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Using TCP Duplicate Selective Acknowledgement (DSACKs) and Stream Control Transmission Protocol (SCTP) Duplicate Transmission Sequence Numbers (TSNs) to Detect Spurious Retransmissions
draft-ietf-tsvwg-dsack-use-02

The information below is for an old version of the document that is already published as an RFC.
Document Type
This is an older version of an Internet-Draft that was ultimately published as RFC 3708.
Authors Ethan Blanton , Mark Allman
Last updated 2015-10-14 (Latest revision 2003-10-14)
RFC stream Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)
Intended RFC status Experimental
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IESG IESG state Became RFC 3708 (Experimental)
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draft-ietf-tsvwg-dsack-use-02
Internet Engineering Task Force                            Ethan Blanton
INTERNET DRAFT                                         Purdue University
File: draft-ietf-tsvwg-dsack-use-02.txt                      Mark Allman
                                                                    ICIR
                                                           October, 2003
                                                    Expires: April, 2004
    
               Using TCP DSACKs and SCTP Duplicate TSNs
                  to Detect Spurious Retransmissions

Status of this Memo

    This document is an Internet-Draft and is in full conformance with
    all provisions of Section 10 of [RFC2026].

    Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering
    Task Force (IETF), its areas, and its working groups.  Note that
    other groups may also distribute working documents as
    Internet-Drafts.

    Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six
    months and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents
    at any time.  It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as
    reference material or to cite them other than as "work in progress."

    The list of current Internet-Drafts can be accessed at
    http://www.ietf.org/ietf/1id-abstracts.txt

    The list of Internet-Draft Shadow Directories can be accessed at
    http://www.ietf.org/shadow.html.

Abstract

    TCP and SCTP provide notification of duplicate segment receipt
    through DSACK and Duplicate TSN notification, respectively. This
    document presents conservative methods of using this information to
    identify unnecessary retransmissions for various applications.

Terminology

    The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
    "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this
    document are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119 [RFC2119].

1   Introduction

    TCP [RFC793] and SCTP [RFC2960] provide notification of duplicate
    segment receipt through duplicate selective acknowledgment (DSACK)
    [RFC2883] and Duplicate TSN notifications, respectively.  Using this
    information, a TCP or SCTP sender can generally determine when a
    retransmission was sent in error.  This document presents two
    methods for using duplicate notifications.  The first method is
    simple and can be used for accounting applications.  The second
    method is a conservative algorithm to disambiguate unnecessary
    retransmissions from loss events for the purpose of undoing

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    unnecessary congestion control changes.

    This document is intended to outline reasonable and safe algorithms
    for detecting spurious retransmissions and discuss some of the
    considerations involved.  It is not intended to describe the only
    possible method for achieving the goal, although the guidelines in
    this document should be taken into consideration when designing
    alternate algorithms.  Additionally, this document does not outline
    what a TCP or SCTP sender may do after a spurious retransmission is
    detected.  A number of proposals have been developed (e.g.,
    [RFC3522], [SK03], [BDA03]), but it is not yet clear which of these
    proposals are appropriate.  In addition, they all rely on detecting
    spurious retransmits and so can share the algorithm specified in
    this document.

    Finally, we note that to simplify the text much of the following
    discussion is in terms of TCP DSACKs, while applying to both TCP and
    SCTP.
    
2   Counting Duplicate Notifications

    For certain applications a straight count of duplicate notifications
    will suffice.  For instance, if a stack simply wants to know (for
    some reason) the number of spuriously retransmitted segments,
    counting all duplicate notifications for retransmitted segments
    should work well.  Another application of this strategy is to
    monitor and adapt transport algorithms so that the transport is not
    sending large amounts of spurious data into the network.  For
    instance, monitoring duplicate notifications could be used by the
    Early Retransmit [AAAB03] algorithm to determine whether fast
    retransmitting [RFC2581] segments with a lower than normal duplicate
    ACK threshold is working, or if segment reordering is causing
    spurious retransmits.

