Yannick Florian Yankam, Vianney Kengne Tchendji, Jean Frédéric Myoupo
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WoS-CoMS: Work Stealing-Based Congestion Management Scheme for SDN Programmable Networks
In recent years, the software-defined networking (SDN) paradigm emerged as an easy way to manage large-scale network infrastructures through programmability brought out and its control plane/data plane decoupling logic. This allows infrastructure and service providers to better deploy, configure and automate their traffic management policies and network equipments. However, congestion control remains a concern due to the evolution of increasingly complex and resource-intensive user requirements [(virtual reality, metaverse, Internet of Things (IoT), Artificial Intelligence (AI), Cloud,...] on network infrastructures. This server state leads to high latency in request processing and data loss. This paper proposes, in such a controller-supervised environment, a congestion management scheme within network service servers to maintain an acceptable quality of service. The strategy relies on work stealing to ensure a better workload balance. Simulations show that the proposed solution can reduce congestion load on the servers by up to 22%, depending on the request grain size, with shorter latency than other works in the literature. Moreover, the proposed solution allows stolen tasks to be completed within a shorter time frame.
期刊介绍:
Journal of Network and Systems Management, features peer-reviewed original research, as well as case studies in the fields of network and system management. The journal regularly disseminates significant new information on both the telecommunications and computing aspects of these fields, as well as their evolution and emerging integration. This outstanding quarterly covers architecture, analysis, design, software, standards, and migration issues related to the operation, management, and control of distributed systems and communication networks for voice, data, video, and networked computing.