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Re: [tor-dev] Fairness between circuits
2011/5/6 Björn Scheuermann <scheuermann@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>:
[...]
> We implemented Tor's scheduling mechanisms, the N23 extension, and our
> fairness mechanism in an event-based network simulator (ns-3).
> Independent from the question of inter-circuit fairness, we were able to
> confirm the key findings in the DefenestraTor tech report with respect
> to N23 based on this independent implementation. Moreover, we found that
> N23 does not solve the fundamental fairness problems - but N23 in
> combination with our fairness mechanism does an excellent job in this
> regard.
>
> We explain all this in much more detail in a paper:
>
> F. Tschorsch, B. Scheuermann: Tor is Unfair - and What to Do About It
> http://robotik.informatik.uni-wuerzburg.de/tr481.pdf
>
> We're hoping for feedback and vivid discussions - we would be really
> interested in bringing these mechanisms into Tor.
Hi! Let me kick the discussion off by asking how your work relates
(if at all!) to:
1) This other work on using N23 with Tor ("DefenstraTor: Throwing
out Windows in Tor" by AlSabah, Bauer, Goldberg, Grunwald, McCoy,
Savage, and Voelker):
http://www.cacr.math.uwaterloo.ca/techreports/2011/cacr2011-06.pdf
(IMO it's a promising sign that two groups seem to be
independently converging on the same basic algorithm family.)
2) The priority-queue-based circuit scheduling code originally
merged in Tor 0.2.2.7-alpha (starting with commit d3be00e0f).
3) Your other scheduling/bandwidth allocation work (ticket 2536)
I'd also be interested in hearing what the DefenestraTor authors think
about above-linked paper and
the topic in general.
yrs,
--
Nick
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