Abstract
We measure and analyze the single-hop packet delay through operational routers in a backbone IP network. First we present our delay measurements through a single router. Then we identify step-by-step the factors contributing to single-hop delay. In addition to packet processing, transmission, and queueing delays, we identify the presence of very large delays due to non-work-conserving router behavior. We use a simple output queue model to separate those delay components. Our step-by-step methodology used to ohtain the pure queueing delay is easily applicable to any single-hop delay measurements. After obtaining the queueing delay, we analyze the tail of its distribution, and find that it is long tailed and fits a Weihull distrihution with the scale parameter, a = 0.5, and the shape parameter, b = 0.58 to 0.6. The measured average queueing delay is larger than predicted by M/M/l, M/G/l, and FBM models when the link utilization is below 70%, but its absolute value is quite small.