DQMA and CRMA: New access schemes for Gbit/s LANs and MANs
Hans R. Muller, Mehdi Nassehi, et al.
IEEE INFOCOM 1990
Cyclic-reservation multiple access (CRMA) is presented as an access scheme for high-speed local and metropolitan area networks (LANs and MANs) based on slotted unidirectional bus structure, both folded and dual-bus configurations. CRMA consists of two novel mechanisms: cyclic-reservation access and reservation-cancellation backpressure. The cyclic-reservation access provides both throughput efficiency and flexibility in capacity allocation. This flexibility can be used to achieve any set of fairness conditions. The reservation-cancellation backpressure minimizes the worst-case access delay. CRMA provides the capability of reserving consecutive slots for transmitting a packet, thus facilitating reassembly. The flexibility in bandwidth allocation, together with the capability of efficiently utilizing the network with a few users, makes CRMA well suited to supercomputer-networking applications, such as visualization, high-resolution graphics, and image-retrieval systems. The recovery from transmission errors is simple owing to the centralized-global-queue approach. These properties make CRMA suitable for both LANs and MANs in the gigabit-per-second, as well as the 100-Mb/s speed range.
Hans R. Muller, Mehdi Nassehi, et al.
IEEE INFOCOM 1990
R. Haeb, D. Rugar, et al.
ICC 1990
Ilias Iliadis, Wolfgang E. Denzel
ICC 1990
C.B. Shung, P.H. Siegel, et al.
ICC 1990