[Bloat] Little's Law mea culpa, but not invalidating my main point
Bob McMahon
bob.mcmahon at broadcom.com
Tue Jul 13 13:22:34 EDT 2021
"the infinite TCP flow that converges to a steady behavior is purely
academic"
We find this to be mostly true. Sadly, the tools such as iperf drove to
this condition. While still useful, not realistic.
We added, in iperf 2, the ability to test TCP bursts (--burst-size and
--burst-period) over low duty cycles and get completely different sets of
phenomena with TCP.
It seems (past) time that peak average throughput driving the control loop
needs reconsideration, particularly if TCP_NODELAY is set on a socket. This
is particularly challenging for WiFi because "requests for low latency"
usually triggers no aggregation which doesn't always reduce tail latencies.
Bob
On Tue, Jul 13, 2021 at 12:15 AM Amr Rizk <amr at rizk.com.de> wrote:
> Ben,
>
> it depends on what one tries to measure. Doing a rate scan using UDP (to
> measure latency distributions under load) is the best thing that we have
> but without actually knowing how resources are shared (fair share as in
> WiFi, FIFO as nearly everywhere else) it becomes very difficult to
> interpret the results or provide a proper argument on latency. You are
> right - TCP stats are a proxy for user experience but I believe they are
> difficult to reproduce (we are always talking about very short TCP flows -
> the infinite TCP flow that converges to a steady behavior is purely
> academic).
>
> By the way, Little's law is a strong tool when it comes to averages. To be
> able to say more (e.g. 1% of the delays is larger than x) one requires more
> information (e.g. the traffic - On-OFF pattern) see [1]. I am not sure
> when does such information readily exist.
>
> Best
> Amr
>
> [1] https://dl.acm.org/doi/10.1145/3341617.3326146 or if behind a paywall
> https://www.dcs.warwick.ac.uk/~florin/lib/sigmet19b.pdf
>
> --------------------------------
> Amr Rizk (amr.rizk at uni-due.de)
> University of Duisburg-Essen
>
> -----Ursprüngliche Nachricht-----
> Von: Bloat <bloat-bounces at lists.bufferbloat.net> Im Auftrag von Ben Greear
> Gesendet: Montag, 12. Juli 2021 22:32
> An: Bob McMahon <bob.mcmahon at broadcom.com>
> Cc: starlink at lists.bufferbloat.net; Make-Wifi-fast <
> make-wifi-fast at lists.bufferbloat.net>; Leonard Kleinrock <lk at cs.ucla.edu>;
> David P. Reed <dpreed at deepplum.com>; Cake List <cake at lists.bufferbloat.net>;
> codel at lists.bufferbloat.net; cerowrt-devel <
> cerowrt-devel at lists.bufferbloat.net>; bloat <bloat at lists.bufferbloat.net>
> Betreff: Re: [Bloat] Little's Law mea culpa, but not invalidating my main
> point
>
> UDP is better for getting actual packet latency, for sure. TCP is
> typical-user-experience-latency though, so it is also useful.
>
> I'm interested in the test and visualization side of this. If there were
> a way to give engineers a good real-time look at a complex real-world
> network, then they have something to go on while trying to tune various
> knobs in their network to improve it.
>
> I'll let others try to figure out how build and tune the knobs, but the
> data acquisition and visualization is something we might try to
> accomplish. I have a feeling I'm not the first person to think of this,
> however....probably someone already has done such a thing.
>
> Thanks,
> Ben
>
> On 7/12/21 1:04 PM, Bob McMahon wrote:
> > I believe end host's TCP stats are insufficient as seen per the
> > "failed" congested control mechanisms over the last decades. I think
> > Jaffe pointed this out in
> > 1979 though he was using what's been deemed on this thread as "spherical
> cow queueing theory."
> >
> > "Flow control in store-and-forward computer networks is appropriate
> > for decentralized execution. A formal description of a class of
> > "decentralized flow control algorithms" is given. The feasibility of
> > maximizing power with such algorithms is investigated. On the
> > assumption that communication links behave like M/M/1 servers it is
> shown that no "decentralized flow control algorithm" can maximize network
> power. Power has been suggested in the literature as a network performance
> objective. It is also shown that no objective based only on the users'
> throughputs and average delay is decentralizable. Finally, a restricted
> class of algorithms cannot even approximate power."
> >
> > https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/1095152
> >
> > Did Jaffe make a mistake?
> >
> > Also, it's been observed that latency is non-parametric in it's
> > distributions and computing gaussians per the central limit theorem
> > for OWD feedback loops aren't effective. How does one design a control
> loop around things that are non-parametric? It also begs the question, what
> are the feed forward knobs that can actually help?
