3rd International Conference on Mobile Systems, Applications, and Services Abstract
Pp. 121134 of the Proceedings
Horde: Separating Network Striping Policy from Mechanism
Asfandyar Qureshi and John Guttag, MIT Computer Science and AI Laboratory
Abstract
Inverse multiplexing, or network striping, allows the construction of
a high-bandwidth virtual channel from a collection of multiple
low-bandwidth network channels. Striping systems usually employ an
immutable packet scheduling policy and allow applications to be
oblivious of the way in which packets are routed to specific network
channels. Though this is appropriate for many applications, other
applications can benefit from an approach that explicitly involves the
application in the dynamic determination of the striping policy.
Horde is middleware that facilitates flexible striping in wireless
environments for a diverse range of applications. Horde separates the
striping policy from routing and scheduling. It allows applications
to specify network quality-of-service objectives that the striping
mechanism attempts to satisfy. Horde can be used by a set of
application data streams, each with its own quality-of-service policy,
to flexibly stripe data over a highly heterogeneous set of dynamically
varying wireless network channels.
We present the Horde architecture, describe an early implementation,
and examine how different policies can be used to modulate the
quality-of-service observed across different independent data streams.
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