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High Performance IP Multicasting Over Wireless Satellite- Terrestrial Networks

Authors :
Baras, John S.
ISR
CSHCN
Baras, John S.
Secka, Isatou
Baras, John S.
ISR
CSHCN
Baras, John S.
Secka, Isatou
Publication Year :
1997

Abstract

We describe our recent work on the design and implementation of high performance Internet services over networks consisting of interconnected high data rate satellites including Direct Broadcast Satellite hosts and terrestrial wireless LANs with various capabilities (with rates from 16 kbps to 10Mbps, including LMDS and MMDS systems). The network can use either bi- directional or receive-only satellite links for downstream data delivery and wireless and wireline terrestrial or satellite links for the upstream path. A key concept in our work is that of a hybrid terminal, which is a PC connected to a satellite antenna (including just DBS antennas) and to the wireless LAN. The hybrid terminal uses a modem connection for outgoing traffic while receiving incoming information through the VSAT. The hybrid terminal is attached to the Internet through any Internet service provider who supports Serial Line Internet Protocol (SLIP). The traffic from the hybrid terminal is transmitted to the hybrid gateway through IP-within-IP encapsulation, to accomplish asymmetric routing. The hybrid gateway is responsible for decapsulation of traffic from hybrid terminals. It is also responsible for formatting data to suit the satellite transmission. The asymmetric nature of traffic in most networks, as evident in the Internet, is shifting current networking technology trends more towards the development of hybrid networks. Multimedia traffic, with its inherent variability in Quality of Service (QoS) requirements, further reinforces this trend. Technologies such as DirecPC, which allow users to send traffic terrestrially and receive traffic through satellite have demonstrated the efficiency of the broadcast nature of satellite communications as a means of delivering high bandwidth traffic to end users. Even though the majority of Internet applications rely on point-to-point transmission (unicast), emerging applications such as teleconferencing and information distribution have necessitated t

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
en_US
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1380374885
Document Type :
Electronic Resource