> >
> > Bob
> >
> > On Mon, Jul 12, 2021 at 12:07 PM Ben Greear <greearb at candelatech.com
> <mailto:greearb at candelatech.com>> wrote:
> >
> > Measuring one or a few links provides a bit of data, but seems like
> if someone is trying to understand
> > a large and real network, then the OWD between point A and B needs
> to just be input into something much
> > more grand. Assuming real-time OWD data exists between 100 to 1000
> endpoint pairs, has anyone found a way
> > to visualize this in a useful manner?
> >
> > Also, considering something better than ntp may not really scale to
> 1000+ endpoints, maybe round-trip
> > time is only viable way to get this type of data. In that case,
> maybe clever logic could use things
> > like trace-route to get some idea of how long it takes to get 'onto'
> the internet proper, and so estimate
> > the last-mile latency. My assumption is that the last-mile latency
> is where most of the pervasive
> > assymetric network latencies would exist (or just ping 8.8.8.8 which
> is 20ms from everywhere due to
> > $magic).
> >
> > Endpoints could also triangulate a bit if needed, using some anchor
> points in the network
> > under test.
> >
> > Thanks,
> > Ben
> >
> > On 7/12/21 11:21 AM, Bob McMahon wrote:
> > > iperf 2 supports OWD and gives full histograms for TCP write to
> read, TCP connect times, latency of packets (with UDP), latency of "frames"
> with
> > > simulated video traffic (TCP and UDP), xfer times of bursts with
> low duty cycle traffic, and TCP RTT (sampling based.) It also has support
> for sampling (per
> > > interval reports) down to 100 usecs if configured with
> --enable-fastsampling, otherwise the fastest sampling is 5 ms. We've
> released all this as open source.
> > >
> > > OWD only works if the end realtime clocks are synchronized using
> a "machine level" protocol such as IEEE 1588 or PTP. Sadly, *most data
> centers don't
> > provide
> > > sufficient level of clock accuracy and the GPS pulse per second *
> to colo and vm customers.
> > >
> > > https://iperf2.sourceforge.io/iperf-manpage.html
> > >
> > > Bob
> > >
> > > On Mon, Jul 12, 2021 at 10:40 AM David P. Reed <
> dpreed at deepplum.com <mailto:dpreed at deepplum.com> <mailto:
> dpreed at deepplum.com
> > <mailto:dpreed at deepplum.com>>> wrote:
> > >
> > >
> > > On Monday, July 12, 2021 9:46am, "Livingood, Jason" <
> Jason_Livingood at comcast.com <mailto:Jason_Livingood at comcast.com>
> > <mailto:Jason_Livingood at comcast.com <mailto:
> Jason_Livingood at comcast.com>>> said:
> > >
> > > > I think latency/delay is becoming seen to be as important
> certainly, if not a more direct proxy for end user QoE. This is all still
> evolving and I
> > have
> > > to say is a super interesting & fun thing to work on. :-)
> > >
> > > If I could manage to sell one idea to the management
> hierarchy of communications industry CEOs (operators, vendors, ...) it is
> this one:
> > >
> > > "It's the end-to-end latency, stupid!"
> > >
> > > And I mean, by end-to-end, latency to complete a task at a
> relevant layer of abstraction.
> > >
> > > At the link level, it's packet send to packet receive
> completion.
> > >
> > > But at the transport level including retransmission buffers,
> it's datagram (or message) origination until the acknowledgement arrives
> for that
> > message being
> > > delivered after whatever number of retransmissions, freeing
> the retransmission buffer.
> > >
> > > At the WWW level, it's mouse click to display update
> corresponding to completion of the request.
> > >
> > > What should be noted is that lower level latencies don't
> directly predict the magnitude of higher-level latencies. But longer lower
> level latencies
> > almost
> > > always amplfify higher level latencies. Often non-linearly.
> > >
> > > Throughput is very, very weakly related to these latencies,
> in contrast.
> > >
> > > The amplification process has to do with the presence of
> queueing. Queueing is ALWAYS bad for latency, and throughput only helps if
> it is in exactly the
> > > right place (the so-called input queue of the bottleneck
> process, which is often a link, but not always).
> > >
> > > Can we get that slogan into Harvard Business Review? Can we
> get it taught in Managerial Accounting at HBS? (which does address
> logistics/supply chain
> > queueing).
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > >
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> >
> > --
> > Ben Greear <greearb at candelatech.com <mailto:greearb at candelatech.com
> >>
> > Candela Technologies Inc http://www.candelatech.com
> >
> >
> > This electronic communication and the information and any files
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>
> --
> Ben Greear <greearb at candelatech.com>
> Candela Technologies Inc http://www.candelatech.com
>
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