RTP Media Congestion Avoidance Techniques D. Hayes, Ed.
Internet-Draft Simula Research Laboratory
Intended status: Experimental S. Ferlin
Expires: September 30, 2018
M. Welzl
K. Hiorth
University of Oslo
March 29, 2018
Shared Bottleneck Detection for Coupled Congestion Control for RTP
Media.
draft-ietf-rmcat-sbd-11
Abstract
This document describes a mechanism to detect whether end-to-end data
flows share a common bottleneck. It relies on summary statistics
that are calculated based on continuous measurements and used as
input to a grouping algorithm that runs wherever the knowledge is
needed.
Status of This Memo
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Table of Contents
1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
1.1. The Basic Mechanism . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
1.2. The Signals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
1.2.1. Packet Loss . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
1.2.2. Packet Delay . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
1.2.3. Path Lag . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
2. Definitions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
2.1. Parameters and Their Effect . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
2.2. Recommended Parameter Values . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
3. Mechanism . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
3.1. SBD Feedback Requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
3.1.1. Feedback When All the Logic is Placed at the Sender . 9
3.1.2. Feedback When the Statistics are Calculated at the
Receiver and SBD Performed at the Sender . . . . . . 9
3.1.3. Feedback When Bottlenecks can be Determined at Both
Senders and Receivers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
3.2. Key Metrics and Their Calculation . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
3.2.1. Mean Delay . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
3.2.2. Skewness Estimate . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
3.2.3. Variability Estimate . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
3.2.4. Oscillation Estimate . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
3.2.5. Packet Loss . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
3.3. Flow Grouping . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
3.3.1. Flow Grouping Algorithm . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
3.3.2. Using the Flow Group Signal . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
4. Enhancements to the Basic SBD Algorithm . . . . . . . . . . . 16
4.1. Reducing Lag and Improving Responsiveness . . . . . . . . 16
4.1.1. Improving the Response of the Skewness Estimate . . . 17
4.1.2. Improving the Response of the Variability Estimate . 19
4.2. Removing Oscillation Noise . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
5. Measuring OWD . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
5.1. Time-stamp Resolution . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
5.2. Clock Skew . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
6. Expected Feedback from Experiments . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
7. Acknowledgments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
8. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
9. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
10. Change history . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
11. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
11.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
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11.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
1. Introduction
In the Internet, it is not normally known if flows (e.g., TCP
connections or UDP data streams) traverse the same bottlenecks. Even
flows that have the same sender and receiver may take different paths
and may or may not share a bottleneck. Flows that share a bottleneck
link usually compete with one another for their share of the
capacity. This competition has the potential to increase packet loss
and delays. This is especially relevant for interactive applications
that communicate simultaneously with multiple peers (such as multi-
party video). For RTP media applications such as RTCWEB,
[I-D.ietf-rmcat-coupled-cc] describes a scheme that combines the
congestion controllers of flows in order to honor their priorities
and avoid unnecessary packet loss as well as delay. This mechanism
relies on some form of Shared Bottleneck Detection (SBD); here, a
measurement-based SBD approach is described.
1.1. The Basic Mechanism
The mechanism groups flows that have similar statistical
characteristics together. Section 3.3.1 describes a simple method
for achieving this, however, a major part of this draft is concerned
with collecting suitable statistics for this purpose.
1.2. The Signals
The current Internet is unable to explicitly inform endpoints as to
which flows share bottlenecks, so endpoints need to infer this from
whatever information is available to them. The mechanism described
here currently utilizes packet loss and packet delay, but is not
restricted to these. As ECN becomes more prevalent it too will
become a valuable base signal.
1.2.1. Packet Loss
Packet loss is often a relatively infrequent indication that a flow
traverses a bottleneck. Therefore, on its own it is of limited use
for SBD, however, it is a valuable supplementary measure when it is
more prevalent (refer to [RFC2680] section 2.5 for measuring packet
loss).
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1.2.2. Packet Delay
End-to-end delay measurements include noise from every device along
the path in addition to the delay perturbation at the bottleneck
device. The noise is often significantly increased if the round-trip
time is used. The cleanest signal is obtained by using One-Way-Delay
(OWD) (refer to [RFC7679] section 3 for a definition of OWD).
Measuring absolute OWD is difficult since it requires both the sender
and receiver clocks to be synchronized. However, since the
statistics being collected are relative to the mean OWD, a relative
OWD measurement is sufficient. Clock skew is not usually significant
over the time intervals used by this SBD mechanism (see [RFC6817] A.2
for a discussion on clock skew and OWD measurements). However, in
circumstances where it is significant, Section 5.2 outlines a way of
adjusting the calculations to cater for it.
