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(Dana P.) #1
served, longer buffer sizes may apply as these
would accept longer delays (and delay varia-
tions), although the loss requirements might not
be lower.

One of the primary goals of TE in an operational
network is to limit the sustained congestion.
A focused congestion may result from unbal-
anced mapping of traffic flows onto the resource
groups. Then, means can be activated to dis-
tribute the traffic flow in a better way. TE mech-
anisms do also allow for differentiating and
ensuring service levels. This would meet the
characteristics related to the spectrum of traffic
flows. An example is to use separate real-time
and non-real-time traffic on the buffering side,
while still using the same link capacity. Hence,
high link utilisation is achieved, while knowl-
edge of the traffic flow characteristics is ex-
ploited. Delay, delay variation and loss ratio are
examples of characteristics used so far. Another
important parameter is related to dependability,
such as the availability of the service. This
would also be addressed by the TE-related
mechanisms, increasing the general depend-
ability but also allowing for differentiation.

In sum, the TE mechanisms offer a set of “tools”
that a network operator can tune for its opera-
tion, reaching better utilisation of network
resources while allowing predictable service
levels (differentiated and ensured).

The actual need for introducing TE-related
mechanisms is questioned by some. Two factors
supporting this view are the traffic growth and
the willingness to pay. For the former, it is con-
sidered that by the traffic growth seen these days
there is little need for accurate procedures as
more capacity should be installed all the time.
Hence, additional capacity present when over-
provisioning would fairly soon be needed any-
way. Regarding the latter factor, much traffic on
IP-based networks comes from Web browsing,

assumed to be looking for low-priced, low ser-
vice level.

An argument in the other direction is that as one
of the current trends is that more commercial
activities are based on IP networks, a stronger
demand for predictable services will emerge.
This also seems to be recognised by the industry
in this area as much work is allocated to TE-
related mechanisms.

In this article, some of the most central themes
of TE are described. In the following chapter
overall objectives, scope and resource types are
described. Chapter 3 presents the activities,
processes, key components and mechanisms
together with the contexts in which the TE activ-
ities are carried out. Some requirements on TE
systems are listed in Chapter 4. Chapter 5 ex-
plains the TE taxonomy, while Chapter 6 elabo-
rates on further challenges in the TE and QoS
areas.

2 TE Objectives and


Resource Types


The main goals of traffic engineering are to
improve performance for IP-based traffic while
still utilising the network resources efficiently.
In the TE framework principles, as elaborated
within IETF, architectures and methodologies
for evaluating and optimising the performance
of operational IP networks are addressed. The
framework as described in [ID_tepri] gives both
the terminology (set of key terms) and the taxon-
omy (criteria for describing a system). Internet
traffic engineering is here defined as

that aspect of Internet network engineering
dealing with the issue of performance evalua-
tions and performance optimisation of opera-
tional IP networks. Hence, measurement,
characterisation, modelling and control of
traffic are included.

A major objective is to improve the performance
of operational networks, at the traffic and at the
resource levels. This is striven for by looking at
traffic-related performance requirements, like
delay, delay variation, packet loss and goodput.
At the same time the network resources should
be efficiently utilised. An essential part is to
achieve reliable network operations, e.g. during
failures. Having efficient routing configurations
is also central as these decide the way the pack-
ets are distributed in the network.

Capacity management and traffic management
can be used for the optimisation done as part of
TE. Capacity arrangement includes capacity
planning, routing control and resource manage-
ment. The resources include link bandwidth,
buffer spaceand computational, see Figure 3.

Figure 2 Schematic illustra-
tion of relations between delay
and loss


loss

high

low

increasing
traffic load

increasing
buffer size

short long
delay
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