Abstract

ATM is a packet-like transmission mode that has been proposed for BISDN. It is characterized by an asynchronous slotted transmission mechanism that provides a high bandwidth, low delay connection-oriented transport service to the end user. In this paper, we provide an analytical approach for determining the performance of a virtual circuit connection for data transmission in a high-speed ATM network with finite buffers at the network nodes. The analysis assumes that the network operates using thebest effort delivery strategy and that the end-to-end virtual circuit is responsible for guaranteeing the integrity of the connection. Since the normal Markovian assumptions do not apply, a concise exact solution is impossible to obtain. This provides motivation for developing approximate techniques such as those found in Whitt's QNA paper that allow us to use general distributions for the traffic streams and service times. However, even these techniques assume infinite buffer capacities and hence cannot model buffer overflow. We have therefore developed a hybrid model that allows us to incorporate finite buffers at the nodes. This enables us to study the effect on the performance of both link errors and buffer overflow in conjunction with an end-to-end packet loss recovery scheme.

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