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INFORMATIONAL
Network Working Group                                        S. PoretskyRequest for Comments: 4689                            Reef Point SystemsCategory: Informational                                        J. Perser                                                                Veriwave                                                            S. Erramilli                                                               Telcordia                                                              S. Khurana                                                                Motorola                                                            October 2006Terminology for Benchmarking Network-layer Traffic Control MechanismsStatus of This Memo   This memo provides information for the Internet community.  It does   not specify an Internet standard of any kind.  Distribution of this   memo is unlimited.Copyright Notice   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2006).Abstract   This document describes terminology for the benchmarking of devices   that implement traffic control using packet classification based on   defined criteria.  The terminology is to be applied to measurements   made on the data plane to evaluate IP traffic control mechanisms.   Rules for packet classification can be based on any field in the IP   header, such as the Differentiated Services Code Point (DSCP), or any   field in the packet payload, such as port number.Poretsky, et al.             Informational                      [Page 1]

RFC 4689       Terminology for Traffic Control Mechanisms   October 2006Table of Contents1. Introduction ....................................................22. Existing Definitions ............................................33. Term Definitions ................................................43.1. Configuration Terms ........................................43.1.1. Classification ......................................43.1.2. Codepoint Set .......................................43.1.3. Forwarding Congestion ...............................53.1.4. Congestion Management ...............................63.1.5. Flow ................................................73.2. Measurement Terms ..........................................73.2.1. Forwarding Capacity .................................73.2.2. Conforming Packet ...................................83.2.3. Nonconforming Packet ................................93.2.4. Forwarding Delay ....................................93.2.5. Jitter .............................................113.2.6. Undifferentiated Response ..........................113.3. Sequence Tracking .........................................123.3.1. Test Sequence Number ...............................123.3.2. Stream .............................................123.3.3. In-Sequence Packet .................................133.3.4. Out-of-Order Packet ................................143.3.5. Duplicate Packet ...................................143.4. Vectors ...................................................153.4.1. Intended Vector ....................................153.4.2. Offered Vector .....................................163.4.3. Expected Vectors ...................................163.4.4. Output Vectors .....................................234. Security Considerations ........................................305. Acknowledgements ...............................................306. References .....................................................316.1. Normative References ......................................316.2. Informative References ....................................311.  Introduction   New terminology is needed because most existing measurements assume   the absence of congestion and only a single per-hop behavior.  This   document introduces several new terms that will allow measurements to   be taken during periods of congestion.   Another key difference from existing terminology is the definition of   measurements as observed on egress and ingress of a device/system   under test.  Again, the existence of congestion requires the addition   of egress measurements, as well as of those taken on ingress; without   observing traffic leaving a device/system, it is not possible to say   whether traffic-control mechanisms effectively dealt with congestion.Poretsky, et al.             Informational                      [Page 2]

RFC 4689       Terminology for Traffic Control Mechanisms   October 2006   The principal measurements introduced in this document are vectors   for rate, delay, and jitter, all of which can be observed with or   without congestion of the Device Under Test (DUT)/System Under Test   (SUT).  This document describes only those terms relevant to   measuring behavior of a DUT or SUT at the egress during periods of   congestion.  End-to-end and service-level measurements are beyond the   scope of this document.2.  Existing DefinitionsRFC 1224, "Techniques for Managing Asynchronously Generated Alerts"   [St91], is used for 'Time with fine enough units to distinguish   between two events'.RFC 1242, "Benchmarking Terminology for Network Interconnect   Devices", andRFC 2285, "Benchmarking Terminology for LAN Switching   Devices", should be consulted before attempting to make use of this   document.RFC 2474, "Definition of the Differentiated Services Field (DS Field)   in the IPv4 and IPv6 Headers",section 2, contains discussions of a   number of terms relevant to network-layer traffic control mechanisms   and should also be consulted.   For the sake of clarity and continuity, this RFC adopts the template   for definitions set out inSection 2 of RFC 1242.  Definitions are   indexed and grouped together in sections for ease of reference.   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 inBCP 14,RFC 2119   [Br97].RFC 2119 defines the use of these key words to help make the   intent of standards track documents as clear as possible.  While this   document uses these keywords, this document is not a standards track   document.2.1.  Frequently Used Acronyms   DA   Destination Address   DS   DiffServ   DSCP DiffServ Code Point   DUT  Device Under Test   IP   Internet Protocol   PHB  Per Hop Behavior   SA   Source Address   SUT  System Under TestPoretsky, et al.             Informational                      [Page 3]

