mentioning
confidence: 91%
“…This often makes link cost expressed strictly as a function of link utilisation less attractive than the constant value used in minhop path computation. However, as our previous results show [9], for many networks with low connectivity only the load balancing approach of existing algorithms, can fully utilise available resources.…”
Section: Link-state Qos Routingmentioning
confidence: 99%
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