Local loss recovery for reliable multicast can provide significant performance improvement in terms of loss recovery latency, bandwidth consumption and network throughput. Active reliable multicast (ARM) is a novel loss recovery scheme for large-scale reliable multicast. When sufficient active resources of active routers (ARs) and associated cache are available, ARM gives good loss recovery latency performance. The authors build an analytical model for studying the optimal active resource allocation for ARM. They propose a top-down layering analysis (TDLA) approach to derive the expected loss recovery latency (ELRL). For a given multicast tree, the ELRL is derived as a function of the active resource allocation pattern. Simulation experiments reveal that high performance gains can be attained with limited active resources, which are properly allocated. It is also shown that simulation results have a good match with the analytical results. The analytical framework developed can be used for further investigation of various active resource allocation schemes and caching policies.
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