RFC 4689       Terminology for Traffic Control Mechanisms   October 20063.  Term Definitions3.1.  Configuration Terms3.1.1.  Classification   Definition:      Selection of packets according to defined rules.   Discussion:      Classification determines the per-hop behaviors and traffic      conditioning functions, such as shaping and dropping, that are to      be applied to the packet.      Classification of packets can be based on the DS field or IP      Precedence in the packet header.  Classification can be based on      other IP header fields, such as IP Source Address (SA),      Destination Address (DA), and protocol, or on fields in the packet      payload, such as port number.  Classification can also be based on      ingress interface.  It is possible to base classification on      Multi-Field (MF) criteria such as IP source and destination      addresses, protocol, and port number.  For further discussion of      packet classification and its network applications, see [Bl98].   Measurement units:      n/a   See Also:      None3.1.2.  Codepoint Set   Definition:      The set of all DS Code-points or IP precedence values used during      the test duration.   Discussion:      Describes all the code-point markings associated with packets that      are input to the DUT/SUT.  For each entry in the codepoint set,      there are associated vectors describing the rate of traffic,      delay, loss, or jitter containing that particular DSCP or IP      precedence value.      The treatment that a packet belonging to a particular code-point      gets is subject to the DUT classifying packets to map to the      correct PHB.  Moreover, the forwarding treatment in general is      also dependent on the complete set of offered vectors.Poretsky, et al.             Informational                      [Page 4]

RFC 4689       Terminology for Traffic Control Mechanisms   October 2006   Measurement Units:      n/a   See Also:      None3.1.3.  Forwarding Congestion   Definition:      A condition in which one or more egress interfaces are offered      more packets than are forwarded.   Discussion:      This condition is a superset of the overload definition [Ma98].      Overload [Ma98] deals with overloading input and output interfaces      beyond the maximum transmission allowed by the medium.  Forwarding      congestion does not assume ingress interface overload as the only      source of overload on output interfaces.      Another difference between Forwarding Congestion and overload      occurs when the SUT comprises multiple elements, in that      Forwarding Congestion may occur at multiple points.  Consider an      SUT comprising multiple edge devices exchanging traffic with a      single core device.  Depending on traffic patterns, the edge      devices may induce Forwarding Congestion on multiple egress      interfaces on the core device.      Throughput [Br91] defines the lower boundary of Forwarding      Congestion.  Throughput is the maximum offered rate with no      Forwarding Congestion.  At offered rates above throughput, the      DUT/SUT is considered to be in a state of Forwarding Congestion.      Packet Loss, not increased Forwarding Delay, is the external      observable metric used to indicate the condition of Forwarding      Congestion.  Packet Loss is a deterministic indicator of      Forwarding Congestion.  The condition of increased Forwarding      Delay without Packet Loss is an indicator of Forwarding Congestion      known as Incipient Congestion.  Incipient Congestion is a non-      deterministic indicator of Forwarding Congestion [Fl93].  As      stated in [Ec98], RED [Br98] detects incipient congestion before      the buffer overflows, but the current Internet environment is      limited to packet loss as the mechanism for indicating congestion      to the end-nodes.  [Ra99] implies that it is impractical to build      a black-box test to observe Incipient Congestion.  [Ra99] instead      introduces Explicit Congestion Notification (ECN) as a      deterministic Black-Box method for observing Incipient Congestion.      [Ra99] is an Experimental RFC with limited deployment, so ECN is      not used for this particular methodology.  For the purpose ofPoretsky, et al.             Informational                      [Page 5]

