Asynchronous Layered Coding: Difference between revisions

Content deleted Content added
Xizhi.zhu (talk | contribs)
 
(9 intermediate revisions by 6 users not shown)
Line 1:
'''Asynchronous Layered Coding''' ('''ALC''') is an [[Internet]] protocol ofsuite|Internet the [[IETFprotocol]] specifiedfor content delivery in a reliable, massively scalable, multiple-rate, and congestion-controlled manner. Specified in [http://www.rfc-archive.org/getrfc.php?rfc=34505775 RFC 34505775], andit described as a massively scalable reliable content delivery protocol. It was adopted asis an experimental protocol in December 2002 and still is as of[[IETF]] Januaryproposed 2006standard.
 
The protocol
Asynchronous Layered Coding (ALC)is a massively scalable
reliable content delivery protocol, for multiple
rate congestion controlled reliable content delivery. The protocol
is specifically designed to provide massive scalability using IP
[[multicast]] as the underlying network service. Massive scalability in
this context means the number of concurrent receivers for an object
is potentially in the millions, the aggregate size of objects to be
Line 45 ⟶ 43:
== Implementations ==
*[http://mad.cs.tut.fi/ Tampere University of Technology MAD/TUT]
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20110719184443/https://prj.tzi.org/cgi-bin/trac.cgi/wiki/Papageno TZI Papageno]
*[http://planete-bcast.inrialpes.fr/rubriquerubrique272c.php3?id_rubrique=2html INRIA]
 
[[Category:Internet protocols]]
 
 
{{Internet-stub}}