Prakash D. Vyavahare

Work place: Department of Electronics & Telecommunication Engineering, Shri Govindram Seksaria Institute of Technology and Science, 23 Sir M. Visvesvaraya Marg, Indore, Madhya Pradesh 452003, India

E-mail: prakash@sgsits.ac.in

Website:

Research Interests: Computational Science and Engineering, Computational Engineering, Engineering

Biography

Prakash D.Vyavahare received his M.Tech and Ph.D. degrees in Electronics Engineering from IIT Mumbai in 1976 and 1995 respectively. He worked at Tata Institute of Fundamental Research, Mumbai as communication engineer during 1976 to 1982. He was associate of ICTP (UNESCO organization), Trieste, Italy during 1998 to 2005. He is currently working as Professor in Department of Electronics and Telecommunications Engineering, Shri Govindram Seksaria Institute of Technology and Science, Indore, India. His research interests include channel coding, channel modeling, cross layer design issues and secure communication.

Author Articles
Study on QoS Gains in Migration from IPv4 to IPv6 Internet

By Shailendra S. Tomar Anil Rawat Prakash D. Vyavahare Sanjiv Tokekar

DOI: https://doi.org/10.5815/ijitcs.2017.05.01, Pub. Date: 8 May 2017

IPv6 has features, like a) "no header checksum calculation" and b) "no IP packet fragmentation at intermediate routers", which makes it better than IPv4 from router/routing point of view. Existing Internet technology supports both IPv6 and IPv4 protocols for transport of packets and hence dual addressed machines are widely present. Maximizing QoS in IPv6 networks, as compared to IPv4 networks, for sites having dual addresses is an active area of research. Results of our study on QoS gains in networks connected to IPv6 Internet as compared to IPv4 Internet for a network of about 2500 nodes are presented here. The technique used to estimate QoS gains in the migration from IPv4 to IPv6 is also presented. The test-bed data of one month with 25000 most visited websites was analyzed. The results show that an alternate IPv6 channel exists for a large number of major global websites and substantial QoS gains in terms of reduced access times – averaging up to 35% for some websites - can be expected by intelligent per site IP address selection for dual stack machines.

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