RFC 4689       Terminology for Traffic Control Mechanisms   October 2006      "black-box" testing a DUT/SUT, this methodology uses Packet Loss      as the indicator of Forwarding Congestion.      Ingress observations alone are not sufficient to cover all cases      in which Forwarding Congestion may occur.  A device with an      infinite amount of memory could buffer an infinite number of      packets and eventually forward all of them.  However, these      packets may or may not be forwarded during the test duration.      Congestion Collapse [Na84] is defined as the state in which      buffers are full and all arriving packets MUST be dropped across      the network.  Even though ingress interfaces accept all packets      without loss, Forwarding Congestion is present in this      hypothetical device.      The definition presented here explicitly defines Forwarding      Congestion as an event observable on egress interfaces.      Regardless of internal architecture, any device exhibiting Packet      Loss on one or more egress interfaces is experiencing Forwarding      Congestion.   Measurement units:      None   See Also:      Gateway Congestion Control Survey [Ma91]3.1.4.  Congestion Management   Definition:      An implementation of one or more per-hop behaviors to avoid or      minimize the condition of congestion.   Discussion:      Congestion management may seek either to control congestion or      avoid it altogether through Classification.      Congestion avoidance mechanisms seek to prevent congestion before      it actually occurs.      Congestion control mechanisms give one or more flows (with a      discrete IP Precedence or DSCP value) preferential treatment over      other classes during periods of congestion.   Measurement units:      n/a   See Also:      ClassificationPoretsky, et al.             Informational                      [Page 6]

RFC 4689       Terminology for Traffic Control Mechanisms   October 20063.1.5.  Flow   Definition:      A flow is one or more packets sharing a common intended pair of      ingress and egress interfaces.   Discussion:      Packets are grouped by the ingress and egress interfaces they use      on a given DUT/SUT.      A flow can contain multiple source IP addresses and/or destination      IP addresses.  All packets in a flow MUST enter on the same      ingress interface and exit on the same egress interface and have      some common network layer content.      Microflows [Ni98] are a subset of flows.  As defined in [Ni98],      microflows require application-to-application measurement.  In      contrast, flows use lower-layer classification criteria.  Since      this document focuses on network-layer classification criteria, it      concentrates here on the use of network-layer identifiers in      describing a flow.  Flow identifiers also may reside at the data-      link, transport, or application layers of the OSI model.  However,      identifiers other than those at the network layer are out of scope      for this document.      A flow may contain a single code point/IP precedence value or may      contain multiple values destined for a single egress interface.      This is determined by the test methodology.   Measurement units:      n/a   See Also:      Microflow [Ni98]      Streams3.2.  Measurement Terms3.2.1.  Forwarding Capacity   Definition:      The number of packets per second that a device can be observed to      transmit successfully to the correct egress interface in response      to a specified offered load while the device drops none of the      offered packets.Poretsky, et al.             Informational                      [Page 7]

