Not quite UDP, but RTP congestion avoidance is being worked on in the IETF. Please join us - http://datatracker.ietf.org/wg/rmcat/charter/

Kevin Gross
+1-303-447-0517
Media Network Consultant
AVA Networks - www.AVAnw.comwww.X192.org


On Thu, May 2, 2013 at 5:44 AM, Forums1000 <forums1000@gmail.com> wrote:
I hope I can get a bit more information on what comprises the total solution. But knitting it together proves a bit hard (for me at least). Without this, it is hard to follow the discussions on the list. Has anyone made a summary of how all of this works together?

So:

1. In order to move the bottleneck to a device under our administrative control, we need to shape traffic (we need to become the bottleneck).
2. Next, we have the AQM-algorithms that manage the (or a) queue.
3. And then there are still issues with multiple flows and with UDP?

From what I understand, we need to shape traffic, and then drop packets taking into account that the most aggressive flow (the flow that contributes the most to filling a buffer), is the flow that will get the most packets dropped. This to prevent the aggressive flow from impacting flows that behave better.

Now for UDP, is the problem here that we cannot identify flows, and hence, only have one queue for UDP whereas for TCP we can have multiple?

Any good resources are more than welcome:-)!

Thanks,
Jeroen

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