2017 Volume E100.B Issue 8 Pages 1377-1387
For network researchers and practitioners, active measurement, in which probe packets are injected into a network, is a powerful tool to measure end-to-end delay. It is, however, suffers the intrusiveness problem, where the load of the probe traffic itself affects the network QoS. In this paper, we first demonstrate that there exists a fundamental accuracy bound of the conventional active measurement of delay. Second, to transcend that bound, we propose INTrusiveness-aware ESTimation (INTEST), an approach that compensates for the delays produced by probe packets in wired networks. Simulations of M/M/1 and MMPP/M/1 show that INTEST enables a more accurate estimation of end-to-end delay than conventional methods. Furthermore, we extend INTEST for multi-hop networks by using timestamps or multi-flow probes.