BECN$504617$ - traducción al español
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BECN$504617$ - traducción al español

REDUCED QUALITY OF SERVICE DUE TO HIGH TRAFFIC ON A COMPUTER NETWORK
Network congestion avoidance; Congestion collapse; Congestion Control; Congestive collapse; Congestion avoidance; Congestion control; Network constipation; BECN; Network congestion-avoidance; Backward ECN; Congestion control algorithm

BECN      
bit (simple unidad básica de información) enviado por una red de transmisión a un equipo terminal de información para indicar que el dispositivo de envío debe reducir la velocidad del paquete de información o deberá comenzar algún procedimiento para evitar el congestionamiento en la red (Telecomunicaciones)

Definición

BECN
Backward Explicit Congestion Notification (Reference: ATM)

Wikipedia

Network congestion

Network congestion in data networking and queueing theory is the reduced quality of service that occurs when a network node or link is carrying more data than it can handle. Typical effects include queueing delay, packet loss or the blocking of new connections. A consequence of congestion is that an incremental increase in offered load leads either only to a small increase or even a decrease in network throughput.

Network protocols that use aggressive retransmissions to compensate for packet loss due to congestion can increase congestion, even after the initial load has been reduced to a level that would not normally have induced network congestion. Such networks exhibit two stable states under the same level of load. The stable state with low throughput is known as congestive collapse.

Networks use congestion control and congestion avoidance techniques to try to avoid collapse. These include: exponential backoff in protocols such as CSMA/CA in 802.11 and the similar CSMA/CD in the original Ethernet, window reduction in TCP, and fair queueing in devices such as routers and network switches. Other techniques that address congestion include priority schemes which transmit some packets with higher priority ahead of others and the explicit allocation of network resources to specific flows through the use of admission control.