[an error occurred while processing this directive]
Campus Bandwidth Management BOF
Spring 2002 Internet2 Member Meeting--Arlington, VA
Tuesday, May 7, 2002Managing campus network resources, particularly congested access circuits, is an increasing challenge for many campus network operators. Some campuses have turned to special purpose middleboxes that are often deployed at the campus edge. Related to firewalls, these "QoS appliances" support a range of functionality, including: application classification, DSCP marking, shaping, differentiated queuing, and TCP window size spoofing. Other campuses have turned to usage-based accounting, charge-back, quotas, or other policy mechanisms. These various mechanisms are often combined in creative ways to meet particular technical and policy objectives.
This session is a partial reprise and follow-on to the QoS Appliances: Disease or Cure? session held at the NLANR/Internet2 Techs Workshop - Tempe, AZ.
Speakers
[an error occurred while processing this directive]
- Campus Bandwidth Management: What's the Problem? (Ben Teitelbaum, Internet2)
- The Case for Traffic Shaping At Internet2 Schools (Joe St. Sauver, U Oregon)
- QoS Appliances Cause Cancer and Global Warming (Stanislav Shalunov, Internet2)
- Internet Bandwidth Management at The University of Pennsylvania (Deke Kassabian, U Pennsylvania)
- Bandwidth Management Strategies and Methodologies (Clark Gaylord, Viginia Tech)
- North Dakota State University Case Study (Jim Ross, North Dakota State University)
- Discussion, questions from audience