Abstract

Due to the special topologies and communication pattern, in today's data center networks it is common that a large set of TCP flows and a small set of TCP flows get into different ingress ports of a switch and compete for a same egress port. However, in this case the throughput share of flows in the two sets will not be fair even though all flows have the same RTT. In this paper, we study this problem and find that TCP's fairness in data center networks is related with not only the network capacity but also the number of flows in the two sets. We propose a mathematical model of the average throughput ratio of the large set of flows to the small set of flows. This model can reveal the variation of TCP's fairness along with the change of network parameters (including buffer size, bandwidth, and propagation delay) as well as the number of flows in the two sets. We validate our model by comparing its numerical results with simulation results, finding that they match well.

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