In queueing theory, a discipline within the mathematical theory of probability, a Kelly network is a general multiclass queueing network.[1] In the network each node is quasireversible and the network has a product-form stationary distribution, much like the single-class Jackson network.
The model is named after Frank Kelly who first introduced the model in 1975 in his paper Networks of Queues with Customers of Different Types.[2]
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Single queueing nodes | |
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Arrival processes | |
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Queueing networks | |
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Service policies | |
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Key concepts | |
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Limit theorems | |
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Extensions | |
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Information systems | |
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