About Us Our Work Employment News & Events
MITRE Remote Access for MITRE Staff and Partners Site Map
Our Work

Follow Us:

Visit MITRE on Facebook
Visit MITRE on Twitter
Visit MITRE on Linkedin
Visit MITRE on YouTube
View MITRE's RSS Feeds
View MITRE's Mobile Apps
Home > Our Work > Technical Papers >

Improving Multi-homed SCTP Mobile Communication Performance

June 2006

Kevin H. Grace, The MITRE Corporation
Dylan Pecelli, The MITRE Corporation
Jeffrey D. D'Amelia, The MITRE Corporation

ABSTRACT

The growing availability of different wireless access technologies like WiFi 802.11, cellular broadband EV-DO, and the soon to be deployed WiMax 802.16, provide the opportunity for users to carry multiple radio types and potentially benefit from better connectivity and reliability. The multi-homing features of the Stream Control Transmission Protocol (SCTP) appear to be key enablers for improving mobile communications for such multi-radio equipped users. However, satisfactory performance of SCTP in a mobile wireless environment depends heavily on the settings of configurable protocol parameters and questions remain whether multi-homing may actually perform worse than single-homing in some circumstances. This paper examines the complex interactions between various configurable protocol parameters and their effect on performance with the goal of making recommendations for how to set these "knobs" in an informed way. Using simulation, we investigate SCTP's throughput performance between a pair of users in three scenarios: each user equipped with a single radio type, each user equipped with a pair of radios that provide identical data rates, and each user equipped with a pair of radios where one radio's data rate is 10x less than the other. For the last scenario, we find that SCTP's default recovery performance is lacking to such an extent that better throughput is actually achieved when users are equipped with only a single radio. To mitigate this problem, we propose a change to the protocol's heartbeat mechanism and present simulation data showing the resulting improvement.

View/Download Document

Additional Search Keywords

N/A

 

Page last updated: July 14, 2006   |   Top of page

Homeland Security Center Center for Enterprise Modernization Command, Control, Communications and Intelligence Center Center for Advanced Aviation System Development

 
 
 

Solutions That Make a Difference.®
Copyright © 1997-2013, The MITRE Corporation. All rights reserved.
MITRE is a registered trademark of The MITRE Corporation.
Material on this site may be copied and distributed with permission only.

IDG's Computerworld Names MITRE a "Best Place to Work in IT" for Eighth Straight Year The Boston Globe Ranks MITRE Number 6 Top Place to Work Fast Company Names MITRE One of the "World's 50 Most Innovative Companies"
 

Privacy Policy | Contact Us