Each packet arriving at the bottleneck buffer may experience very
different queue lengths, and therefore different waiting times. A
single OWD sample does not, therefore, characterize the path well.
However, multiple OWD measurements do reflect the distribution of
delays experienced at the bottleneck.
1.2.3. Path Lag
Flows that share a common bottleneck may traverse different paths,
and these paths will often have different base delays. This makes it
difficult to correlate changes in delay or loss. This technique uses
the long term shape of the delay distribution as a base for
comparison to counter this.
2. Definitions
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
"SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and
"OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in BCP
14 [RFC2119] RFC2119 [RFC2119] RFC8174 [RFC8174] when, and only when,
they appear in all capitals, as shown here.
Acronyms used in this document:
OWD -- One Way Delay
MAD -- Mean Absolute Deviation
RTT -- Round Trip Time
SBD -- Shared Bottleneck Detection
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Conventions used in this document:
T -- the base time interval over which measurements are
made
N -- the number of base time, T, intervals used in some
calculations
M -- the number of base time, T, intervals used in some
calculations, where M <= N
sum(...) -- summation of terms of the variable in parentheses
sum_T(...) -- summation of all the measurements of the variable
in parentheses taken over the interval T
sum_NT(...) -- summation of all measurements taken over the
interval N*T
sum_MT(...) -- summation of all measurements taken over the
interval M*T
E_T(...) -- the expectation or mean of the measurements of the
variable in parentheses over T
E_N(...) -- the expectation or mean of the last N values of
the variable in parentheses
E_M(...) -- the expectation or mean of the last M values of
the variable in parentheses
num_T(...) -- the count of measurements of the variable in
parentheses taken in the interval T
num_MT(...) -- the count of measurements of the variable in
parentheses taken in the interval NT
PB -- a boolean variable indicating the particular flow
was identified transiting a bottleneck in the
previous interval T (i.e. Previously Bottleneck)
skew_est -- a measure of skewness in a OWD distribution
skew_base_T -- a variable used as an intermediate step in
calculating skew_est
var_est -- a measure of variability in OWD measurements
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var_base_T -- a variable used as an intermediate step in
calculating var_est
freq_est -- a measure of low frequency oscillation in the OWD
measurements
pkt_loss -- a measure of the proportion of packets lost
p_l, p_f, p_mad, c_s, c_h, p_s, p_d, p_v -- various thresholds
used in the mechanism
M and F -- number of values related to N
2.1. Parameters and Their Effect
T T should be long enough so that there are enough packets
received during T for a useful estimate of short term mean
OWD and variation statistics. Making T too large can limit
the efficacy of freq_est. It will also increase the response
time of the mechanism. Making T too small will make the
metrics noisier.
N & M N should be large enough to provide a stable estimate of
oscillations in OWD. Usually M=N, though having M<N may be
beneficial in certain circumstances. M*T needs to be long
enough to provide stable estimates of skewness and MAD.
F F determines the number of intervals over which statistics
are considered to be equally weighted. When F=M recent and
older measurements are considered equal. Making F<M can
increase the responsiveness of the SBD mechanism. If F is
too small, statistics will be too noisy.
c_s c_s is the threshold in skew_est used for determining whether
a flow is transiting a bottleneck or not. Lower values of
c_s require bottlenecks to be more congested to be considered
for grouping by the mechanism. c_s should be set within the
range of +0.2 to -0.1; low enough so that lightly loaded
paths do not give a false indication.
p_l p_l is the threshold in pkt_loss used for determining whether
a flow is transiting a bottleneck or not. When pkt_loss is
high it becomes a better indicator of congestion than
skew_est.
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c_h c_h adds hysteresis to the bottleneck determination. It
should be large enough to avoid constant switching in the
determination, but low enough to ensure that grouping is not
attempted when there is no bottleneck and the delay and loss
signals cannot be relied upon.
p_v p_v determines the sensitivity of freq_est to noise. Making
it smaller will yield higher but noisier values for freq_est.
Making it too large will render it ineffective for
determining groups.
p_* Flows are separated when the
skew_est|var_est|freq_est|pkt_loss measure is greater than
p_s|p_mad|p_f|p_d. Adjusting these is a compromise between
false grouping of flows that do not share a bottleneck and
false splitting of flows that do. Making them larger can
help if the measures are very noisy, but reducing the noise
in the statistical measures by adjusting T and N|M may be a
better solution.
