[Example: For link X, can we say that most packets/bytes stay on that continent? Or that most packets have a minimum end-to-end delay of at least S seconds? Or that most packets on that link during this period of time traverse more than one congested link on their path from source to destination?]
For round-trip time measurements greater than 500 ms, to what extent is this delay due to queueing delay? to routing problems? to delay at the end-node?
Answers. Quick summary, so far: A range of more than 10:1 in round-trip times seems common, but with most (85%, in one case) of the connections having round-trip times between 15 and 500 ms.
Answers.
Quick summary: Deployment is increasing rapidly, both for web
browsers and for web servers.
Answers.
Quick summary: There is a significant deployment of NewReno TCP, as
compared to Reno or Tahoe TCP.
* The RED Web Page
already has pointers to Curtis Villamizar's 1994 paper
on "High Performance TCP in ANSNET", and to Sean Doran's web page
showing RED turned on at a site at Ebone.
*
WRED is enabled on
Cisco GSRs on overloaded links at AS1 (Genuity), to reduce
queueing delay. Experience has been positive.
(Reported by Derek Fonda of Genuity, October 2000.)