[84] in resnet
[daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU : the rx hex]
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (marc@MIT.EDU)
Thu Nov 11 00:39:09 1993
From: marc@MIT.EDU
Date: Thu, 11 Nov 93 00:33:48 EST
To: resnet@MIT.EDU
------- Forwarded transaction
[2178] daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (peter honeyman) Info-AFS_Redistribution 11/10/93 22:18 (41 lines)
Subject: the rx hex
From: peter honeyman <honey@citi.umich.edu>
To: info-afs@transarc.com
Date: Wed, 10 Nov 1993 18:29:56 -0500
here's the long-awaited (long delayed, actually) tech report describing
some of our rx dialup hacks at citi. postscript is in
/afs/citi.umich.edu/user/honey/papers/rxp/rx.tr.PS
(it will be in "the usual place" soon.)
peter
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
CITI Technical Report 93-8
The Rx Hex
D. Bachmann
bachmann@austin.ibm.com
P. Honeyman
honey@citi.umich.edu
L.B. Huston
lhuston@citi.umich.edu
ABSTRACT
At CITI, we run dataless AFS clients over dialup IP net-
works. Improving Rx performance is critical to that task.
In this paper, we report on our progress in adapting Rx to
networks characterized by low bandwidth, high delay, or
variable round-trip time. Our focus is on adding facilities
for congestion avoidance and control, and on compressing Rx
headers. Although our work is ongoing, we have overcome
several hurdles, and are now getting impressive data
transfer rates over ordinary dialup lines.
--[2178]--
------- End forwarded transaction