[Ecn-sane] [Bloat] [tsvwg] [iccrg] Fwd: [tcpPrague] Implementation and experimentation of TCP Prague/L4S hackaton at IETF104
Jonathan Morton
chromatix99 at gmail.com
Wed Mar 20 19:28:09 EDT 2019
> On 21 Mar, 2019, at 1:11 am, Holland, Jake <jholland at akamai.com> wrote:
>
> I think it's a fair point that even as close as the non-home side
> of the access network, fq would need a lot of queues, and if you
> want something in hardware it's going to be tricky. I hear
> they're up to an average of ~6k homes per OLT.
I think most of us would be relieved if competent single-queue AQMs became ubiquitous. It doesn't have to be Cake everywhere, just *something* unambiguously better than a dumb FIFO - and that's a rather low bar to clear.
Now, when you have a 6000-channel router, I expect it starts with some very simple and fast device to direct packets in *approximately* the right direction, where some other piece of hardware deals with some subset of the total port count. Let's say you have a 1Gbps+ link to a 64-line cluster. Immediately the problem of providing FQ on each of those lines is more tractable; you can give each one 1024 queues and AQMs, the same as fq_codel, for a quite manageable total of 65536, and it's not so hard to build hardware that can keep up with 1Gbps traffic these days.
- Jonathan Morton
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