TULIP: A Link-Level Protocol for Improving TCP over Wireless Links

Abstract

We present the transport unaware link improvement protocol (TULIP), which dramatically improves the performance of TCP over lossy wireless links, without competing with or modifying the transport- or network-layer protocols. TULIP is tailored for the half-duplex radio links available with today's commercial radios and provides a MAC acceleration feature applicable to collision-avoidance MAC protocols (e.g., IEEE 802.11) to improve throughput. TULIP's timers rely on a maximum propagation delay over the link, rather than performing a round-trip time estimate of the channel delay. The protocol does not require a base station and keeps no TCP state. TULIP is exceptionally robust when bit error rates are high; it maintains high goodput, i.e., only those packets which are in fact dropped on the wireless link are retransmitted and then only when necessary. The performance of TULIP is compared against the performance of the Snoop protocol (a TCP-aware approach) and TCP without link-level retransmission support. The results of simulation experiments using the actual code of the Snoop protocol show that TULIP achieves higher throughput, lower packet delay, and smaller delay variance.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Jan 01, 1999
Accession Number
ADA461750

Entities

People

  • Christina Parsa
  • J.J. Garcia-Luna-Aceves

Organizations

  • University of California, Santa Cruz

Tags

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Computer Programs
  • Congestion
  • Engineering
  • Internet Routing
  • Markov Models
  • Models
  • Network Protocols
  • Networks
  • Packet Loss
  • Probability
  • Retransmission
  • Routing Protocols
  • Simulations
  • Standards
  • Transport Protocols
  • Wireless Communications
  • Wireless Networks

Fields of Study

  • Computer science

Readers

  • Organic Chemistry
  • Radio communications and signal processing.