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TCP Vegas is a TCP congestion avoidance algorithm that emphasizes packet delay, rather than packet loss, as a signal to help determine the rate at which to send packets. It was developed at the University of Arizona by Lawrence Brakmo and Larry L. Peterson and introduced in 1994.
Non-linear neural network congestion control based on genetic algorithm for TCP/IP networks [47] D-TCP [48] NexGen D-TCP [49] Copa [50] TCP New Reno was the most commonly implemented algorithm, [citation needed] SACK support is very common [citation needed] and is an extension to Reno/New Reno. Most others are competing proposals that still ...
His work is instrumental in changing the focus of congestion control research and land speed record contests from parameter tuning to algorithm design and analysis. Through a startup called FastSoft , his team actively pursued the deployment of their research which has been accelerating the world's largest content distribution and social ...
Networks use congestion control and congestion avoidance techniques to try to avoid collapse. These include: exponential backoff in protocols such as CSMA/CA in 802.11 and the similar CSMA/CD in the original Ethernet, window reduction in TCP, and fair queueing in devices such as routers and network switches.
Van Jacobson is an American computer scientist, renowned for his work on TCP/IP network performance and scaling. [1] He is one of the primary contributors to the TCP/IP protocol stack—the technological foundation of today’s Internet. [2]
CUBIC is a network congestion avoidance algorithm for TCP which can achieve high bandwidth connections over networks more quickly and reliably in the face of high latency than earlier algorithms. It helps optimize long fat networks .
BIC TCP (Binary Increase Congestion control) is one of the congestion control algorithms that can be used for Transmission Control Protocol (TCP). BIC is optimized for high-speed networks with high latency: so-called long fat networks. For these networks, BIC has significant advantage over previous congestion control schemes in correcting for ...
In computer networking, the Datagram Congestion Control Protocol (DCCP) is a message-oriented transport layer protocol. DCCP implements reliable connection setup, teardown, Explicit Congestion Notification (ECN), congestion control , and feature negotiation.