On Thu, Sep 03, 2015 at 05:48:00PM +0300, Saku Ytti wrote: > Hey Brett, > > > Here's a paper that shows you don't need buffers equal to > > bandwidth*delay to get near capacity: > > http://www.cs.bu.edu/~matta/Papers/hstcp-globecom04.pdf > > (I'm not endorsing it. Just pointing out it out as a datapoint.) > > Quick glance makes me believe the S and D nodes are equal bandwidth, > but only R1-R2 bandwidth is explicitly stated.S1, D1, Sn, Dn are only > ever mentioned in the topology. If Sender is same or lower rate than > Destination, then we really shouldn't need almost any buffering.
Unless Sender is higher than R1-R2. > Issue should only come when Sender is significantly higher rate than > Destination and network is not limiting them. I didn't read it in detail either, but at first glance, it appears to me that the model is infinite bandwidth and zero latency between S and R1, and D and R2, with queueing happening in R1. That's not going to give materially different results than, having S-R1 be 4 times R1-R2, and R2-D being the same as R1-R2. So it fits well with the original discussion here of 40G into 10G. -- Brett