3rd International ICST Symposium on Modeling and Optimization in Mobile, Ad Hoc, and Wireless Networks

Research Article

The effect of retransmitted packet size preservation property on TCP goodput over links with Bernoulli bit-errors

  • @INPROCEEDINGS{10.1109/WIOPT.2005.46,
        author={T.  Ikegawa and Y.  Takahashi},
        title={The effect of retransmitted packet size preservation property on TCP goodput over links with Bernoulli bit-errors},
        proceedings={3rd International ICST Symposium on Modeling and Optimization in Mobile, Ad Hoc, and Wireless Networks},
        publisher={IEEE},
        proceedings_a={WIOPT},
        year={2005},
        month={4},
        keywords={},
        doi={10.1109/WIOPT.2005.46}
    }
    
  • T. Ikegawa
    Y. Takahashi
    Year: 2005
    The effect of retransmitted packet size preservation property on TCP goodput over links with Bernoulli bit-errors
    WIOPT
    IEEE
    DOI: 10.1109/WIOPT.2005.46
T. Ikegawa1, Y. Takahashi1
  • 1: NTT Network Service Syst. Lab., NTT Corp., Tokyo, Japan

Abstract

In this paper, we investigate the effect of the retransmitted packet size preservation (RPSP) property on TCP performance over links with Bernoulli bit-errors, where RPSP means that the sizes of all packets transferred over datalinks (referred to as transferred packets) with the same sequence-number at retransmissions are equal to the size of a packet generated from a message at the original transmission (namely, generated packet). To achieve this, we present a Markov model for size-sequences of the generated and transferred packets, in which the TCP message-segmentation and error-recovery functions with RPSP are taken into account, respectively. Furthermore, we derive the round-trip time and the transferred packet corruption probability, which are the main parameters of TCP performance. Applying them to the conventional TCP-Reno send-rate formula, we discuss the effect of RPSP on TCP-Reno goodput. The key findings from the numerical results include that RPSP cannot be negligible for networks that suffer from a high bit-error rate (e.g., 1 × 10-4, which is the mean bit-error rate of a wireless link in an industrial environment), when the message-segmentation occurrence probability is relatively small.