[Bloat] [Ecn-sane] [iccrg] Fwd: [tcpPrague] Implementation and experimentation of TCP Prague/L4S hackaton at IETF104
Dave Taht
dave.taht at gmail.com
Sat Mar 16 18:03:15 EDT 2019
Dear Vint:
BBR, along with all "non ect_1 sending L4S compatable" transports,
gets relegated to the dualpi "Classic" queue.
https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-ietf-tsvwg-aqm-dualq-coupled/
On Sat, Mar 16, 2019 at 2:57 PM Vint Cerf <vint at google.com> wrote:
>
> where does BBR fit into all this?
>
> v
>
>
> On Sat, Mar 16, 2019 at 5:39 PM Holland, Jake <jholland at akamai.com> wrote:
>>
>> On 2019-03-15, 11:37, "Mikael Abrahamsson" <swmike at swm.pp.se> wrote:
>> L4S has a much better possibility of actually getting deployment into the
>> wider Internet packet-moving equipment than anything being talked about
>> here. Same with PIE as opposed to FQ_CODEL. I know it's might not be as
>> good, but it fits better into actual silicon and it's being proposed by
>> people who actually have better channels into the people setting hard
>> requirements.
>>
>> I suggest you consider joining them instead of opposing them.
>>
>>
>> Hi Mikael,
>>
>> I agree it makes sense that fq_anything has issues when you're talking
>> about the OLT/CMTS/BNG/etc., and I believe it when you tell me PIE
>> makes better sense there.
>>
>> But fq_x makes great sense and provides real value for the uplink in a
>> home, small office, coffee shop, etc. (if you run the final rate limit
>> on the home side of the access link.) I'm thinking maybe there's a
>> disconnect here driven by the different use cases for where AQMs can go.
>>
>> The thing is, each of these is the most likely congestion point at
>> different times, and it's worthwhile for each of them to be able to
>> AQM (and mark packets) under congestion.
>>
>> One of the several things that bothers me with L4S is that I've seen
>> precious little concern over interfering with the ability for another
>> different AQM in-path to mark packets, and because it changes the
>> semantics of CE, you can't have both working at the same time unless
>> they both do L4S.
>>
>> SCE needs a lot of details filled in, but it's so much cleaner that it
>> seems to me there's reasonably obvious answers to all (or almost all) of
>> those detail questions, and because the semantics are so much cleaner,
>> it's much easier to tell it's non-harmful.
>>
>> <aside regarding="non-harmful">
>> The point you raised in another thread about reordering is mostly
>> well-taken, and a good counterpoint to the claim "non-harmful relative
>> to L4S".
>>
>> To me it seems sad and dumb that switches ended up trying to make
>> ordering guarantees at cost of switching performance, because if it's
>> useful to put ordering in the switch, then it must be equally useful to
>> put it in the receiver's NIC or OS.
>>
>> So why isn't it in all the receivers' NIC or OS (where it would render
>> the switch's ordering efforts moot) instead of in all the switches?
>>
>> I'm guessing the answer is a competition trap for the switch vendors,
>> plus "with ordering goes faster than without, when you benchmark the
>> switch with typical load and current (non-RACK) receivers".
>>
>> If that's the case, it seems like the drive for a competitive advantage
>> caused deployment of a packet ordering workaround in the wrong network
>> location(s), out of a pure misalignment of incentives.
>>
>> RACK rates to fix that in the end, but a lot of damage is already done,
>> and the L4S approach gives switches a flag that can double as proof that
>> RACK is there on the receiver, so they can stop trying to order those
>> packets.
>>
>> So point granted, I understand and agree there's a cost to abandoning
>> that advantage.
>> </aside>
>>
>> But as you also said so well in another thread, this is important. ("The
>> last unicorn", IIRC.) How much does it matter if there's a feature that
>> has value today, but only until RACK is widely deployed? If you were
>> convinced RACK would roll out everywhere within 3 years and SCE would
>> produce better results than L4S over the following 15 years, would that
>> change your mind?
>>
>> It would for me, and that's why I'd like to see SCE explored before
>> making a call. I think at its core, it provides the same thing L4S does
>> (a high-fidelity explicit congestion signal for the sender), but with
>> much cleaner semantics that can be incrementally added to congestion
>> controls that people are already using.
>>
>> Granted, it still remains to be seen whether SCE in practice can match
>> the results of L4S, and L4S was here first. But it seems to me L4S comes
>> with some problems that have not yet been examined, and that are nicely
>> dodged by a SCE-based approach.
>>
>> If L4S really is as good as they seem to think, I could imagine getting
>> behind it, but I don't think that's proven yet. I'm not certain, but
>> all the comparative analyses I remember seeing have been from more or
>> less the same team, and I'm not convinced they don't have some
>> misaligned incentives of their own.
>>
>> I understand a lot of work has gone into L4S, but this move to jump it
>> from interesting experiment to de-facto standard without a more critical
>> review that digs deeper into some of the potential deployment problems
>> has me concerned.
>>
>> If it really does turn out to be good enough to be permanent, I'm not
>> opposed to it, but I'm just not convinced that it's non-harmful, and my
>> default position is that the cleaner solution is going to be better in
>> the long run, if they can do the same job.
>>
>> It's not that I want it to be a fight, but I do want to end up with the
>> best solution we can get. We only have the one internet.
>>
>> Just my 2c.
>>
>> -Jake
>>
>>
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Dave Täht
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