[Rpm] [Starlink] Researchers Seeking Probe Volunteers in USA

Dave Taht dave.taht at gmail.com
Mon Jan 9 15:59:45 EST 2023


On Mon, Jan 9, 2023 at 12:46 PM rjmcmahon <rjmcmahon at rjmcmahon.com> wrote:
>
> The write to read latencies (OWD) are on the server side in CLT form.
> Use --histograms on the server side to enable them.

Thx. It is far more difficult to instrument things on the server side
of the testbed but we will tackle it.

> Your client side sampled TCP RTT is 6ms with less than a 1 ms of
> variance (or sqrt of variance as variance is typically squared)  No
> retries suggest the network isn't dropping packets.

Thank you for analyzing that result. the cake aqm, set for a 5ms
target, with RFC3168-style ECN, is enabled on this path, on this
setup, at the moment. So the result is correct.

A second test with ecn off showed the expected retries.

I have emulations also of fifos, pie, fq-pie, fq-codel, red, blue,
sfq, with various realworld delays, and so on... but this is a bit
distracting at the moment from our focus, which was in optimizing the
XDP + ebpf based bridge and epping based sampling tools to crack
25Gbit.

I think iperf2 will be great for us after that settles down.

> All the newer bounceback code is only master and requires a compile from
> source. It will be released in 2.1.9 after testing cycles. Hopefully, in
> early March 2023