    More speculatively, duplicate notification has been proposed as an
    integral part of estimating TCP's total loss rate [AEO03] for the
    purposes of mitigating the impact of corruption-based losses on
    transport protocol performance.  [EOA03] proposes altering the
    transport's congestion response to the fraction of losses that are
    actually due to congestion by requiring the network to provide the
    corruption-based loss rate and making the transport sender estimate
    the total loss rate.  Duplicate notifications are a key part of
    estimating the total loss rate accurately [AEO03].

3   Congestion/Duplicate Disambiguation Algorithm

    When the purpose of detecting spurious retransmissions is to
    ``undo'' unnecessary changes made to the congestion control state,
    as suggested in [RFC2883], the data sender ideally needs to
    determine:

    (a) That spurious retransmissions in a particular window of data do
        not mask real segment loss (congestion).

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        For example, assume segments N and N+1 are retransmitted even
        though only segment N was dropped by the network (thus, segment
        N+1 was needlessly retransmitted).  When the sender receives the
        notification that segment N+1 arrived more than once it can
        conclude that segment N+1 was needlessly resent.  However, it
        cannot conclude that it is appropriate to revert the congestion
        control state because the window of data contained at least one
        valid congestion indication (i.e., segment N was lost).

    (b) That network duplication is not the cause of the duplicate
        notification.

        Determining whether a duplicate notification is caused by
        network duplication of a packet or a spurious retransmit is a
        nearly impossible task in theory.  Since [Pax97] shows that
        packet duplication by the network is rare, the algorithm in this
        section simply ceases to function when network duplication is
        detected (by receiving a duplication notification for a segment
        that was not retransmitted by the sender).
    
    The algorithm specified below gives reasonable, but not complete,
    protection against both of these cases.

    We assume the TCP sender has a data structure to hold selective
    acknowledgment information (e.g., as outlined in [RFC3517]).  The
    following steps require an extension of such a 'scoreboard' to
    incorporate a slightly longer history of retransmissions than called
    for in [RFC3517].  The following steps MUST be taken upon the
    receipt of each DSACK or duplicate TSN notification:
    
    (A) Check the corresponding sequence range or TSN to determine
        whether the segment has been retransmitted.

        (A.1) If the SACK scoreboard is empty (i.e., the TCP sender has
            received no SACK information from the receiver) processing
            of this DSACK MUST be terminated and the congestion control
            state MUST NOT be reverted during the current window of
            data.  This clause intends to cover the case when an entire
            window of acknowledgments have been dropped by the network.
            In such a case, the reverse path seems to be in a congested
            state and so reducing TCP's sending rate is the conservative
            approach.

        (A.2) If the segment was retransmitted exactly one time, mark it
            as a duplicate.

        (A.3) If the segment was retransmitted more than once processing
            of this DSACK MUST be terminated and the congestion control
            state MUST NOT be reverted to its previous state during the
            current window of data.

        (A.4) If the segment was not retransmitted the incoming DSACK
            indicates that the network duplicated the segment in
            question.  Processing of this DSACK MUST be terminated.  In

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            addition, the algorithm specified in this document MUST NOT
            be used for the remainder of the connection, as future DSACK
            reports may be indicating network duplication rather than
            unnecessary retransmission.  Note that some techniques to
            further disambiguate network duplication from unnecessary
            retransmission (e.g., the TCP timestamp option [RFC1323])
            may be used to refine the algorithm in this document
            further.  Using such a technique in conjunction with an
            algorithm similar to the one presented herein may allow for
            the continued use of the algorithm in the face of duplicated
            segments.  We do not delve into such an algorithm in this
            document due the current rarity of network duplication.
            However, future work should include tackling this problem.

    (B) Assuming processing is allowed to continue (per the (A) rules),
        check all retransmitted segments in the previous window of data.
        
        (B.1) If all segments or chunks marked as retransmitted have
            also been marked as acknowledged and duplicated, we conclude
            that all retransmissions in the previous window of data were
            spurious and no loss occurred.
            
