Wednesday, 16 January 2013

Distributed Packet Buffers for High-Bandwidth Switches and Routers


NANO SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH CENTRE PVT.LTD.,  AMEERPET, HYD
WWW.NSRCNANO.COM, 09640648777, 09652926926



JAVA PROJECTS LIST--2013
JAVA 2013 IEEE PAPERS

Distributed Packet Buffers for High-Bandwidth Switches and Routers
Abstract:
            High-speed routers rely on well-designed packet buffers that support multiple queues, provide large capacity and short response times. Some researchers suggested combined SRAM/DRAM hierarchical buffer architectures to meet these challenges. However, these architectures suffer from either large SRAM requirement or high time-complexity in the memory management. In this paper, we present scalable, efficient, and novel distributed packet buffer architecture. Two fundamental issues need to be addressed to make this architecture feasible: 1) how to minimize the overhead of an individual packet buffer; and 2) how to design scalable packet buffers using independent buffer subsystems. We address these issues by first designing an efficient compact buffer that reduces the SRAM size requirement by (k - 1)/k. Then, we introduce a feasible way of coordinating multiple subsystems with a load-balancing algorithm that maximizes the overall system performance. Both theoretical analysis and experimental results demonstrate that our load-balancing algorithm and the distributed packet buffer architecture can easily scale to meet the buffering needs of high bandwidth links and satisfy the requirements of scale and support for multiple queues.

Existing System
            The router buffer sizing is still an open issue. The traditional rule of thumb for Internet routers states that the routers should be capable of buffering RTT*R data, where RTT is a round-trip time for flows passing through the router, and R is the line rate. Many researchers claimed that the size of buffers in backbone routers can be made very small at the expense of a small loss in throughput. Focusing on the performance of individual TCP flows, researchers claimed that the output/input capacity ratio at a network link largely determines the required buffer size. If the output/input capacity ratio is lower than one, the loss rate follows a power-law reduction with the buffer size and significant buffering is needed

Proposed System
            We devise a “traffic-aware” approach which aims to provide different services for different types of data streams. This approach further reduces the system overhead. Both mathematical analysis and simulation demonstrate that the proposed architecture together with its algorithm reduce the overall SRAM requirement significantly while providing guaranteed performance in terms of low time complexity, upper bounded drop rate, and uniform allocation of resources.
                                                                                                                                               
Software Requirement Specification
Software Specification
Operating System       :           Windows XP
Technology                 :           JAVA 1.6

Hardware Specification
Processor                     :           Pentium IV
RAM                           :           512 MB
Hard Disk                   :           80GB
Modules
  • Source
  • Source Router
  • Main Router
  • Destination Router
  • Destination
� j s a �� �-� 'mso-tab-count:1'>           80 GB
·         RAM                           :           1 GB
·         Processor                     :           Pentium IV
Software Requirements
·         Coding Language       :           Java
·         Database                     :           MySQL
·         Operating System       :           Windows XP
Modules:
  • Get Access Token
  • Get Tweets
  • Calculate Entropy Measure
  • Find Source Type


No comments:

Post a Comment