ACP+: An Age Control Protocol for the Internet

We present the age control protocol ACP+, a transport layer protocol that regulates the rate at which update packets carrying information from a source are sent over the Internet to a monitor. The source would like to minimize the average age of information at the monitor. Extensive experimentation...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:IEEE/ACM transactions on networking Vol. 32; no. 4; pp. 3253 - 3268
Main Authors: Shreedhar, Tanya, Kaul, Sanjit K., Yates, Roy D.
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: IEEE 01.08.2024
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ISSN:1063-6692, 1558-2566
Online Access:Get full text
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Summary:We present the age control protocol ACP+, a transport layer protocol that regulates the rate at which update packets carrying information from a source are sent over the Internet to a monitor. The source would like to minimize the average age of information at the monitor. Extensive experimentation helps shed light on age control over the current Internet and its implications for sources sending updates over a shared wireless access to monitors in the cloud. Surprisingly, age minimizing rates over fast Internet paths are about 0.5 Mbps, which is a small fraction, for example, of link rates supported by WiFi wireless access technology. We also show that congestion control algorithms employed by the Transmission Control Protocol (TCP), including hybrid approaches that achieve higher throughputs at lower delays than traditional loss-based congestion control, are unsuitable for age control.
ISSN:1063-6692
1558-2566
DOI:10.1109/TNET.2024.3380622