• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 51
  • 7
  • 3
  • Tagged with
  • 65
  • 65
  • 65
  • 65
  • 29
  • 27
  • 19
  • 17
  • 17
  • 17
  • 17
  • 16
  • 13
  • 11
  • 10
  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
51

Admission control and congestion control in ATM/CDMA network /

Jiao, QingZhong. January 1995 (has links)
Thesis (M.A. Sc.)--Dept. of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Concordia University, 1995. / "March 1995." Includes bibliographical references (leaves 150-151). Available also on the Internet.
52

Encryption-based security for public networks : technique and application

Fernandez, Irma Becerra 10 October 1994 (has links)
This dissertation describes the development of a new system whereby the Public Switch Telephone Network (PSTN), which is not secure, can perform like a private network. Integrated Services Digital Network (ISDN) forms a technical platform for other communication technologies, such as frame relay and Switched Megabit Data Service (SMDS). This is an original and innovative hardware and software design which can be embedded into the ISDN Customer Premises Equipment (CPE) to privatize the public ISDN without the need to upgrade the existing switching equipment. This research incorporates original design and development of the following hardware and software modules to provide real-time encryption and decryption of images and data in the ISDN medium: 1. ISDN Communications Module with customized Caller-ID access. 2. Token Access Control module for secure log-in. 3. A Hybrid Cryptographic Module, public key for key management and authentication, and private key for privacy. This Cryptographic module, the Security Extension Module to the Terminal Adapter (SEMTA), was implemented in software, and then optimized in hardware. This work proves that medical images and legal documents can be transmitted through the PSTN without any security breach, guaranteeing the privacy, confidentiality, and authenticity of the data.
53

Improving the capacity and the quality of service of a DS-CDMA cellular system with integrated services

Zou, Jialin 15 June 2018 (has links)
In the design of the third generation of multi-media wireless networks, we are primarily concerned with the greatly varying information source rates, the quality requirements of various traffic types, the characteristics of the wireless environment, as well as the complexity and cost. Code Division Multiple Access (CDMA) cellular system is one of the most important candidates for supporting the future universal communications services. The objective of this research is to improve the capacity and the quality of service (QOS), as well as to reduce the complexity of cellular CDMA with integrated services, through improving or optimizing the design of system level operations. To facilitate the system performance and capacity evaluation, the multi-cell multi-user interference is analyzed through a new approach. The area averaged probability density function (PDF) of interference power from one active user is evaluated. The Gamma distribution is proposed for modelling the area averaged PDF of the interference power. An efficient method for evaluating system performance is developed. Differing from the Gaussian approximation, this method is very effective and accurate for both a large number and a small number of users. In this research, differing from the distance membership determination, the statistical effect of handoff is considered. The effects of soft handoff operation on multi-cell multi-user interference are analyzed. Membership statistics which are determined by soft handoff are investigated. A simple binomial model is proposed for modelling the distribution of the number of users belonging to a base station. Considering the call arrival statistics, user membership statistics and a finite number of channels available at a base station, we evaluate the call blocking/dropping rate. The minimum number of channels required at a base-station, which ensures a specified quality of service at a given capacity requirement, is determined. System capacity is further evaluated considering both outage probability limited by interference and call blocking/dropping rate limited by finite number of channels. A pilot assisted channel allocation method is proposed to minimize the number of channels required at a base station. Based on the analysis of a CDMA cellular system with a single traffic type, the design issues in developing a multi-media wireless networks are further discussed. The capacity of a CDMA cellular system with high quality requirements and mixed stream and packet types of traffic is assessed. The impact of the choice of a line rate (bit transmission rate through channel) on the system capacity is investigated. It is also shown that the power allocated to different types of traffic can be optimized to achieve maximum capacity. The optimum power allocation suggests that the power assignments to different traffic types are mainly determined by their quality requirements. / Graduate
54

