Traffic Overflow in Loss Systems with Selective Trunk Reservation
Muhammad El-Taha,
Department of Mathematics and Statistics, University of Southern Maine
John Heath,
Department of Computer Science, University of Southern Maine
Abstract
We consider two traffic streams competing for service at an n-server
queueing system. Jobs from stream 1, the protected stream, are
blocked only
if all n servers are busy. Jobs from stream 2, the best effort
stream, are blocked if n - r, r > 0, servers are busy. Blocked customers
are diverted to a secondary group of c - n servers with, possibly, a
different service rate. For the case r = 1, we calculate the joint
probabilities of the number of primary and secondary busy servers. For
r > 1, we describe a procedure for deriving the joint probabilities.
These probabilities allow for the calculation of various performance
measures including the overflow probabilities of the primary server and
secondary server group. Our model is applicable to traffic control in
communication networks that use the Selective Trunk Reservation method.