First Midterm For ECE374: 03/24/11 Solution!!
First Midterm For ECE374: 03/24/11 Solution!!
First Midterm For ECE374: 03/24/11 Solution!!
First
Midterm
1
First
Midterm
for
ECE374
03/24/11
Solution!!
Note:
In all written assignments, please show as much of your work as you can. Even if
you get a wrong answer, you can get partial credit if you show your work. If you make a
mistake, it will also help the grader show you where you made a mistake.
Problem
1:
In
modern
packet-‐switched
networks
the
source
hosts
segments
long,
application-‐
layer
messages
(for
example,
an
image
or
a
music
file)
into
smaller
packets
and
sends
the
packets
into
the
network.
The
receiver
then
reassembles
the
packet
back
into
the
original
message.
We
refer
to
this
process
as
message
segmentation.
Figure
1
below
illustrates
the
end-‐to-‐end
transport
of
a
message
with
and
without
message
segmentation.
Consider
a
message
that
is
8*106
bits
long
that
is
to
be
sent
from
source
to
destination.
Suppose
each
link
has
a
maximum
capacity
of
2Mbps.
Ignore
propagation,
queuing,
and
processing
delays.
a. Consider
sending
the
message
from
source
to
destination
without
message
segmentation.
How
long
does
it
take
to
move
the
message
from
the
source
host
to
the
first
packet
switch?
Keeping
in
mind
that
each
switch
uses
store-‐
and-‐forward
packet
switching,
what
is
the
total
time
to
move
the
message
from
source
host
to
destination
host?
b. Now
suppose
that
the
message
is
segmented
into
4,000
packets,
with
each
packet
being
2,000
bits
long.
How
long
does
it
take
to
move
the
first
packet
from
source
host
to
the
first
switch?
When
the
first
packet
is
being
sent
from
the
first
switch
to
the
second
switch,
the
second
packet
is
being
sent
from
the
source
to
the
first
switch.
At
what
time
will
the
second
packet
be
fully
received
at
the
first
switch?
c. How
long
does
it
take
to
move
the
file
from
source
host
to
destination
host
when
message
segmentation
is
used?
Compare
this
result
with
your
answer
in
part
(a)
and
comment.
d. Discuss
the
drawbacks
of
message
segmentation.
Figure
1
Network
for
problem
1
Solution:
a) Time
to
send
message
from
source
host
to
first
packet
switch
=
.
Time
at
which
2nd
packet
is
received
at
the
first
switch
=
time
at
which
1st
packet
is
received
at
the
second
switch
=
c) Time
at
which
1st
packet
is
received
at
the
destination
host
=
.
.
After
this,
every
1msec
one
packet
will
be
received;
thus
time
at
which
last
(4000th)
packet
is
received
=
.
It
can
be
seen
that
delay
in
using
message
segmentation
is
significantly
less
(almost
1/3rd).
d) Drawbacks:
i. Packets
have
to
be
put
in
sequence
at
the
destination.
ii. Message
segmentation
results
in
many
smaller
packets.
Since
header
size
is
usually
the
same
for
all
packets
regardless
of
their
size,
with
message
segmentation
the
total
amount
of
header
bytes
is
more.
Problem
2:
Suppose
within
your
Web
browser
you
click
on
a
link
to
obtain
a
Web
page.
The
IP
address
for
the
associated
URL
is
not
cached
in
your
local
host,
so
a
DNS
lookup
is
necessary
to
obtain
the
IP
address.
Suppose
that
n
DNS
servers
are
visited
before
your
host
receives
the
IP
address
from
DNS;
the
successive
visits
incur
an
RTT
of
RTT1,
…,
RTTn.
Further
suppose
that
the
Web
page
associated
with
the
link
contains
exactly
one
object,
consisting
of
a
small
amount
of
HTML
text.
Let
RTT0
denote
the
RTT
between
the
local
host
and
the
server
containing
the
object.
a. Assuming
zero
transmission
time
of
the
object,
how
much
time
elapses
from
when
the
client
clicks
on
the
link
until
the
client
receives
the
object?
Now
suppose
the
HTML
file
references
eight
very
small
objects
on
the
same
server.
Neglecting
transmission
times,
how
much
time
elapses
with
b. Non-‐persistent
HTTP
with
no
parallel
TCP
connections?
c. Non-‐persistent
HTTP
with
browser
configured
for
5
parallel
connections?
d. Persistent
HTTP?
e. Suppose
you
can
access
the
caches
in
the
local
DNS
servers
of
your
department.
Can
you
propose
a
way
to
roughly
determine
the
Web
servers
(outside
your
department)
that
are
most
popular
among
the
users
in
the
department?
Explain.
Solution:
a. The
total
amount
of
time
to
get
the
IP
address
is
.
Once
the
IP
address
is
known,
elapses
to
set
up
the
TCP
connection
and
another
elapses
to
request
and
receive
the
small
object.
The
total
response
time
is
ECE374:
First
Midterm
3
b. .
c.
d. .
Problem
3:
Consider
sending
a
large
file
from
a
host
to
another
over
a
TCP
connection
that
has
no
loss.
a. Suppose
TCP
uses
AIMD
for
its
congestion
control
without
slow
start.
