[Starlink] Network quality for rocket scientists

Bjørn Ivar Teigen bjorn at domos.no
Mon Feb 14 14:21:35 EST 2022


FQ clearly gets us very good behavior, so no argument there.
Also agree the cost of giving up work conservation might be too high, and
I'm not saying we should necessarily do that. I just wanted to point out
that insisting on work conservation also comes at a cost (which we are free
to choose to pay of course!). It's a choice between adding some middlebox
complexity or accepting the amount of jitter induced by the amount of
queuing needed to maintain high utilization (which depends on the
jitteriness of the interface working to empty the queue).

Regards,
Bjørn Ivar


On Mon, 14 Feb 2022 at 18:39, Sebastian Moeller <moeller0 at gmx.de> wrote:

> Regarding work conservation, FQ as so often appears to be a decent
> solution that while not optimal will also not be pessimal. Which IMHO is as
> much as we can hope for unless we want to burden all middleboxes with
> deducing relative importance of packets....
>
> Regards
> Sebastian
>
>
>
> On 14 February 2022 18:52:29 CET, "Bjørn Ivar Teigen" <bjorn at domos.no>
> wrote:
>>
>> Sebastian,
>>
>> On Mon, 14 Feb 2022 at 17:15, Sebastian Moeller <moeller0 at gmx.de> wrote:
>>
>>> Hi Bjørn,
>>>
>>>
>>> I guess I should have started with the obvious. Nice short article!
>>>
>> Thank you!
>>
>>>
>>> > "See the problem? Buffers produce jitter!"
>>> >
>>> > I would rephrase that as "over-sized and under-managed" buffers
>>> increase jitter unduly. Interestingly, bound jitter can be converted into
>>> static latency by using, wait for it, (delay) buffers and a scheduler.
>>> >
>>> > You are absolutely right. I was hoping someone would spot that! There
>>> is one problem with that approach though. To actually remove the jitter the
>>> scheduler can no longer be work-conserving (needs delay as you also point
>>> out), and that increases TCP ramp-up times (among other things). Can be a
>>> hard sell. I think the benefits outweigh the costs though, so I would do it
>>> your way.
>>>
>>>         But that is what end-points already do, on-line games do this to
>>> equalize internet access quality between players (allowing them to make
>>> matches over larger populations), as do DASH type video streaming
>>> applications, where the isochronous play-out takes the role of the
>>> scheduler and the race-to-fill-the-play-out-buffers serves to keep the
>>> buffers filled so the scheduler never runs "dry".
>>
>>
>> Good points. The application clients and servers can choose to use their
>> resources in a way that is not work-conserving and thus achieve sharing of
>> resources without introducing jitter. I would argue it's a different story
>> with the queues "in the network", in routers, switches, access points, etc.
>> There seems to be an unwritten law that those schedulers must be work
>> conserving, presumably to minimize round-trip times, and this makes it
>> harder to achieve well-behaved sharing. So in network devices configured to
>> forward packets as quickly as possible, I think it's mostly true to say
>> that buffers produce jitter.
>>
>>         Given Pete's data at https://github.com/heistp/l4s-tests I am
>>> cautious to hold my breath... or to put it differently, I am certain they
>>> will not deliver on their promises, the bigger question is whether the
>>> incremental improvement they offer (over the default FIFO) is decent enough
>>> to retroactively justify the disruption they will have caused...
>>
>>
>> Ohh, that work has been updated a lot since the IETF showdown! Thanks for
>> reminding me, I'll have a look at it again.
>>
>> - Bjørn Ivar
>>
>>
>>> Regards
>>>         Sebastian
>>>
>>>
>>> > >
>>> > >
>>> > > On Mon, Feb 14, 2022 at 7:07 AM Bjørn Ivar Teigen <bjorn at domos.no>
>>> wrote:
>>> > >>
>>> > >> Hi everyone,
>>> > >>
>>> > >> I was inspired by the latest Starship presentation to write a piece
>>> on network quality in the language of rocket science. The blog can be found
>>> here:
>>> https://www.domos.no/news-updates/network-quality-for-rocket-scientists
>>> > >>
>>> > >> Cheers,
>>> > >> Bjørn Ivar Teigen
>>> > >>
>>> > >> --
>>> > >> Bjørn Ivar Teigen
>>> > >> Head of Research
>>> > >> +47 47335952 | bjorn at domos.no | www.domos.no
>>> > >> WiFi Slicing by Domos
>>> > >> _______________________________________________
>>> > >> Starlink mailing list
>>> > >> Starlink at lists.bufferbloat.net
>>> > >> https://lists.bufferbloat.net/listinfo/starlink
>>> > >
>>> > >
>>> > >
>>> > > --
>>> > > I tried to build a better future, a few times:
>>> > > https://wayforward.archive.org/?site=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.icei.org
>>> > >
>>> > > Dave Täht CEO, TekLibre, LLC
>>> > > _______________________________________________
>>> > > Starlink mailing list
>>> > > Starlink at lists.bufferbloat.net
>>> > > https://lists.bufferbloat.net/listinfo/starlink
>>> >
>>> >
>>> >
>>> > --
>>> > Bjørn Ivar Teigen
>>> > Head of Research
>>> > +47 47335952 | bjorn at domos.no | www.domos.no
>>> > WiFi Slicing by Domos
>>>
>>>
>> --
> Sent from my Android device with K-9 Mail. Please excuse my brevity.
>


-- 
Bjørn Ivar Teigen
Head of Research
+47 47335952 | bjorn at domos.no <name at domos.no> | www.domos.no
WiFi Slicing by Domos
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <https://lists.bufferbloat.net/pipermail/starlink/attachments/20220214/1045a342/attachment.html>


More information about the Starlink mailing list