2.2. Recommended Parameter Values
Reference [Hayes-LCN14] uses T=350ms, N=50, p_l=0.1. The other
parameters have been tightened to reflect minor enhancements to the
algorithm outlined in Section 4: c_s=0.1, p_f=p_d=0.1, p_s=0.15,
p_mad=0.1, p_v=0.7. M=30, F=20, and c_h = 0.3 are additional
parameters defined in the document. These are values that seem to
work well over a wide range of practical Internet conditions.
3. Mechanism
The mechanism described in this document is based on the observation
that the distribution of delay measurements of packets that traverse
a common bottleneck have similar shape characteristics. These shape
characteristics are described using 3 key summary statistics:
variability (estimate var_est, see Section 3.2.3)
skewness (estimate skew_est, see Section 3.2.2)
oscillation (estimate freq_est, see Section 3.2.4)
with packet loss (estimate pkt_loss, see Section 3.2.5) used as a
supplementary statistic.
Summary statistics help to address both the noise and the path lag
problems by describing the general shape over a relatively long
period of time. Each summary statistic portrays a "view" of the
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bottleneck link characteristics, and when used together, they provide
a robust discrimination for grouping flows. An RTP Media device may
be both a sender and a receiver and SBD can be performed at either a
sender or a receiver or both.
+----+
| H2 |
+----+
|
| L2
|
+----+ L1 | L3 +----+
| H1 |------|------| H3 |
+----+ +----+
A network with 3 hosts (H1, H2, H3) and 3 links (L1, L2, L3).
Figure 1
In Figure 1, there are two possible locations for shared bottleneck
detection: sender-side and receiver-side.
1. Sender-side: consider a situation where host H1 sends media
streams to hosts H2 and H3, and L1 is a shared bottleneck. H2
and H3 measure the OWD and packet loss and either send back this
raw data, or the calculated summary statistics, periodically to
H1 every T. H1, having this knowledge, can determine the shared
bottleneck and accordingly control the send rates.
2. Receiver-side: consider that H2 is also sending media to H3, and
L3 is a shared bottleneck. If H3 sends summary statistics to H1
and H2, neither H1 nor H2 alone obtain enough knowledge to detect
this shared bottleneck; H3 can however determine it by combining
the summary statistics related to H1 and H2, respectively.
3.1. SBD Feedback Requirements
There are three possible scenarios each with different feedback
requirements:
1. Both summary statistic calculations and SBD are performed at
senders only. When sender-based congestion control is
implemented, this method is RECOMMENDED.
2. Summary statistics calculated on the receivers and SBD at the
senders.
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3. Summary statistic calculations on receivers, and SBD performed at
both senders and receivers (beyond the current scope, but allows
cooperative detection of bottlenecks).
All three possibilities are discussed for completeness in this
document, however, it is expected that feedback will take the form of
scenario 1 and operate in conjunction with sender-based congestion
control mechanisms.
3.1.1. Feedback When All the Logic is Placed at the Sender
Having the sender calculate the summary statistics and determine the
shared bottlenecks based on them has the advantage of placing most of
the functionality in one place -- the sender.
For every packet, the sender requires accurate relative OWD
measurements of adequate precision, along with an indication of lost
packets (or the proportion of packets lost over an interval). An
method to provide such measurement data with RTCP is described in
[I-D.ietf-avtcore-cc-feedback-message].
Sums, var_base_T and skew_base_T are calculated incrementally as
relative OWD measurements are determined from the feedback messages.
When the mechanism has received sufficient measurements to cover the
T base time interval for all flows, the summary statistics (see
Section 3.2) are calculated for that T interval and flows are grouped
(see Section 3.3.1). The exact timing of these calculations will
depend on the frequency of the feedback message.
3.1.2. Feedback When the Statistics are Calculated at the Receiver and
SBD Performed at the Sender
This scenario minimizes feedback, but requires receivers to send
selected summary statistics at an agreed regular interval. We
envisage the following exchange of information to initialize the
system:
o An initialization message from the sender to the receiver will
contain the following information:
* A list of which key metrics should be collected and relayed
back to the sender out of a possibly extensible set (pkt_loss,
var_est, skew_est, freq_est). The grouping algorithm described
in this document requires all four of these metrics, and
receivers MUST be able to provide them, but future algorithms
may be able to exploit other metrics (e.g. metrics based on
explicit network signals).
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* The values of T, N, M, and the necessary resolution and
precision of the relayed statistics.
o A response message from the receiver acknowledges this message
with a list of key metrics it supports (subset of the senders
list) and is able to relay back to the sender.
This initialization exchange may be repeated to finalize the agreed
metrics should not all be supported by all receivers. It is also
recommendable to include an identifier for the SBD algorithm version
in the initialization message from the sender, so that potential
advances in SBD technology can be easily deployed. For reference,
the mechanism outlined in this document has the identifier SBD=01.
