Determination of Interrupt-Coalescence Latency of Remote Hosts Through Active Measurement
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
4-24-2018
Abstract
Recently, hosts connected to the Internet through network interface cards (NICs) are equipped with a hardware artifact called interrupt coalescence (IC). This artifact reduces the processing load of a host in exchange for an additional delay in the receiving of packets that arrive into its NIC. Even though the adoption of IC has its benefits, the additional delay negatively affects the hosts that are involved in the performance measurement of various network parameters and time-sensitive applications. Therefore, prior knowledge of IC-inflicted delay may be used to facilitate accurate delay and bandwidth measurements, IP geolocation, and traffic load-balancing. In this paper, we propose what we believe as the first scheme to measure the IC period (the additional delay) of remote hosts through the use of pairs of probing packets and a k-means clustering algorithm. We report the practicability of our scheme and the high accuracy through extensive experiments on both controlled and production networks consisting of up to 1000-Mb/s links. Our experimental evaluations show that the proposed scheme measures IC period with 90% accuracy, quickly, and with a small probing load.
Identifier
85045987358 (Scopus)
Publication Title
IEEE Access
External Full Text Location
https://doi.org/10.1109/ACCESS.2018.2830125
e-ISSN
21693536
First Page
23019
Last Page
23033
Volume
6
Recommended Citation
Salehin, Khondaker; Sahasrabudhe, Vinitmadhukar; and Rojas-Cessa, Roberto, "Determination of Interrupt-Coalescence Latency of Remote Hosts Through Active Measurement" (2018). Faculty Publications. 8711.
https://digitalcommons.njit.edu/fac_pubs/8711
