Constant Gbaguidi
École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne
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Featured researches published by Constant Gbaguidi.
Computer Networks | 1999
Jean-Pierre Hubaux; Constant Gbaguidi; Shawn Koppenhoefer; Jean-Yves Le Boudec
The ever-growing popularity of the Internet is dramatically changing the landscape of the communications marketplace. The two separate worlds of the Internet and Telecommunications are converging. The respective advantages of the two environments are being integrated to fulfill the promise of the information super-highways. In this paper, we examine the impact of the Internet on the main telecommunication architectures, namely the IN, the TMN and TINA. There are two new tendencies for implementing telephony services in combination with the Internet: running part of the control system over the Internet, or conveying both the user data and the control information over the Internet. We examine these two trends, and elaborate on possible ways of salvaging the best parts of the work achieved by the TINA-Consortium in the Internet context.
IEEE Communications Magazine | 1999
Constant Gbaguidi; Jean-Pierre Hubaux; Maher Hamdi; Asser N. Tantawi
The success of new service provision platforms will largely depend on their ability to blend with existing technologies. The advent of Internet telephony, although impressive, is unlikely to make telephone customers suddenly turn in favor of computers. Rather, customers display increasing interest in services that span multiple networks (especially Internet protocol-based networks and the telephone and cellular networks) and open new vistas. We refer to these services as hybrid services and propose an architecture for their provision. This architecture allows for programming the service platform elements (i.e., network nodes, gateways, control servers, and terminals) in order to include new service logics. We identify components that can be assembled to build these logics by considering a service as a composition of features such as address translation, security, call control, connectivity, charging, and user interaction. Generic service components are derived from the modeling of these features. We assure that our proposal can be implemented even in existing systems in return for slight changes. These systems are required to generate an event when a special service is encountered. The treatment of this event is handled by an object at a Java service layer. Java has been chosen for its platform-neutrality property and its embedded security mechanisms. Using our architecture, we design a hybrid closed user group service.
IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communications | 1999
Constant Gbaguidi; Jean-Pierre Hubaux; Giovanni Pacifici; Asser N. Tantawi
We propose an architecture for hybrid services, i.e., services that span many network technologies, such as the public switched telephone network (PSTN), cellular networks, and networks based on IP. These services will play an important role in the future because they leverage on the existing infrastructures rather than requiring new and sophisticated mechanisms to be deployed. We explore a few issues related to hybrid services and propose a platform as well as a set of components to facilitate their creation and deployment. The existing infrastructure is only required to generate specific events when requests for hybrid services are detected. We present the design of a service layer, based on Java, that handles the treatment of these special requests. Our service layer is provided with a set of generic components realized according to the JavaBeans model. We illustrate the strength of our architecture by discussing two hybrid-service examples: a calendar service and a call forwarding service.
1999 IEEE Second Conference on Open Architectures and Network Programming. Proceedings. OPENARCH '99 (Cat. No.99EX252) | 1999
Constant Gbaguidi; Jean-Pierre Hubaux; Giovanni Pacifici; Asser N. Tantawi
We propose an architecture for hybrid services, i.e., services that span many network technologies, especially the PSTPN and the Internet. These services will play an important role in the future, because they leverage on the existing infrastructures, rather than requiring brand new and sophisticated mechanisms to be deployed. We explore a few issues related to hybrid services and propose a platform, as well as a set of components, to facilitate their creation and deployment. The existing infrastructure is only required to generate specific events when requests for hybrid services are detected. We present the design of a service layer based on Java that handles the treatment of these special requests. Our service layer is provided with a set of generic components realized as Java Beans. Hence, we can provide hybrid services without changing the existing infrastructure. We illustrate this strength of our architecture by discussing the call forwarding service.
IFIP Conference on Intelligent Networks and New Technologies ( IFIP IN) | 1997
Constant Gbaguidi; Simon Znaty; Jean-Pierre Hubaux
With rapid advances in multimedia processing technologies, and in high bandwidth network technologies, new kinds of multimedia applications are now emerging. These applications require real-time, multimedia, and multipoint interactions involving multiple communicating entities and leading to a need of more sophisticated communication control functionalities. In this paper, a generic integrated and flexible service management architecture for multimedia multipoint communications is proposed, which offers three main generic functions, namely Quality of Service (QoS) negotiation, QoS monitoring and control, and session management.
IFIP/ICCC Int`l Conf. on Information Network and Data Communication (INDC) | 1996
Constant Gbaguidi; Simon Znaty; Jean-Pierre Hubaux; Olivier Verscheure
New open service architectures provide a management framework for telecommunications services, telecommunications networks and computing resources. However, the introduction of multimedia applications in these architectures will require the management of the underlying multimedia resources (e.g., codecs, converters, etc). Multimedia resources are the basic components that support multimedia communications. In this paper, we tackle this issue by proposing a generic management information model for multimedia resources and then instantiate it for the management of an MPEG2 video codec. This information model provides a data representation of the multimedia resources in order to manage them efficiently.
Proceedings of the IEEE/IFIP TC6/WG6.4/WG6.6 International Conference on Management of Multimedia Networks and Services | 1997
Constant Gbaguidi; Olivier Verscheure; Jean-Pierre Hubaux
Accounting for the perceiving conditions that make up the delivery environment of an application helps improve the efficiency of QoS provisioning systems. It is useless to transmit information whose absence cannot be noticed by the end-user under the actual perceiving conditions. Until now, QoS architectures mostly focused on the transport system and did not integrate the studies achieved in the psychophysics area. In this paper, we propose a QoS framework that accounts for the perceiving conditions. Moreover, our framework is both flexible - i.e., customizable at will by the manager - and modular, with a clear and fine-grained layering. New mechanisms and their supporting characteristics, such as experimental curves, may be very easily introduced and managed in the proposed architecture. A case study is carried out, which shows the applicability of the framework for a video-on-demand provisioning system.
global communications conference | 1996
Constant Gbaguidi; Simon Znaty; Jean-Pierre Hubaux
In this paper, we split the service management layer, as defined in the telecommunication management network (TMN), into two sublayers, namely the service application management sublayer and the service network management sublayer. The former deals with managing the mapping of the non functional requirements into functional constraints over the telecommunication service of interest, while the second reveals the management details related to meeting the functional requirements over that service. At each sublayer, we propose an information model and emphasize the correspondence with the other sublayer.
Archive | 1998
Constant Gbaguidi; Hans Joachim Einsiedler; Paul Hurley; Werner Almesberger; Jean-Pierre Hubaux
Journal of Network and Systems Management | 1998
Constant Gbaguidi; Simon Znaty; Jean-Pierre Hubaux
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École nationale supérieure des télécommunications de Bretagne
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