RFC 4689       Terminology for Traffic Control Mechanisms   October 2006   Discussion:      Forwarding Capacity measures the packet rate at the egress      interface(s) of the DUT/SUT.  In contrast, throughput (as defined      inRFC 1242) measures the packet rate at the ingress interface(s)      of the DUT/SUT.      Ingress-based measurements do not account for queuing of the      DUT/SUT.  Throughput rates can be higher than the Forwarding      Capacity because of queueing.  The difference is dependent upon      test duration, packet rate, and queue size.  Forwarding Capacity,      as an egress measurement, does take queuing into account.      Understanding Forwarding Capacity is a necessary precursor to any      measurement involving Traffic Control Mechanisms.  The      accompanying methodology document MUST take into consideration      Forwarding Capacity when determining the expected forwarding      vectors.  When the sum of the expected forwarding vectors on an      interface exceeds the Forwarding Capacity, the Forwarding Capacity      will govern the forwarding rate.      This measurement differs from forwarding rate at maximum offered      load (FRMOL) [Ma98] in that the Forwarding Capacity requires zero      loss.   Measurement units:      N-octet packets per second   See Also:      Throughput [Br91]      Forwarding Rate at Maximum Offered Load [Ma98]3.2.2.  Conforming Packet   Definition:      Packets that lie within specific rate, delay, or jitter bounds.   Discussion:      A DUT/SUT may be configured to allow a given traffic class to      consume a given amount of bandwidth, or to fall within predefined      delay or jitter boundaries.  All packets that lie within specified      bounds are then said to be conforming, whereas those outside the      bounds are nonconforming.   Measurement units:      n/aPoretsky, et al.             Informational                      [Page 8]

RFC 4689       Terminology for Traffic Control Mechanisms   October 2006   See Also:      Expected Vector      Forwarding Vector      Offered Vector      Nonconforming3.2.3.  Nonconforming Packet   Definition:      Packets that do not lie within specific rate, delay, or jitter      bounds.   Discussion:      A DUT/SUT may be configured to allow a given traffic class to      consume a given amount of bandwidth, or to fall within predefined      delay or jitter boundaries.  All packets that do not lie within      these bounds are then said to be nonconforming.   Measurement units:      n/a   See Also:      Expected Vector      Forwarding Vector      Offered Vector      Conforming3.2.4.  Forwarding Delay   Definition:      The time interval starting when the last bit of the input IP      packet is offered to the input port of the DUT/SUT and ending when      the last bit of the output IP packet is received from the output      port of the DUT/SUT.   Discussion:      The delay time interval MUST be externally observed.  The delay      measurement MUST NOT include delays added by test bed components      other than the DUT/SUT, such as propagation time introduced by      cabling or non-zero delay added by the test instrument.      Forwarding Delay differs from latency [Br91] and one-way delay      [Al99] in several key regards:      1. Latency [Br91] assumes knowledge of whether the DUT/SUT uses         "store and forward" or "bit forwarding" technology.  Forwarding         Delay is the same metric, measured the same way, regardless of         the architecture of the DUT/SUT.Poretsky, et al.             Informational                      [Page 9]

RFC 4689       Terminology for Traffic Control Mechanisms   October 2006      2. Forwarding Delay is a last-in, last-out (LILO) measurement,         unlike the last-in, first-out method [Br91] or the first-in,         last-out method [Al99].         The LILO method most closely simulates the way a network-layer         device actually processes an IP datagram.  IP datagrams are not         passed up and down the stack unless they are complete, and         processing begins only once the last bit of the IP datagram has         been received.         Further, the LILO method has an additive property, where the         sum of the parts MUST equal the whole.  This is a key         difference from [Br91] and [Al99].  For example, the delay         added by two DUTs MUST equal the sum of the delay of the DUTs.         This may or may not be the case with [Br91] and [Al99].      3. Forwarding Delay measures the IP datagram only, unlike [Br91],         which also includes link-layer overhead.         A metric focused exclusively on the Internet protocol relieves         the tester from specifying the start/end for every link-layer         protocol that IP runs on.  This avoids the need to determine         whether the start/stop delimiters are included.  It also allows         the use of heterogeneous link-layer protocols in a test.      4. Forwarding Delay can be measured at any offered load, whereas         the latency methodology [Br99] recommends measurement at, and         only at, the throughput level.  Comparing the Forwarding Delay         below the throughput to Forwarding Delay above the Forwarding         Capacity will give insight to the traffic control mechanisms.         For example, non-congested delay may be measured with an         offered load that does not exceed the Forwarding Capacity,         while congested delay may involve an offered load that exceeds         the Forwarding Capacity.         Note: Forwarding Delay SHOULD NOT be used as an absolute         indicator of DUT/SUT Forwarding Congestion.  While Forwarding         Delay may rise when offered load nears or exceeds the         Forwarding Capacity, there is no universal point at which         Forwarding Delay can be said to indicate the presence or         absence of Forwarding Congestion.   Measurement units:      millisecondsPoretsky, et al.             Informational                     [Page 10]