After initialization the agreed summary statistics are fed back to
the sender (nominally every T).
3.1.3. Feedback When Bottlenecks can be Determined at Both Senders and
Receivers
This type of mechanism is currently beyond the scope of the SBD
algorithm described in this document. It is mentioned here to ensure
more advanced sender/receiver cooperative shared bottleneck
determination mechanisms remain possible in the future.
It is envisaged that such a mechanism would be initialized in a
similar manner to that described in Section 3.1.2.
After initialization both summary statistics and shared bottleneck
determinations should be exchanged, nominally every T.
3.2. Key Metrics and Their Calculation
Measurements are calculated over a base interval, T and summarized
over N or M such intervals. All summary statistics can be calculated
incrementally.
3.2.1. Mean Delay
The mean delay is not a useful signal for comparisons between flows
since flows may traverse quite different paths and clocks will not
necessarily be synchronized. However, it is a base measure for the 3
summary statistics. The mean delay, E_T(OWD), is the average one way
delay measured over T.
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To facilitate the other calculations, the last N E_T(OWD) values will
need to be stored in a cyclic buffer along with the moving average of
E_T(OWD):
mean_delay = E_M(E_T(OWD)) = sum_M(E_T(OWD)) / M
where M <= N. Setting M to be less than N allows the mechanism to be
more responsive to changes, but potentially at the expense of a
higher error rate (see Section 4.1 for a discussion on improving the
responsiveness of the mechanism.)
3.2.2. Skewness Estimate
Skewness is difficult to calculate efficiently and accurately.
Ideally it should be calculated over the entire period (M * T) from
the mean OWD over that period. However this would require storing
every delay measurement over the period. Instead, an estimate is
made over M * T based on a calculation every T using the previous T's
calculation of mean_delay.
The base for the skewness calculation is estimated using a counter
initialized every T. It increments for one way delay (OWD) samples
below the mean and decrements for OWD above the mean. So for each
OWD sample:
if (OWD < mean_delay) skew_base_T++
if (OWD > mean_delay) skew_base_T--
The mean_delay does not include the mean of the current T interval to
enable it to be calculated iteratively.
skew_est = sum_MT(skew_base_T)/num_MT(OWD)
where skew_est is a number between -1 and 1
Note: Care must be taken when implementing the comparisons to ensure
that rounding does not bias skew_est. It is important that the mean
is calculated with a higher precision than the samples.
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3.2.3. Variability Estimate
Mean Absolute Deviation (MAD) delay is a robust variability measure
that copes well with different send rates. It can be implemented in
an online manner as follows:
var_base_T = sum_T(|OWD - E_T(OWD)|)
where
|x| is the absolute value of x
E_T(OWD) is the mean OWD calculated in the previous T
var_est = MAD_MT = sum_MT(var_base_T)/num_MT(OWD)
3.2.4. Oscillation Estimate
An estimate of the low frequency oscillation of the delay signal is
calculated by counting and normalizing the significant mean,
E_T(OWD), crossings of mean_delay:
freq_est = number_of_crossings / N
where we define a significant mean crossing as a crossing that
extends p_v * var_est from mean_delay. In our experiments we
have found that p_v = 0.7 is a good value.
Freq_est is a number between 0 and 1. Freq_est can be approximated
incrementally as follows:
With each new calculation of E_T(OWD) a decision is made as to
whether this value of E_T(OWD) significantly crosses the current
long term mean, mean_delay, with respect to the previous
significant mean crossing.
A cyclic buffer, last_N_crossings, records a 1 if there is a
significant mean crossing, otherwise a 0.
The counter, number_of_crossings, is incremented when there is a
significant mean crossing and decremented when a non-zero value is
removed from the last_N_crossings.
This approximation of freq_est was not used in [Hayes-LCN14], which
calculated freq_est every T using the current E_N(E_T(OWD)). Our
tests show that this approximation of freq_est yields results that
are almost identical to when the full calculation is performed every
T.
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3.2.5. Packet Loss
The proportion of packets lost over the period NT is used as a
supplementary measure:
pkt_loss = sum_NT(lost packets) / sum_NT(total packets)
Note: When pkt_loss is small it is very variable, however, when
pkt_loss is high it becomes a stable measure for making grouping
decisions.
3.3. Flow Grouping
3.3.1. Flow Grouping Algorithm
The following grouping algorithm is RECOMMENDED for use of SBD with
coupled congestion control for RTP media [I-D.ietf-rmcat-coupled-cc]
and is sufficient and efficient for small to moderate numbers of
flows. For very large numbers of flows (e.g. hundreds), a more
complex clustering algorithm may be substituted.