QoS scheduling in integrated services packet-switching networks

Mabe, Kampong Jacob 27 August 2012 (has links)
M.Ing. / The Internet is evolving into a global communication infrastructure that is expected to support an overabundance of new applications such as IP telephony, interactive TV, and e-commerce. The existing best effort service is no longer sufficient. It is not enough to provide differentiated services and to meet QoS requirements of these different traffic types. As a result, there is an urgent need to provide more services that are powerful such as guaranteed services, flow protection etc, merged in one IP network, referred to as Integrated Services Packet-Switching Network (ISPN) in this thesis. To provide these services, QoS aware network architectures are required to implement the services. This dissertation presents a survey on two network architectures: Fair Queuing (FQ) and Scalable Core (SCORE), which attempt to provide QoS solutions in ISPN. We theoretically analyse scheduling as an important element in providing QoS in these architectures. The important thread in scheduling is performance and implementation complexity. SCORE based scheduling have less implementation complexity but cannot exactly match the high performance of FQ solutions, which suffer implementation complexity. The contribution of this work is a feedback protocol that minimises congestion in SCORE scheduling scheme called Core stateless fair queuing (CSFQ). The flow rates are adjusted by sending rate signal to a transmitting node from a receiving node, to adjust ill-behaved flow rate during congestion to a fair share rate of receiving node. We use CSFQ based theoretical analysis and simulations to demonstrate the performance of the feedback protocol.
55

Analysis Of Discrete-Time Queues With Applications To ATM Based B-ISDNs

Gangadhar, Nandyala Dhani 03 1900 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
56

Priority CSMA schemes for integrated voice and data transmission

Ching, Kai-Sang January 1988 (has links)
Priority schemes employing the inherent properties of carrier-sense multiple-access (CSMA) schemes are investigated and then applied to the integrated transmission of voice and data. A priority scheme composed of 1-persistent and non-persistent CSMA protocols is proposed. The throughput and delay characteristics of this protocol are evaluated by mathematical analysis and simulation, respectively. The approach of throughput analysis is further extended to another more general case, p-persistent CSMA with two persistency factors, the throughput performance of which had not been analyzed before. Simulations are carried out to study the delay characteristics of this protocol. After careful consideration of the features of the priority schemes studied, two protocols are proposed for integrated voice and data transmission. While their ultimate purpose is for integrated services, they have different application. One of them is applied to local area network; the other is suitable for packet radio network. The distinctive features of the former are simplicity and flexibility. The latter is different from other studies in that collision detection is not required, and that it has small mean and variance of voice packet delay. Performance characteristics of both of these protocols are examined by simulations under various system parameter values. / Applied Science, Faculty of / Electrical and Computer Engineering, Department of / Graduate
57

QoS enabled IP based wireless networking : design, modelling and performance analysis

Gyasi-Agyei, Amoakoh January 2003 (has links)
Quality of service differentiation has never achieved much attention and relevance until the advent of the convergence of mobile wireless network and the fixed Internet, that is, Internet Protocol ( IP ) based mobile wireless networks, or wireless Internet. These networks are poised to support multimedia applications ' traffic with diverse QoS sensitivities. To date, most traffic transferred over the Internet still undergo best - effort forwarding, which does not guarantee whether or not traffic sent by a source gets to the intended destination, let alone loss and timing bounds. The major contribution of this thesis is three - fold. First, the thesis proposes a QoS - enabled wireless Internet access architecture, which leverages the micromobility in wireless standards to reduce mobile IP weaknesses, such as long handoff delay, to achieve effective interworking between mobile wireless networks and the global, fixed Internet. Although the idea here is applicable to any wireless standard, the design examples in this thesis are based on the IEEE 802.11b wireless local area network ( WLAN ) standard. Second, it proposes a framework for a class of wireless channel state dependent packet scheduling schemes, which consider the QoS requirements of the applications ' traffic ; the wireless channel state ( reflected in instantaneous data rate or noise level ) ; and optimises the usage of the expensive wireless resource. The operation of the QoS - enabled, channel state - dependent packet scheduler is analysed using optimisation theory, eigenanalysis and stochastic modelling. Third, the thesis analyses the effects of wireless channel properties on differentiated QoS ( DQoS ) schemes, using two - dimensional, channel - state - dependent queuing theory, matrix analytic methods to stochastic modelling and eigenanalysis. The ana - lytical model of DQoS schemes, especially models accounting for user scenarios such as speed of motion and wireless channel properties, such as fading, spatio - temporarily varying quality and low rate, is not properly covered in the open literature, and hence was a motivation for this part of the thesis. The wireless channel is discretized into discrete - time Markovian states based on the received signal - to - noise plus interference ratio ( SNIR ), which also reflects on the instantaneous link quality. The link quality, in turn, influences the QoS experienced by the transported applications sitting on top of the ISO / OSI protocol hierarchy. The parameters of the Markovian states are evaluated using realistic physical channel noise models and transceiver characteristics, such as modem. [ Different modems ( modulator / demodulator ) yields different transceiver properties such as sensitivity. The analysis in the thesis adopts QPSKand BPSK modulation. ] Source traffic models are used in the analysis. Lastly, the thesis provides an extensive introduction to, and provides a detailed background material for the new area of mobile wireless Internet systems, upon which considerable future research can be based. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering, 2003.
58

