Abstract

After more than a decade of active research on Quality of Service in IP networks and the Internet, the majority of IP traffic relies on the conventional best-effort IP service model. Nevertheless, some QoS mechanisms are deployed in current networking infrastructures, while emerging applications pose QoS challenges. This survey brings into the foreground a broad range of research results on Quality of Service in IP-based networks. First, a justification of the need for QoS is provided, along with challenges stemming from the convergence of IP and wireless networks and the proliferation of QoS-demanding IP applications (such as VoIP). It is also emphasized that a global uniform end-to-end IP QoS solution is not realistic. Based on this remark, packet-level QoS mechanisms are classified as certain building blocks, each one fulfilling different objectives in certain parts of a heterogeneous IP network. This taxonomy, being in line with the ITU-T initiative toward a QoS architectural framework for IP networks, gives rise to a thorough presentation of QoS “building blocks,” as well as their associated mechanisms. This presentation is followed by an illustration of how the various building blocks are combined in the scope of modern IP networks. However, offering QoS in a large scale IP-based network demands that additional (i.e. non-packet-level) QoS mechanisms are deployed in some parts. Therefore, we also present prominent technologies and mechanisms devised to augment the QoS capabilities of access, wireless, and optical networks. We illustrate how these mechanisms boost end-to-end QoS solutions and reveal interworking issues with packet-level mechanisms.

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