Hi Dave, Yes definitely, when fair-queuing is present, the onus is no longer on the congestion control algorithm to ensure fairness. In fact, if buffer-sharing is implemented correctly, FQ can even stand against adversarial congestion control algorithms. We have good reason to believe that end-to-end congestion control algorithms can provably work (i.e. achieve high utilization, bounded delay and fairness) in the presence of FQ. Cheers, Venkat On Fri, Aug 5, 2022 at 12:36 AM Dave Taht wrote: > Perhaps it's obvious to the authors that FQ opens up new possibilities > for delay based convergence. Otherwise, pretty good: > > "We prove that when two flows using the same CCA share a bottleneck > link, if the non-congestive delay variations exceed double the > difference between the maximum and minimum queueing delay at > equilibrium, then there are patterns of non-congestive delay where one > flow will get arbitrarily low throughput compared to the other. Our > theorem shows that CCAs have > to choose at most two out of three properties: high through put, > convergence to a small and bounded delay range, and no starvation." > > Paper: http://people.csail.mit.edu/venkatar/cc-starvation.pdf > > Article: > https://news.mit.edu/2022/algorithm-computer-network-bandwidth-0804 > > > > -- > FQ World Domination pending: > https://blog.cerowrt.org/post/state_of_fq_codel/ > Dave Täht CEO, TekLibre, LLC >