Towards IQ-Appliances: Quality-awareness in Information Virtualization

Niranjan Mysore, Radhika 03 May 2007 (has links)
Our research addresses two important problems that arise in modern large-scale distributed systems: 1. The necessity to virtualize their data flows by applying actions such as filtering, format translation, coalescing or splitting, etc. 2. The desire to separate such actions from application level logic, to make it easier for future service-oriented codes to inter-operate in diverse and dynamic environments. This research considers the runtimes of the `information appliances used for these purposes, particularly with respect to their ability to provide diverse levels of Quality of Service (QoS) in lieu of dynamic application behaviors and the consequent changes in the resource needs of their data flows. Our specific contribution is the enrichment of these runtimes with methods for QoS-awareness, thereby giving them the ability to deliver desired levels of QoS even under sudden requirement changes IQ-appliances. For experimental evaluation, we enrich a prototype implementation of an IQ-appliance, based on the Intel IXP network processor, with the additional functionality needed to guarantee QoS constraints for diverse data streams. Measurements demonstrate the feasibility and utility of the approach. Further, we enhance the Self-Virtualized Network Interface developed in previous work from our group with QoS awareness and demonstrate the importance of such functionality in end-to-end virtualized infrastructures.
59

Testbed evaluation of integrating ethernet switches in the differentiated services architecture using virtual LANs

Fornaro, Antony 05 1900 (has links)
No description available.
60

QoS enabled IP based wireless networking : design, modelling and performance analysis

Gyasi-Agyei, Amoakoh January 2003 (has links)
Quality of service differentiation has never achieved much attention and relevance until the advent of the convergence of mobile wireless network and the fixed Internet, that is, Internet Protocol ( IP ) based mobile wireless networks, or wireless Internet. These networks are poised to support multimedia applications ' traffic with diverse QoS sensitivities. To date, most traffic transferred over the Internet still undergo best - effort forwarding, which does not guarantee whether or not traffic sent by a source gets to the intended destination, let alone loss and timing bounds. The major contribution of this thesis is three - fold. First, the thesis proposes a QoS - enabled wireless Internet access architecture, which leverages the micromobility in wireless standards to reduce mobile IP weaknesses, such as long handoff delay, to achieve effective interworking between mobile wireless networks and the global, fixed Internet. Although the idea here is applicable to any wireless standard, the design examples in this thesis are based on the IEEE 802.11b wireless local area network ( WLAN ) standard. Second, it proposes a framework for a class of wireless channel state dependent packet scheduling schemes, which consider the QoS requirements of the applications ' traffic ; the wireless channel state ( reflected in instantaneous data rate or noise level ) ; and optimises the usage of the expensive wireless resource. The operation of the QoS - enabled, channel state - dependent packet scheduler is analysed using optimisation theory, eigenanalysis and stochastic modelling. Third, the thesis analyses the effects of wireless channel properties on differentiated QoS ( DQoS ) schemes, using two - dimensional, channel - state - dependent queuing theory, matrix analytic methods to stochastic modelling and eigenanalysis. The ana - lytical model of DQoS schemes, especially models accounting for user scenarios such as speed of motion and wireless channel properties, such as fading, spatio - temporarily varying quality and low rate, is not properly covered in the open literature, and hence was a motivation for this part of the thesis. The wireless channel is discretized into discrete - time Markovian states based on the received signal - to - noise plus interference ratio ( SNIR ), which also reflects on the instantaneous link quality. The link quality, in turn, influences the QoS experienced by the transported applications sitting on top of the ISO / OSI protocol hierarchy. The parameters of the Markovian states are evaluated using realistic physical channel noise models and transceiver characteristics, such as modem. [ Different modems ( modulator / demodulator ) yields different transceiver properties such as sensitivity. The analysis in the thesis adopts QPSKand BPSK modulation. ] Source traffic models are used in the analysis. Lastly, the thesis provides an extensive introduction to, and provides a detailed background material for the new area of mobile wireless Internet systems, upon which considerable future research can be based. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering, 2003.

Page generated in 0.101 seconds