Since no single metric is precise enough to group flows (due to
noise), the algorithm uses multiple metrics. Each metric offers a
different "view" of the bottleneck link characteristics, and used
together they enable a more precise grouping of flows than would
otherwise be possible.
Flows determined to be transiting a bottleneck are successively
divided into groups based on freq_est, var_est, skew_est and
pkt_loss.
The first step is to determine which flows are transiting a
bottleneck. This is important, since if a flow is not transiting a
bottleneck its delay based metrics will not describe the bottleneck,
but the "noise" from the rest of the path. Skewness, with proportion
of packet loss as a supplementary measure, is used to do this:
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1. Grouping will be performed on flows that are inferred to be
traversing a bottleneck by:
skew_est < c_s
|| ( skew_est < c_h & PB ) || pkt_loss > p_l
The parameter c_s controls how sensitive the mechanism is in
detecting a bottleneck. c_s = 0.0 was used in [Hayes-LCN14]. A value
of c_s = 0.1 is a little more sensitive, and c_s = -0.1 is a little
less sensitive. c_h controls the hysteresis on flows that were
grouped as transiting a bottleneck last time. If the test result is
TRUE, PB=TRUE, otherwise PB=FALSE.
These flows, flows transiting a bottleneck, are then progressively
divided into groups based on the freq_est, var_est, and skew_est
summary statistics. The process proceeds according to the following
steps:
2. Group flows whose difference in sorted freq_est is less than a
threshold:
diff(freq_est) < p_f
3. Subdivide the groups obtained in 2. by grouping flows whose
difference in sorted E_M(var_est) (highest to lowest) is less
than a threshold:
diff(var_est) < (p_mad * var_est)
The threshold, (p_mad * var_est), is with respect to the highest
value in the difference.
4. Subdivide the groups obtained in 3. by grouping flows whose
difference in sorted skew_est is less than a threshold:
diff(skew_est) < p_s
5. When packet loss is high enough to be reliable (pkt_loss > p_l),
Subdivide the groups obtained in 4. by grouping flows whose
difference is less than a threshold
diff(pkt_loss) < (p_d * pkt_loss)
The threshold, (p_d * pkt_loss), is with respect to the highest
value in the difference.
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This procedure involves sorting estimates from highest to lowest. It
is simple to implement, and efficient for small numbers of flows (up
to 10-20). Figure 2 illustrates this algorithm.
*********
* Flows *
***.**.**
/ '
/ '--.
/ \
.---v--. .----v---.
1. Flows traversing | Cong | | UnCong |
a bottleneck '-.--.-' '--------'
/ \
/ \
/ \
.--v--. v-----.
2. Divide by | g_1 | ... | g_n |
freq_est '---.-. '----..
/ \ / \
/ '--. v '------.
/ \ \
.----v-. .-v----. .---v--.
3. Divide by | g_1a | ... | g_1z | ... | g_nz |
var_est '---.-.' '-----.. '-.-.--'
/ \ / \ / |
/ '-----. v v v |
/ \ |
.-v-----. .-v-----. .---v---.
4. Divide by | g_1ai | ... | g_1ax | ... | g_nzx |
skew_est '----.-.' '------.. '-.-.---'
/ \ / \ / |
/ '--. v v v |
/ \ |
.-----v--. .-v------. .----v---.
5. Divide by | g_1aiA | ... | g_1aiZ | ... | g_nzxZ |
pkt_loss '--------' '--------' '--------'
(when applicable)
Simple grouping algorithm.
Figure 2
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3.3.2. Using the Flow Group Signal
Grouping decisions can be made every T from the second T, however
they will not attain their full design accuracy until after the
2*N'th T interval. We recommend that grouping decisions are not made
until 2*M T intervals.
Network conditions, and even the congestion controllers, can cause
bottlenecks to fluctuate. A coupled congestion controller MAY decide
only to couple groups that remain stable, say grouped together 90% of
the time, depending on its objectives. Recommendations concerning
this are beyond the scope of this document and will be specific to
the coupled congestion controller's objectives.
4. Enhancements to the Basic SBD Algorithm
The SBD algorithm as specified in Section 3 was found to work well
for a broad variety of conditions. The following enhancements to the
basic mechanisms have been found to significantly improve the
algorithm's performance under some circumstances and SHOULD be
implemented. These "tweaks" are described separately to keep the
main description succinct.
4.1. Reducing Lag and Improving Responsiveness
This section describes how to improve the responsiveness of the basic
algorithm.