RFC 4689       Terminology for Traffic Control Mechanisms   October 2006   See Also:      Latency [Br91]      Latency [Al99]      One-way Delay [Br99]3.2.5.  Jitter   Definition:      The absolute value of the difference between the Forwarding Delay      of two consecutive received packets belonging to the same stream.   Discussion:      The Forwarding Delay fluctuation between two consecutive received      packets in a stream is reported as the jitter.  Jitter can be      expressed as |D(i) - D(i-1)|, where D equals the Forwarding Delay      and i is the order the packets were received.      Under loss, jitter can be measured between non-consecutive test      sequence numbers.  When IP Traffic Control Mechanisms are dropping      packets, fluctuating Forwarding Delay may be observed.  Jitter      MUST be able to benchmark the delay variation independently of      packet loss.      Jitter is related to the IPDV [De02] (IP Delay Variation) by      taking the absolute value of the ipdv.  The two metrics will      produce different mean values.  Mean Jitter will produce a      positive value, where the mean ipdv is typically zero.  Also, IPDV      is undefined when one packet from a pair is lost.   Measurement units:      milliseconds   See Also:      Forwarding Delay      Jitter variation [Ja99]      ipdv [De02]      interarrival jitter [Sc96]3.2.6.  Undifferentiated Response   Definition:      The vector(s) obtained when mechanisms used to support diff-serv      or IP precedence are disabled.   Discussion:      Enabling diff-serv or IP precedence mechanisms may impose      additional processing overhead for packets.  This overhead may      degrade performance even when traffic belonging to only one class,Poretsky, et al.             Informational                     [Page 11]

RFC 4689       Terminology for Traffic Control Mechanisms   October 2006      the best-effort class, is offered to the device.  Measurements      with "undifferentiated response" SHOULD be made to establish a      baseline.      The vector(s) obtained with DSCP or IP precedence enabled can be      compared to the undifferentiated response to determine the effect      of differentiating traffic.   Measurement units:      n/a3.3.  Sequence Tracking3.3.1.  Test Sequence Number   Definition:      A field in the IP payload portion of the packet that is used to      verify the order of the packets on the egress of the DUT/SUT.   Discussion:      The traffic generator sets the test sequence number value.  Upon      receipt of the packet,  the traffic receiver checks the value.      The traffic generator changes the value on each packet transmitted      based on an algorithm agreed to by the traffic receiver.      The traffic receiver keeps track of the sequence numbers on a      per-stream basis.  In addition to the number of received packets,      the traffic receiver may also report the number of in-sequence      packets, the number of out-of-sequence packets, the number of      duplicate packets, and the number of reordered packets.  The      RECOMMENDED algorithm to change the sequence number on sequential      packets is an incrementing value.   Measurement units:      n/a   See Also:      Stream3.3.2.  Stream   Definition:      A group of packets tracked as a single entity by the traffic      receiver.  A stream MUST share common content, such as type (IP,      UDP), IP SA/DA, packet size, or payload.Poretsky, et al.             Informational                     [Page 12]

