外文翻译---校园网络多媒体的演变
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1、一、英文原文: The Evolution of Campus Networks Towards Multimedia Ciro A. Noronha Jr. Fouad A. Tobagi 4 The Backbone The campus backbone carries the aggregate traffic from the sub networks. From a theoretical point, of view, the design of the backbone is no different, from the design of the sub networks t
2、hemselves; the steps taken in section 3 can be repeated here, with the difference that the network being designed is the backbone, and its users are the sub networks. The difference is one of scale. In this section, we will briefly comment on the effect of the backbone traffic on the aggregate throu
3、ghput of the sub network (which was ignored in section 3), and then compute the backbone traffic under a variety of scenarios. 4.1 Connecting the Sub network to the Backbone The main difference between the traffic to/from the backbone and the internal sub network traffic is the fact that former is c
4、oncentrated in a single point (the backbone connection); in other words, all the traffic from the the sub network to the backbone is directed to the backbone connection, and all the traffic from the backbone to the sub network originates in the same location. In the other hand, the sources and desti
5、nations of the intra-sub network traffic are spread over the sub network. The effect of adding the backbone connection in the aggregate sub network bandwidth depends on its topology. In sub networks organized as trees, the congestion in the branches near the location of the backbone connection might
6、 limit the aggregate throughput to a value lower than what is attained when no backbone traffic is present. In the star configuration, however, the high-speed channel is the ideal location for attaching the backbone connection, and the aggregate throughput in this case is always higher than its valu
7、e when there is no traffic from the backbone. The reason for this is simple: the internal sub network traffic uses bandwidth both at the source and at the destination segments, but the traffic to/from the backbone uses bandwidth only at the source/destination segments, leading to a higher aggregate
8、throughput. The actual increase or decrease in the aggregate bandwidth will be a function of a, the fraction of the traffic that, is intra-sub network, and A, the ratio between the traffic from the backbone to the traffic into the backbone (defined in section 2.).The increase is higher for small val
9、ues of a (most of the traffic is inter sub network). 4.2 Structure of the Backbone In this section, we will give a number of scenarios that illustrate how the structure of the backbone can change as a function of the size of the campus network; we will use figure 3 to determine the required capacity
10、. The results are shown in table 1; note that the solutions for the structure of the backbone are not unique, and we have listed one of such solutions for each case. In figure 5 we show one possible backbone topology which has all the main elements we have been discussing. In the figure we show the
11、sub networks being served by switching hubs. The switching hubs serving sub networks with little external traffic can be grouped by an ATM multiplexer before reaching the ATM switch; this multiplexer can perform some local switching or rely completely in the central switch. Hubs generating larger tr
12、affic can be connected directly to the ATM switch. The switch is also the best location to connect centralized shared resources, such as video servers. The ATM switches themselves can be arranged in a hierarchical fashion, depending on the traffic requirements. 5 Adding multimedia to the other OSI l
13、ayers In this section we discuss the issues raised by the addition of multimedia services on the other layers of the OSI model. 5.1 The Medium Access Control (MAC) Layer The synchronous nature of audio and video traffic dictates that data be delivered to its destination within strict timing constrai
14、nts. Failure to deliver data on time results in a discontinuity of the video or a degradation in the quality. The busty nature of data traffic, on the other hand, means that a station transmits data in an unpredictable fashion, and the amount of data that the station transmits in a burst is also ran
15、dom. Both types of traffic are to be supported by the same local network. Indeed, multimedia applications naturally involve both types of traffic simultaneously; existing local area networks are expected to carry audio and video traffic alongside existing data applications. Mixing the two types of t
16、raffic on the same network requires special attention, particularly where shared resources are contended to by both types. The bandwidth available on local area network segments is one such shared resource, and is the subject of this section. It is shared by all traffic originating at all stations,
17、and accessed by means of the Media Access Control (MAC) protocol. Ideally, one would like the MAC protocol to include techniques which reserve the bandwidth necessary for synchronous traffic, so as to remove any effect of busty traffic. The CSMA/CD protocol (IEEE 802.3) does not differentiate among
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