Measurement based shared bottleneck detection makes decisions in the
present based on what has been measured in the past. This means that
there is always a lag in responding to changing conditions. This
mechanism is based on summary statistics taken over (N*T) seconds.
This mechanism can be made more responsive to changing conditions by:
1. Reducing N and/or M -- but at the expense of having less accurate
metrics, and/or
2. Exploiting the fact that more recent measurements are more
valuable than older measurements and weighting them accordingly.
Although more recent measurements are more valuable, older
measurements are still needed to gain an accurate estimate of the
distribution descriptor we are measuring. Unfortunately, the simple
exponentially weighted moving average weights drop off too quickly
for our requirements and have an infinite tail. A simple linearly
declining weighted moving average also does not provide enough weight
to the most recent measurements. We propose a piecewise linear
distribution of weights, such that the first section (samples 1:F) is
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flat as in a simple moving average, and the second section (samples
F+1:M) is linearly declining weights to the end of the averaging
window. We choose integer weights, which allows incremental
calculation without introducing rounding errors.
4.1.1. Improving the Response of the Skewness Estimate
The weighted moving average for skew_est, based on skew_est in
Section 3.2.2, can be calculated as follows:
skew_est = ((M-F+1)*sum(skew_base_T(1:F))
+ sum([(M-F):1].*skew_base_T(F+1:M)))
/ ((M-F+1)*sum(numsampT(1:F))
+ sum([(M-F):1].*numsampT(F+1:M)))
where numsampT is an array of the number of OWD samples in each T
(i.e. num_T(OWD)), and numsampT(1) is the most recent; skew_base_T(1)
is the most recent calculation of skew_base_T; 1:F refers to the
integer values 1 through to F, and [(M-F):1] refers to an array of
the integer values (M-F) declining through to 1; and ".*" is the
array scalar dot product operator.
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To calculate this weighted skew_est incrementally:
Notation: F_ - flat portion, D_ - declining portion, W_ - weighted
component
Initialize: sum_skewbase = 0, F_skewbase=0, W_D_skewbase=0
skewbase_hist = buffer length M initialize to 0
numsampT = buffer length M initialized to 0
Steps per iteration:
1. old_skewbase = skewbase_hist(M)
2. old_numsampT = numsampT(M)
3. cycle(skewbase_hist)
4. cycle(numsampT)
5. numsampT(1) = num_T(OWD)
6. skewbase_hist(1) = skew_base_T
7. F_skewbase = F_skewbase + skew_base_T - skewbase_hist(F+1)
8. W_D_skewbase = W_D_skewbase + (M-F)*skewbase_hist(F+1)
- sum_skewbase
9. W_D_numsamp = W_D_numsamp + (M-F)*numsampT(F+1) - sum_numsamp
+ F_numsamp
10. F_numsamp = F_numsamp + numsampT(1) - numsampT(F+1)
11. sum_skewbase = sum_skewbase + skewbase_hist(F+1) - old_skewbase
12. sum_numsamp = sum_numsamp + numsampT(1) - old_numsampT
13. skew_est = ((M-F+1)*F_skewbase + W_D_skewbase) /
((M-F+1)*F_numsamp+W_D_numsamp)
Where cycle(....) refers to the operation on a cyclic buffer where
the start of the buffer is now the next element in the buffer.
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4.1.2. Improving the Response of the Variability Estimate
Similarly the weighted moving average for var_est can be calculated
as follows:
var_est = ((M-F+1)*sum(var_base_T(1:F))
+ sum([(M-F):1].*var_base_T(F+1:M)))
/ ((M-F+1)*sum(numsampT(1:F))
+ sum([(M-F):1].*numsampT(F+1:M)))
where numsampT is an array of the number of OWD samples in each T
(i.e. num_T(OWD)), and numsampT(1) is the most recent; skew_base_T(1)
is the most recent calculation of skew_base_T; 1:F refers to the
integer values 1 through to F, and [(M-F):1] refers to an array of
the integer values (M-F) declining through to 1; and ".*" is the
array scalar dot product operator. When removing oscillation noise
(see Section 4.2) this calculation must be adjusted to allow for
invalid var_base_T records.
Var_est can be calculated incrementally in the same way as skew_est
in Section 4.1.1. However, note that the buffer numsampT is used for
both calculations so the operations on it should not be repeated.
4.2. Removing Oscillation Noise
When a path has no bottleneck, var_est will be very small and the
recorded significant mean crossings will be the result of path noise.
Thus up to N-1 meaningless mean crossings can be a source of error at
the point a link becomes a bottleneck and flows traversing it begin
to be grouped.
