Handbook of Optimization in TelecommunicationsM.G.C. Resende and P.M. Pardalos (Editors)Springer Science + Business Media, 2006. |
![]() |
Chapter
17
|
|
Optimization issues in quality of service |
|
| J.G. Klincewicz | |
Abstract |
|
| The advent of the
World Wide Web has fundamentally changed the nature of Internet traffic.
New classes of applications, such as video conferencing, Internet telephony and
various forms of e-commerce have arisen, for which so-called best effort service is no longer
acceptable. These new applications represent delay-sensitive traffic
with specific performance requirements. The term Quality of Service
(QoS) is used to describe network
features that are designed to provide the better than best effort
performance
that is required by such applications. In this chapter, we consider QoS
in the
context of network design. Specifically, we focus on network design or
optimization problems that
address link topology, link capacity, route assignment and/or router
location,
and that take various performance requirements into account. In
particular, solutions to these network
design problems ensure that sufficient resources (e.g., bandwidth) are made available so
that certain specified performance requirements (e.g., delay
requirements) will be explicitly
met. |
|
| Keywords:
Internet
protocol, network design, quality of service, delay, routing, capacity,
network topology. |
|