On the Flow-level Dynamics of a Packet-switched Network.

link: http://arxiv.org/abs/1003.0929
Abstract

The packet is the fundamental unit of transportation in modern communication
networks such as the Internet. Physical layer scheduling decisions are made at
the level of packets, and packet-level models with exogenous arrival processes
have long been employed to study network performance, as well as design
scheduling policies that more efficiently utilize network resources. On the
other hand, a user of the network is more concerned with end-to-end bandwidth,
which is allocated through congestion control policies such as TCP.
Utility-based flow-level models have played an important role in understanding
congestion control protocols. In summary, these two classes of models have
provided separate insights for flow-level and packet-level dynamics of a
network.