To remove this source of noise from freq_est:
1. Set the current var_base_T = NaN (a value representing an invalid
record, i.e. Not a Number) for flows that are deemed to not be
transiting a bottleneck by the first skew_est based grouping test
(see Section 3.3.1).
2. Then var_est = sum_MT(var_base_T != NaN) / num_MT(OWD)
3. For freq_est, only record a significant mean crossing if flow
deemed to be transiting a bottleneck.
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These three changes can help to remove the non-bottleneck noise from
freq_est.
5. Measuring OWD
This section discusses the OWD measurements required for this
algorithm to detect shared bottlenecks.
The SBD mechanism described in this document relies on differences
between OWD measurements to avoid the practical problems with
measuring absolute OWD (see [Hayes-LCN14] section IIIC). Since all
summary statistics are relative to the mean OWD and sender/receiver
clock offsets should be approximately constant over the measurement
periods, the offset is subtracted out in the calculation.
5.1. Time-stamp Resolution
The SBD mechanism requires timing information precise enough to be
able to make comparisons. As a rule of thumb, the time resolution
should be less than one hundredth of a typical path's range of
delays. In general, the coarser the time resolution, the more care
that needs to be taken to ensure rounding errors do not bias the
skewness calculation. Frequent timing information in millisecond
resolution as described by [I-D.ietf-avtcore-cc-feedback-message]
should be sufficient for the sender to calculate relative OWD.
5.2. Clock Skew
Generally sender and receiver clock skew will be too small to cause
significant errors in the estimators. Skew_est and freq_est are the
most sensitive to this type of noise due to their use of a mean OWD
calculated over a longer interval. In circumstances where clock skew
is high, basing skew_est only on the previous T's mean and ignoring
freq_est provides a noisier but reliable signal.
A more sophisticated method is to estimate the effect the clock skew
is having on the summary statistics, and then adjust statistics
accordingly. There are a number of techniques in the literature,
including [Zhang-Infocom02].
6. Expected Feedback from Experiments
The algorithm described in this memo has so far been evaluated using
simulations and small scale experiments. Real network tests using
RTP Media Congestion Avoidance Techniques (RMCAT) congestion control
algorithms will help confirm the default parameter choice. For
example, the time interval T may need to be made longer if the packet
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rate is very low. Implementers and testers are invited to document
their findings in an Internet draft.
7. Acknowledgments
This work was part-funded by the European Community under its Seventh
Framework Programme through the Reducing Internet Transport Latency
(RITE) project (ICT-317700). The views expressed are solely those of
the authors.
8. IANA Considerations
This memo includes no request to IANA.
9. Security Considerations
The security considerations of RFC 3550 [RFC3550], RFC 4585
[RFC4585], and RFC 5124 [RFC5124] are expected to apply.
Non-authenticated RTCP packets carrying OWD measurements, shared
bottleneck indications, and/or summary statistics could allow
attackers to alter the bottleneck sharing characteristics for private
gain or disruption of other parties' communication. When using SBD
for coupled congestion control as described in
[I-D.ietf-rmcat-coupled-cc], the security considerations of
[I-D.ietf-rmcat-coupled-cc] apply.
10. Change history
XX RFC ED - PLEASE REMOVE THIS SECTION XXX
Changes made to this document:
WG-10->WG-11 : Genart review addressed.
WG-09->WG-10 : AD review addressed.
WG-08->WG-09 : Removed definitions that are no longer used. Added
pkt_loss definition. Refined c_s recommendation.
WG-07->WG-08 : Updates addressing https://www.ietf.org/mail-
archive/web/rmcat/current/msg01671.html Mainly
clarifications.
WG-06->WG-07 : Updates addressing
https://mailarchive.ietf.org/arch/msg/
rmcat/80B6q4nI7carGcf_ddBwx7nKvOw. Mainly
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clarifications. Figure 2 to supplement grouping
algorithm description.
WG-05->WG-06 : Updates addressing WG reviews
https://mailarchive.ietf.org/arch/msg/rmcat/-
1JdrTMq1Y5T6ZNlOkrQJQ27TzE and
https://mailarchive.ietf.org/arch/msg/rmcat/
eI2Q1f8NL2SxbJgjFLR4_rEmJ_g. This has mainly
involved minor clarifications, including the moving
of 3.4.1 and 3.5 into the new Section 4, and 3.4.1
into Section 5
WG-04->WG-05 : Fix ToC formatting. Add section on expected
feedback from experiments replacing short section
on implementation status. Added comment on ECN as
a signal. Clarification of lost packet signaling.
Change term "draft" to "document" where
appropriate. American spelling. Some tightening
of the text.
