Dr. Florin Ciucu
(T-Labs, Berlin)"A Modern Network Queueing Theory with Inequalities"
Since the early 1990s, a radically new approach to compute backlogs and delays in networks evolved
under the name of network calculus. The key novelty of the calculus approach to queueing
systems consists in the modelling of arrivals and service with bounds, and not with exact
expressions as in the classical queueing theory.
In this way the derivation of end-to-end backlog and delay bounds can
be carried out using elementary inequalities.
The first part of talk overviews envelopes and service curve processes--the main concepts
of the calculus--and explains how to compute backlog and delay bounds in both a deterministic
and probabilistic framework. This is then followed by a discussion on the key advantages
of the calculus such as invariance to several scheduling algorithms, dealing with
non-necessarily statistical independent arrivals/service, and the relatively straightforward
multi-node extension. Finally, by modelling classical queueing scenarios
such as M/M/1 and M/D/1, the talk provides arguments that the bounds derived with the calculus are tight.
Zeit: | Montag, 02.02.2009, 17.15 Uhr |
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Ort: | Gebäude 48, Raum 210 |