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SIGCOMM
2006
ACM

Designing DCCP: congestion control without reliability

14 years 5 months ago
Designing DCCP: congestion control without reliability
DCCP, the Datagram Congestion Control Protocol, is a new transport protocol in the TCP/UDP family that provides a congestion-controlled flow of unreliable datagrams. Delay-sensitive applications, such as streaming media and telephony, prefer timeliness to reliability. These applications have historically used UDP and implemented their own congestion control mechanisms—a difficult task—or no congestion control at all. DCCP will make it easy to deploy these applications without risking congestion collapse. It aims to add to a UDP-like foundation the minimum mechanisms necessary to support congestion control, such as possibly-reliable transmission of acknowledgement information. This minimal design should make DCCP suitable as a building block for more advanced application semantics, such as selective reliability. We introduce and motivate the protocol and discuss some of its design principles. Those principles particularly shed light on the ways TCP’s reliable byte-stream semant...
Eddie Kohler, Mark Handley, Sally Floyd
Added 14 Jun 2010
Updated 14 Jun 2010
Type Conference
Year 2006
Where SIGCOMM
Authors Eddie Kohler, Mark Handley, Sally Floyd
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