WG-03->WG-04 : Add M to terminology table, suggest skew_est based
on previous T and no freq_est in clock skew
section, feedback requirements as a separate sub
section.
WG-02->WG-03 : Correct misspelled author
WG-01->WG-02 : Removed ambiguity associated with the term
"congestion". Expanded the description of
initialization messages. Removed PDV metric.
Added description of incremental weighted metric
calculations for skew_est. Various clarifications
based on implementation work. Fixed typos and
tuned parameters.
WG-00->WG-01 : Moved unbiased skew section to replace skew
estimate, more robust variability estimator, the
term variance replaced with variability, clock
drift term corrected to clock skew, revision to
clock skew section with a place holder, description
of parameters.
02->WG-00 : Fixed missing 0.5 in 3.3.2 and missing brace in
3.3.3
01->02 : New section describing improvements to the key
metric calculations that help to remove noise,
bias, and reduce lag. Some revisions to the
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notation to make it clearer. Some tightening of
the thresholds.
00->01 : Revisions to terminology for clarity
11. References
11.1. Normative References
[RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119,
DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, March 1997,
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2119>.
11.2. Informative References
[Hayes-LCN14]
Hayes, D., Ferlin, S., and M. Welzl, "Practical Passive
Shared Bottleneck Detection using Shape Summary
Statistics", Proc. the IEEE Local Computer Networks
(LCN) pp150-158, September 2014,
<http://heim.ifi.uio.no/davihay/
hayes14__pract_passiv_shared_bottl_detec-abstract.html>.
[I-D.ietf-avtcore-cc-feedback-message]
Sarker, Z., Perkins, C., Singh, V., and M. Ramalho, "RTP
Control Protocol (RTCP) Feedback for Congestion Control",
draft-ietf-avtcore-cc-feedback-message-01 (work in
progress), March 2018.
[I-D.ietf-rmcat-coupled-cc]
Islam, S., Welzl, M., and S. Gjessing, "Coupled congestion
control for RTP media", draft-ietf-rmcat-coupled-cc-07
(work in progress), September 2017.
[RFC2680] Almes, G., Kalidindi, S., and M. Zekauskas, "A One-way
Packet Loss Metric for IPPM", RFC 2680,
DOI 10.17487/RFC2680, September 1999,
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2680>.
[RFC3550] Schulzrinne, H., Casner, S., Frederick, R., and V.
Jacobson, "RTP: A Transport Protocol for Real-Time
Applications", STD 64, RFC 3550, DOI 10.17487/RFC3550,
July 2003, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3550>.
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[RFC4585] Ott, J., Wenger, S., Sato, N., Burmeister, C., and J. Rey,
"Extended RTP Profile for Real-time Transport Control
Protocol (RTCP)-Based Feedback (RTP/AVPF)", RFC 4585,
DOI 10.17487/RFC4585, July 2006,
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4585>.
[RFC5124] Ott, J. and E. Carrara, "Extended Secure RTP Profile for
Real-time Transport Control Protocol (RTCP)-Based Feedback
(RTP/SAVPF)", RFC 5124, DOI 10.17487/RFC5124, February
2008, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5124>.
[RFC6817] Shalunov, S., Hazel, G., Iyengar, J., and M. Kuehlewind,
"Low Extra Delay Background Transport (LEDBAT)", RFC 6817,
DOI 10.17487/RFC6817, December 2012,
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6817>.
[RFC7679] Almes, G., Kalidindi, S., Zekauskas, M., and A. Morton,
Ed., "A One-Way Delay Metric for IP Performance Metrics
(IPPM)", STD 81, RFC 7679, DOI 10.17487/RFC7679, January
2016, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7679>.
[RFC8174] Leiba, B., "Ambiguity of Uppercase vs Lowercase in RFC
2119 Key Words", BCP 14, RFC 8174, DOI 10.17487/RFC8174,
May 2017, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8174>.
[Zhang-Infocom02]
Zhang, L., Liu, Z., and H. Xia, "Clock synchronization
algorithms for network measurements", Proc. the IEEE
International Conference on Computer Communications
(INFOCOM) pp160-169, September 2002,
<http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/INFCOM.2002.1019257>.
Authors' Addresses
David Hayes (editor)
Simula Research Laboratory
P.O. Box 134
Lysaker 1325
Norway
Email: davidh@simula.no
Simone Ferlin
Email: simone@ferlin.io
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Michael Welzl
University of Oslo
PO Box 1080 Blindern
Oslo N-0316
Norway
Email: michawe@ifi.uio.no
Kristian Hiorth
University of Oslo
PO Box 1080 Blindern
Oslo N-0316
Norway
Email: kristahi@ifi.uio.no
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