        (B.2) If any segment or chunk is still marked as retransmitted
            but not marked as duplicate, there are outstanding
            retransmissions that could indicate loss within this window
            of data.  We can make no conclusions based on this
            particular DSACK/duplicate TSN notification.

    In addition to keeping the state mentioned in [RFC3517] (for TCP)
    and [RFC2960] (for SCTP), an implementation of this algorithm must
    track all sequence numbers or TSNs that have been acknowledged as
    duplicates.

4   Related Work

    In addition to the mechanism for detecting spurious retransmits
    outlined in this document, several other proposals for finding
    needless retransmits have been developed.

    [BA02] uses the algorithm outlined in this document as the basis for
    investigating several methods to make TCP more robust to reordered
    packets.

    The Eifel detection algorithm [RFC3522] uses the TCP timestamp
    option [RFC1323] to determine whether the ACK for a given retransmit
    is for the original transmission or a retransmission.  More
    generally, [LK00] outlines the benefits of detecting spurious
    retransmits and reverting from needless congestion control changes
    using the timestamp-based scheme or a mechanism that uses a
    "retransmit bit" to flag retransmits (and ACKs of retransmits).  The
    Eifel detection algorithm can detect spurious retransmits more
    rapidly than a DSACK-based scheme.  However, the tradeoff is that
    the overhead of the 12-byte timestamp option must be incurred in
    every packet transmitted for Eifel to function.

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    The F-RTO scheme [SK03] slightly alters TCP's sending pattern
    immediately following a retransmission timeout and then observes the
    pattern of the returning ACKs.  This pattern can indicate whether
    the retransmitted segment was needed.  The advantage of F-RTO is
    that the algorithm only needs to be implemented on the sender side
    of the TCP connection and that nothing extra needs to cross the
    network (e.g., DSACKs, timestamps, special flags, etc.).  The
    downside is that the algorithm is a heuristic that can be confused
    by network pathologies (e.g., duplication or reordering of key
    packets).  Finally, note that F-RTO only works for spurious
    retransmits triggered by the transport's retransmission timer.

    Finally, [AP99] briefly investigates using the time between
    retransmitting a segment via the retransmission timeout and the
    arrival of the next ACK as an indicator of whether the retransmit
    was needed.  The scheme compares this time delta with a fraction (f)
    of the minimum RTT observed thus far on the connection.  If the time
    delta is less than f*minRTT then the retransmit is labeled
    spurious.  When f=1/2 the algorithm identifies roughly 59% of the
    needless retransmission timeouts and identifies needed retransmits
    only 2.5% of the time.  As with F-RTO, this scheme only detects
    spurious retransmits sent by the transport's retransmission timer.

5   Security Considerations

    It is possible for the receiver to falsely indicate spurious
    retransmissions in the case of actual loss, potentially causing a
    TCP or SCTP sender to inaccurately conclude that no loss took place
    (and possibly cause inappropriate changes to the senders congestion
    control state).  

    Consider the following scenario: A receiver watches every segment or
    chunk that arrives and acknowledges any segment that arrives out of
    order by more than some threshold amount as a duplicate, assuming
    that it is a retransmission.  A sender using the above algorithm
    will assume that the retransmission was spurious.

    The ECN nonce sum proposal [RFC3540] could possibly help mitigate
    the ability of the receiver to hide real losses from the sender with
    modest extension.  In the common case of receiving an original
    transmission and a spurious retransmit a receiver will have received
    the nonce from the original transmission and therefore can "prove"
    to the sender that the duplication notification is valid.  In the
    case when the receiver did not receive the original and is trying to
    improperly induce the sender into transmitting at an inappropriately
    high rate, the receiver will not know the ECN nonce from the
    original segment and therefore will probabilistically not be able to
    fool the sender for long.  [RFC3540] calls for disabling nonce sums
    on duplicate ACKs, which means that the nonce sum is not directly
    suitable for use as a mitigation to the problem of receivers lying
    about DSACK information.  However, future efforts may be able to use
    [RFC3540] as a starting point for building protection should it be
    needed.