RFC 4689       Terminology for Traffic Control Mechanisms   October 2006   Discussion:      Streams are tracked by test sequence number or "unique signature      field" [Ma00].  Streams define how individual packet statistics      are grouped together to form an intelligible summary.      Common stream groupings would be by egress interface, destination      address, source address, DSCP, or IP precedence.  A stream using      test sequence numbers can track the ordering of packets as they      traverse the DUT/SUT.      Streams are not restricted to a pair of source and destination      interfaces as long as all packets are tracked as a single entity.      A multicast stream can be forwarded to multiple destination      interfaces.   Measurement units:      n/a   See Also:      Flow      Microflow [Ni98]      Test sequence number3.3.3.  In-Sequence Packet   Definition:      A received packet with the expected Test Sequence number.   Discussion:      In-sequence is done on a stream level.  As packets are received on      a stream, each packet's Test Sequence number is compared with the      previous packet.  Only packets that match the expected Test      Sequence number are considered in-sequence.      Packets that do not match the expected Test Sequence number are      counted as "not in-sequence" or out-of-sequence.  Every packet      that is received is either in-sequence or out-of-sequence.      Subtracting the in-sequence from the received packets (for that      stream), the tester can derive the out-of-sequence count.      Two types of events will prevent the in-sequence from      incrementing: packet loss and reordered packets.   Measurement units:      Packet countPoretsky, et al.             Informational                     [Page 13]

RFC 4689       Terminology for Traffic Control Mechanisms   October 2006   See Also:      Stream      Test Sequence number3.3.4.  Out-of-Order Packet   Definition:      A received packet with a sequence number less than the sequence      number of any previously arriving packet.   Discussion:      As a stream of packets enters a DUT/SUT, they include a Stream      Test Sequence number indicating the order the packets were sent to      the DUT/SUT.  On exiting the DUT/SUT, these packets may arrive in      a different order.  Each packet that was reordered is counted as      an Out-of-Order Packet.      Certain streaming protocols (such as TCP) require the packets to      be in a certain order.  Packets outside this are dropped by the      streaming protocols even though they were properly received by the      IP layer.  The type of reordering tolerated by a streaming      protocol varies from protocol to protocol, and also by      implementation.      Packet loss does not affect the Out-of-Order Packet count.  The      Out-of-Order Packet count is impacted only by packets that were      not received in the order that they were transmitted.   Measurement units:      packets   See Also:      Stream      Test Sequence number      Packet Reordering Metric for IPPM [Mo03]3.3.5.  Duplicate Packet   Definition:      A received packet with a Test Sequence number matching a      previously received packet.   Discussion:      A Duplicate Packet is a packet that the DUT/SUT has successfully      transmitted out an egress interface more than once.  The egress      interface has previously forwarded this packet.Poretsky, et al.             Informational                     [Page 14]

RFC 4689       Terminology for Traffic Control Mechanisms   October 2006      A Duplicate Packet SHOULD be a bit-for-bit copy of an already      transmitted packet (including Test Sequence number).  If the      Duplicate Packet traversed different paths through the DUT/SUT,      some fields (such as TTL or checksum) may have changed.      A multicast packet is not a Duplicate Packet by definition.  For a      given IP multicast group, a DUT/SUT SHOULD forward a packet once      on a given egress interface provided the path to one or more      multicast receivers is through that interface.  Several egress      interfaces will transmit the same packet, but only once per      interface.      To detect a Duplicate Packet, each packet offered to the DUT/SUT      MUST contain a unique packet-by-packet identifier.   Measurement units:      Packet count   See Also:      Stream      Test Sequence number3.4.  Vectors   A vector is a group of packets all matching a specific   classification criteria, such as DSCP.  Vectors are   identified by the classification criteria and benchmarking   metrics, such as a Forwarding Capacity, Forwarding Delay,   or Jitter.3.4.1.  Intended Vector   Definition:      A description of the configuration on an external source      for the attempted rate of a stream transmitted to a DUT/SUT      matching specific classification rules.   Discussion:      The Intended Vector of a stream influences the benchmark      measurements.  The Intended Vector is described by the      classification criteria and attempted rate.   Measurement Units:      N-bytes packets per secondPoretsky, et al.             Informational                     [Page 15]