Assuming
cwnd
increases
by
1
MSS
every
time
a
batch
of
ACKs
is
received
and
assuming
approximately
constant
round-‐trip
times,
how
long
does
it
take
for
cwnd
to
increase
from
5
MSS
to
11
MSS
(assuming
no
loss
events)?
b. What
is
the
average
throughput
(in
terms
of
MSS
and
RTT)
for
this
connection
up
through
time
=
6
RTT?
Solution:
a. It
takes
1
RTT
to
increase
CongWin
to
6
MSS;
2
RTTs
to
increase
to
7
MSS;
3
RTTs
to
increase
to
8
MSS;
4
RTTs
to
increase
to
9
MSS;
5
RTTs
to
increase
to
10
MSS;
and
6
RTTs
to
increase
to
11
MSS.
b. In
the
first
RTT
5
MSS
was
sent;
in
the
second
RTT
6
MSS
was
sent;
in
the
third
RTT
7
MSS
was
sent;
in
the
forth
RTT
8
MSS
was
sent;
in
the
fifth
RTT,
9
MSS
was
sent;
and
in
the
sixth
RTT,
10
MSS
was
sent.
Thus,
up
to
time
6
RTT,
5+6+7+8+9+10
=
45
MSS
were
sent
(and
acknowledged).
Thus,
we
can
say
that
the
average
throughput
up
to
time
6
RTT
was
(45
MSS)/(6
RTT)
=
7.5
MSS/RTT.
Problem
4:
Consider
distributing
a
file
of
F
=
15
Gbits
to
N
peers.
The
server
has
an
upload
rate
of
us
=
30
Mbps,
and
each
peer
has
a
download
rate
of
di
=
2
Mbps
and
an
upload
rate
of
u.
For
N
=
10,
100,
and
1,000
and
u
=
300
Kbps,
700
Kbps,
and
2
Mbps,
prepare
a
chart
giving
the
minimum
distribution
time
for
each
of
the
combination
of
N
and
u
for
both
client-‐server
distribution
and
P2P
distribution.
Solution:
For calculating the minimum distribution time for client-server distribution, we use the
following formula:
Client Server
N
10 100 1000
300 Kbps 7680 51200 512000
u 700 Kbps 7680 51200 512000
2 Mbps 7680 51200 512000
Peer to Peer
N
10 100 1000
300 Kbps 7680 25904 47559
u 700 Kbps 7680 15616 21525
2 Mbps 7680 7680 7680
Problem
5:
Compare
GBN,
SR,
and
TCP
(no
delayed
ACK).
Assume
that
the
timeout
values
for
all
three
protocols
are
sufficiently
long
such
that
5
consecutive
data
segments
and
their
corresponding
ACKs
can
be
received
(if
not
lost
in
the
channel)
by
the
receiving
host
(Host
B)
and
the
sending
host
(Host
A)
respectively.
Suppose
Host
A
sends
5
data
segments
to
Host
B,
and
the
2nd
segment
(sent
from
A)
is
lost.
In
the
end,
all
5
data
segments
have
been
correctly
received
by
Host
B.
a. How
many
segments
has
Host
A
sent
in
total
and
how
many
ACKs
has
Host
B
sent
in
total?
What
are
their
sequence
numbers?
Answer
this
question
for
all
three
protocols.
b. If
the
timeout
values
for
all
three
protocols
are
much
longer
than
5
*
RTT,
then
which
protocol
successfully
delivers
all
five
data
segments
in
shortest
time
interval?
Solution:
a. GoBackN:
A sends 9 segments in total. They are initially sent segments 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 and later
re-sent segments 2, 3, 4, and 5. B sends 8 ACKs. They are 4 ACKS with sequence
number 1, and 4 ACKS with sequence numbers 2, 3, 4, and 5.
Selective Repeat:
A sends 6 segments in total. They are initially sent segments 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 and later
re-sent segments 2. B sends 5 ACKs. They are 4 ACKS with sequence number 1,
3, 4, 5. And there is one ACK with sequence number 2.
TCP:
A sends 6 segments in total. They are initially sent segments 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 and later
ECE374:
First
Midterm
5
re-sent segments 2. B sends 5 ACKs. They are 4 ACKS with sequence number 2.
There is one ACK with sequence numbers 6. Note that TCP always send an ACK
with expected sequence number.
b. TCP. This is because TCP uses fast retransmit without waiting until time out.
Problem
6:
For
this
problem
you
should
familiarize
yourself
with
Figure
2
first.
Now
assume
that
in
the
network
shown
in
Figure
2
two
parallel
TCP
transmissions
are
performed.
TCP1
is
a
transmission
between
Source
A
and
Sink
A
that
uses
TCP
Tahoe.
TCP2
is
a
transmission
between
Source
B
and
Sink
B
that
uses
TCP
Reno.
Initial
ssthresh
for
both
TCP
transmissions
is
set
to
32.
In
this
specific
scenario
no
additional
delay
through
forwarding
is
introduced.
Thus,
the
RTT
is
only
composed
of
the
sums
of
the
delay
indicated
on
each
link,
times
two.
a. For
the
TCP
1
transmission,
draw
the
resulting
congestion
window,
assuming
that
a
packet
loss
(triple
duplicate
ACKs)
is
detected
at
time
t=900ms.
b. For
the
TCP
2
transmission,
draw
the
resulting
congestion
window,
assuming
that
a
packet
loss
(triple
duplicate
ACKs)
is
detected
at
time
t=650ms.
c. Describe
the
benefit
of
TCP
Reno
over
TCP
Tahoe.
Solution:
ECE374:
First
Midterm
7