I would like to somehow parse and present those histograms.
>
> Bob
>
> https://sourceforge.net/projects/iperf2/
>
> > The DC that so graciously loaned us 3 machines for the testbed (thx
> > equinix!), does support ptp, but we have not configured it yet. In ntp
> > tests between these hosts we seem to be within 500us, and certainly
> > 50us would be great, in the future.
> >
> > I note that in all my kvetching about the new tests' needing
> > validation today... I kind of elided that I'm pretty happy with
> > iperf2's new tests that landed last august, and are now appearing in
> > linux package managers around the world. I hope more folk use them.
> > (sorry robert, it's been a long time since last august!)
> >
> > Our new testbed has multiple setups. In one setup - basically the
> > machine name is equal to a given ISP plan, and a key testing point is
> > looking at the differences between the FCC 25-3 and 100/20 plans in
> > the real world. However at our scale (25gbit) it turned out that
> > emulating the delay realistically has problematic.
> >
> > Anyway, here's a 25/3 result for iperf (other results and iperf test
> > type requests gladly accepted)
> >
> > root at lqos:~# iperf -6 --trip-times -c c25-3 -e -i 1
> > ------------------------------------------------------------
> > Client connecting to c25-3, TCP port 5001 with pid 2146556 (1 flows)
> > Write buffer size: 131072 Byte
> > TOS set to 0x0 (Nagle on)
> > TCP window size: 85.3 KByte (default)
> > ------------------------------------------------------------
> > [  1] local fd77::3%bond0.4 port 59396 connected with fd77::1:2 port
> > 5001 (trip-times) (sock=3) (icwnd/mss/irtt=13/1428/948) (ct=1.10 ms)
> > on 2023-01-09 20:13:37 (UTC)
> > [ ID] Interval            Transfer    Bandwidth       Write/Err  Rtry
> >    Cwnd/RTT(var)        NetPwr
> > [  1] 0.0000-1.0000 sec  3.25 MBytes  27.3 Mbits/sec  26/0          0
> >      19K/6066(262) us  562
> > [  1] 1.0000-2.0000 sec  3.00 MBytes  25.2 Mbits/sec  24/0          0
> >      15K/4671(207) us  673
> > [  1] 2.0000-3.0000 sec  3.00 MBytes  25.2 Mbits/sec  24/0          0
> >      13K/5538(280) us  568
> > [  1] 3.0000-4.0000 sec  3.12 MBytes  26.2 Mbits/sec  25/0          0
> >      16K/6244(355) us  525
> > [  1] 4.0000-5.0000 sec  3.00 MBytes  25.2 Mbits/sec  24/0          0
> >      19K/6152(216) us  511
> > [  1] 5.0000-6.0000 sec  3.00 MBytes  25.2 Mbits/sec  24/0          0
> >      22K/6764(529) us  465
> > [  1] 6.0000-7.0000 sec  3.12 MBytes  26.2 Mbits/sec  25/0          0
> >      15K/5918(605) us  554
> > [  1] 7.0000-8.0000 sec  3.00 MBytes  25.2 Mbits/sec  24/0          0
> >      18K/5178(327) us  608
> > [  1] 8.0000-9.0000 sec  3.00 MBytes  25.2 Mbits/sec  24/0          0
> >      19K/5758(473) us  546
> > [  1] 9.0000-10.0000 sec  3.00 MBytes  25.2 Mbits/sec  24/0          0
> >       16K/6141(280) us  512
> > [  1] 0.0000-10.0952 sec  30.6 MBytes  25.4 Mbits/sec  245/0
> > 0       19K/5924(491) us  537
> >
> >
> > On Mon, Jan 9, 2023 at 11:13 AM rjmcmahon <rjmcmahon at rjmcmahon.com>
> > wrote:
> >>
> >> My biggest barrier is the lack of clock sync by the devices, i.e. very
> >> limited support for PTP in data centers and in end devices. This
> >> limits
> >> the ability to measure one way delays (OWD) and most assume that OWD
> >> is
> >> 1/2 and RTT which typically is a mistake. We know this intuitively
> >> with
> >> airplane flight times or even car commute times where the one way time
> >> is not 1/2 a round trip time. Google maps & directions provide a time
> >> estimate for the one way link. It doesn't compute a round trip and
> >> divide by two.
> >>
> >> For those that can get clock sync working, the iperf 2 --trip-times
> >> options is useful.
> >>
> >> --trip-times
> >>    enable the measurement of end to end write to read latencies
> >> (client
> >> and server clocks must be synchronized)
> >>
> >> Bob
> >> > I have many kvetches about the new latency under load tests being
> >> > designed and distributed over the past year. I am delighted! that they
> >> > are happening, but most really need third party evaluation, and
> >> > calibration, and a solid explanation of what network pathologies they
> >> > do and don't cover. Also a RED team attitude towards them, as well as
> >> > thinking hard about what you are not measuring (operations research).
> >> >
> >> > I actually rather love the new cloudflare speedtest, because it tests
> >> > a single TCP connection, rather than dozens, and at the same time folk
> >> > are complaining that it doesn't find the actual "speed!". yet... the
> >> > test itself more closely emulates a user experience than speedtest.net
> >> > does. I am personally pretty convinced that the fewer numbers of flows
> >> > that a web page opens improves the likelihood of a good user
> >> > experience, but lack data on it.
> >> >
> >> > To try to tackle the evaluation and calibration part, I've reached out
> >> > to all the new test designers in the hope that we could get together
> >> > and produce a report of what each new test is actually doing. I've
> >> > tweeted, linked in, emailed, and spammed every measurement list I know
> >> > of, and only to some response, please reach out to other test designer
> >> > folks and have them join the rpm email list?
> >> >
> >> > My principal kvetches in the new tests so far are:
> >> >
> >> > 0) None of the tests last long enough.
> >> >
> >> > Ideally there should be a mode where they at least run to "time of
> >> > first loss", or periodically, just run longer than the
> >> > industry-stupid^H^H^H^H^H^Hstandard 20 seconds. There be dragons
> >> > there! It's really bad science to optimize the internet for 20
> >> > seconds. It's like optimizing a car, to handle well, for just 20
> >> > seconds.
> >> >
> >> > 1) Not testing up + down + ping at the same time
> >> >
> >> > None of the new tests actually test the same thing that the infamous
> >> > rrul test does - all the others still test up, then down, and ping. It
> >> > was/remains my hope that the simpler parts of the flent test suite -
> >> > such as the tcp_up_squarewave tests, the rrul test, and the rtt_fair
> >> > tests would provide calibration to the test designers.
> >> >
> >> > we've got zillions of flent results in the archive published here:
> >> > https://blog.cerowrt.org/post/found_in_flent/
> >> > ps. Misinformation about iperf 2 impacts my ability to do this.
> >>
> >> > The new tests have all added up + ping and down + ping, but not up +
> >> > down + ping. Why??
> >> >
> >> > The behaviors of what happens in that case are really non-intuitive, I
> >> > know, but... it's just one more phase to add to any one of those new
> >> > tests. I'd be deliriously happy if someone(s) new to the field
> >> > started doing that, even optionally, and boggled at how it defeated
> >> > their assumptions.
> >> >
> >> > Among other things that would show...
> >> >
> >> > It's the home router industry's dirty secret than darn few "gigabit"
> >> > home routers can actually forward in both directions at a gigabit. I'd
> >> > like to smash that perception thoroughly, but given our starting point
> >> > is a gigabit router was a "gigabit switch" - and historically been
> >> > something that couldn't even forward at 200Mbit - we have a long way
> >> > to go there.
> >> >
> >> > Only in the past year have non-x86 home routers appeared that could
> >> > actually do a gbit in both directions.
> >> >
> >> > 2) Few are actually testing within-stream latency
> >> >
> >> > Apple's rpm project is making a stab in that direction. It looks
> >> > highly likely, that with a little more work, crusader and
> >> > go-responsiveness can finally start sampling the tcp RTT, loss and
> >> > markings, more directly. As for the rest... sampling TCP_INFO on
> >> > windows, and Linux, at least, always appeared simple to me, but I'm
> >> > discovering how hard it is by delving deep into the rust behind
> >> > crusader.
> >> >
> >> > the goresponsiveness thing is also IMHO running WAY too many streams
> >> > at the same time, I guess motivated by an attempt to have the test
> >> > complete quickly?
> >> >
> >> > B) To try and tackle the validation problem:ps. Misinformation about
> >> > iperf 2 impacts my ability to do this.
> >>
> >> >
> >> > In the libreqos.io project we've established a testbed where tests can
> >> > be plunked through various ISP plan network emulations. It's here:
> >> > https://payne.taht.net (run bandwidth test for what's currently hooked
> >> > up)
> >> >
> >> > We could rather use an AS number and at least a ipv4/24 and ipv6/48 to
> >> > leverage with that, so I don't have to nat the various emulations.
> >> > (and funding, anyone got funding?) Or, as the code is GPLv2 licensed,
> >> > to see more test designers setup a testbed like this to calibrate
> >> > their own stuff.
> >> >
> >> > Presently we're able to test:
> >> > flent
> >> > netperf
> >> > iperf2
> >> > iperf3
> >> > speedtest-cli
> >> > crusader
> >> > the broadband forum udp based test:
> >> > https://github.com/BroadbandForum/obudpst
> >> > trexx
> >> >
> >> > There's also a virtual machine setup that we can remotely drive a web
> >> > browser from (but I didn't want to nat the results to the world) to
> >> > test other web services.
> >> > _______________________________________________
> >> > Rpm mailing list
> >> > Rpm at lists.bufferbloat.net
> >> > https://lists.bufferbloat.net/listinfo/rpm



-- 
This song goes out to all the folk that thought Stadia would work:
https://www.linkedin.com/posts/dtaht_the-mushroom-song-activity-6981366665607352320-FXtz
Dave Täht CEO, TekLibre, LLC


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