The role of signaling in quality of service enabled networks
01 June 1999
In this article we identify the common building blocks that enable some networks to provide better than best-effort transfer guarantees to the traffic they carry. We consider the role signaling plays in such a network and argue in favor of pinned routes, with a highly efficient pinning process, to improve network stability and to ease the task of maintaining QoS guarantees in the face of changing network characteristics, including failures; the use of broad QoS classes to determine the path that a particular flow should follow through the network; and providing the flexibility of specifying the detailed QoS for the flow, if needed, at any arbitrary time during the life of the flow. We conclude that a flexible signaling architecture is an essential enabling component of any QoS-aware network. We present an overview of the design and implementation of UNITE, as an example of a signaling architecture that embodies these attributes. More generally, we consider the relationship between QoS-related signaling and other protocols and mechanisms that may form part of an overall QoS-enabled network and service infrastructure.