StreamGuard: Exploring a 5G Architecture for Efficient, Quality of Experience-Aware Video Conferencing

Abstract

Video conferencing over 5G is increasingly prevalent, yet its Quality of Experience (QoE) often degrades under limited radio resources. This has two causes: 5G networks must serve many users, while interactive traffic requires careful handling. Motivated by the insight that different subflows within an interactive session have a disproportionate effect on QoE, we present the design and implementation of StreamGuard, a practical 5G architecture for subflow-level, QoE-aware prioritization. StreamGuard forms a closed control loop with three components: (1) a monitor in the Radio Access Network (RAN) that uses deep packet inspection to infer QoE and RAN state, (2) a controller that selects prioritization actions to balance QoE and fairness, and (3) a marking module that applies these decisions by marking packets to steer subflows into appropriate priority queues. StreamGuard further shapes application behaviors via mechanisms including selective subflow dropping and probe-based rate control, to align application behavior with radio constraints. Implemented in a real 5G testbed, StreamGuard achieves a superior QoE-fairness tradeoff compared to vanilla 5G and prior state-of-the-art approaches, improving QoE by up to 70% at comparable background throughput or preserving up to 2x higher background throughput at similar QoE.

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