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Acknowledgments    

    Sourabh Ladha and Reiner Ludwig made several useful comments on an
    earlier version of this document.  The second author thanks BBN
    Technologies and NASA's Glenn Research Center for supporting this
    work.

Normative References

    [RFC793] Jon Postel.  Transmission Control Protocol.  Std 7, RFC
        793.  September 1981.
    
    [RFC2960] R. Stewart, Q. Xie, K. Morneault, C. Sharp, H.
        Schwarzbauer, T. Taylor, I. Rytina, M. Kalla, L. Zhang, V.
        Paxson.  Stream Control Transmission Protocol.  October 2000.

    [RFC2883] S. Floyd, J. Mahdavi, M. Mathis, M. Podolsky.  An
        Extension to the Selective Acknowledgement (SACK) Option for
        TCP.  RFC 2883, July 2000.
    
Non-Normative References

    [AAAB03] M. Allman, K. Avrachenkov, U. Ayesta, J. Blanton.  Early
        Retransmit for TCP.  Internet-Draft
        draft-allman-tcp-early-rexmt-01.txt, June 2003.  Work in
        progress.

    [AEO03] Mark Allman, Wesley Eddy, Shawn Ostermann. Estimating Loss
        Rates With TCP. August 2003. Under submission.

    [AP99] Allman, M. and V. Paxson, "On Estimating End-to-End Network
        Path Properties", SIGCOMM 99.

    [BA02] E. Blanton, M. Allman.  On Making TCP More Robust to Packet
        Reordering.  ACM Computer Communication Review, 32(1), January
        2002.

    [BDA03] Ethan Blanton, Robert Dimond, Mark Allman. Practices for TCP
        Senders in the Face of Segment Reordering, February
        2003. Internet-Draft draft-blanton-tcp-reordering-00.txt (work
        in progress).

    [EOA03] Wesley Eddy, Shawn Ostermann, Mark Allman. New Techniques
        for Making Transport Protocols Robust to Corruption-Based
        Loss. July 2003. Under submission.

    [LK00] R. Ludwig, R. H. Katz.  The Eifel Algorithm: Making TCP
        Robust Against Spurious Retransmissions.  ACM Computer
        Communication Review, 30(1), January 2000.

    [Pax97] V. Paxson.  End-to-End Internet Packet Dynamics.  In ACM
        SIGCOMM, September 1997.

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    [RFC1323] Van Jacobson, Robert Braden, David Borman.  TCP Extensions
        for High Performance.  RFC 1323.  May 1992.

    [RFC3517] Ethan Blanton, Mark Allman, Kevin Fall, Lili Wang. A
        Conservative Selective Acknowledgment (SACK)-based Loss Recovery
        Algorithm for TCP, April 2003. RFC 3517.

    [RFC3522] R. Ludwig, M. Meyer.  The Eifel Detection Algorithm for
        TCP, April 2003.  RFC 3522.

    [RFC3540] N. Spring, D. Wetherall, D. Ely.  Robust Explicit
        Congestion Notification (ECN) Signaling with Nonces, June 2003.
        RFC 3540.

    [SK03] P. Sarolahti, M. Kojo.  F-RTO: An Algorithm for Detecting
        Spurious Retransmission Timeouts with TCP and SCTP.
        Internet-Draft draft-sarolahti-tsvwg-tcp-frto-04.txt, June 2003.
        Work in progress.

Authors' Addresses:

    Ethan Blanton
    Purdue University Computer Sciences
    1398 Computer Science Building
    West Lafayette, IN  47907
    eblanton@cs.purdue.edu

    Mark Allman
    ICSI Center for Internet Research
    1947 Center Street, Suite 600
    Berkeley, CA 94704-1198
    Phone: 216-243-7361
    mallman@icir.org
    http://www.icir.org/mallman/

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