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Admission control

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Admission control is a validation process in communication systems where a check is performed before a connection is established to see if current resources are sufficient for the proposed connection.

Applications

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For some applications, dedicated resources (such as a wavelength across an optical network) may be needed in which case admission control has to verify availability of such resources before a request can be admitted.[1]

For more elastic applications, a total volume of resources may be needed prior to some deadline in order to satisfy a new request, in which case admission control needs to verify availability of resources at the time and perform scheduling to guarantee satisfaction of an admitted request.[2][3][4]

Admission control systems

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References

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  1. ^ M. Sengupta; et al. (2012). "A comparison of wavelength reservation protocols for WDM optical networks". Journal of Network and Computer Applications. 35 (2). ELSEVIER Journal of Network and Computer Applications: 606–618. doi:10.1016/j.jnca.2011.11.014.
  2. ^ S. Kandula; et al. (2014). "Calendaring for Wide Area Networks" (PDF). ACM SIGCOMM.
  3. ^ H. Zhang; et al. (2015). "Guaranteeing Deadlines for Inter-Datacenter Transfers" (PDF). ACM EUROSYS.
  4. ^ M. Noormohammadpour; et al. (2016). "DCRoute: Speeding up Inter-Datacenter Traffic Allocation while Guaranteeing Deadlines". 2016 IEEE 23rd International Conference on High Performance Computing (HiPC). IEEE HiPC. pp. 82–90. arXiv:1707.04011. Bibcode:2017arXiv170704011N. doi:10.1109/HiPC.2016.019. ISBN 978-1-5090-5411-4.
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