RFC 4689       Terminology for Traffic Control Mechanisms   October 2006   See Also:      Stream      Offered Vector      Forwarding Vector3.4.2.  Offered Vector   Definition:      A description for the attempted rate of a stream offered to      a DUT/SUT matching specific classification rules.   Discussion:      The Offered Vector of a stream influences the benchmark      measurements.  The Offered Vector is described by the      classification criteria and offered rate.   Measurement Units:      N-bytes packets per second   See Also:      Stream      Intended Vector      Forwarding Vector3.4.3.  Expected Vectors3.4.3.1.  Expected Forwarding Vector   Definition:      A description of the expected output rate of packets matching a      specific classification, such as DSCP.   Discussion:      The value of the Expected Forwarding Vector is dependent on the      set of offered vectors and Classification configuration on the      DUT/SUT.  The DUT is configured in a certain way so that      classification occurs when a traffic mix consisting of multiple      streams is applied.      This term captures the expected forwarding behavior from the DUT      receiving multiple Offered Vectors.  The actual algorithm or      mechanism the DUT uses to achieve service differentiation is      implementation specific and is not important when describing the      Expected Forwarding Vector.   Measurement units:      N-octet packets per secondPoretsky, et al.             Informational                     [Page 16]

RFC 4689       Terminology for Traffic Control Mechanisms   October 2006   See Also:      Classification      Stream      Intended Vector      Offered Vector3.4.3.2.  Expected Loss Vector   Definition:      A description of the percentage of packets having a specific      classification that should not be forwarded.   Discussion:      The value of the Expected Loss Vector is dependent on the set of      offered vectors and Classification configuration on the DUT/SUT.      The DUT is configured in a certain way so that classification      occurs when a traffic mix consisting of multiple streams is      applied.      This term captures the expected forwarding behavior from the DUT      receiving multiple Offered Vectors.  The actual algorithm or      mechanism the DUT uses to achieve service differentiation is      implementation specific and is not important when describing the      Expected Loss Vector.   Measurement Units:      Percentage of intended packets expected to be dropped.   See Also:      Classification      Stream      Intended Vector      Offered Vector      One-way Packet Loss Metric [Ka99]3.4.3.3.  Expected Sequence Vector   Definition:      A description of the expected in-sequence packets matching a      specific classification, such as DSCP.   Discussion:      The value of the Expected Sequence Vector is dependent on the set      of offered vectors and Classification configuration on the      DUT/SUT.  The DUT is configured in a certain way so that      classification occurs when a traffic mix consisting of multiple      streams is applied.Poretsky, et al.             Informational                     [Page 17]

RFC 4689       Terminology for Traffic Control Mechanisms   October 2006      This term captures the expected forwarding behavior from the DUT      receiving multiple Offered Vectors.  The actual algorithm or      mechanism the DUT uses to achieve service differentiation is      implementation specific and is not important when describing the      Expected Sequence Vector.   Measurement Units:      N-octet packets per second   See Also:      Classification      Stream      In-Sequence Packet      Intended Vector      Offered Vector3.4.3.4.  Expected Delay Vector   Definition:      A description of the expected instantaneous Forwarding Delay for      packets matching a specific classification, such as DSCP.   Discussion:      The value of the Expected Delay Vector is dependent on the set of      offered vectors and Classification configuration on the DUT/SUT.      The DUT is configured in a certain way so that classification      occurs when a traffic mix consisting of multiple streams is      applied.      This term captures the expected forwarding behavior from the DUT      receiving multiple Offered Vectors.  The actual algorithm or      mechanism the DUT uses to achieve service differentiation is      implementation specific and is not important when describing the      Expected Delay Vector.   Measurement units:      milliseconds   See Also:      Classification      Stream      Forwarding Delay      Intended Vector      Offered VectorPoretsky, et al.             Informational                     [Page 18]

RFC 4689       Terminology for Traffic Control Mechanisms   October 20063.4.3.5.  Expected Average Delay Vector   Definition:      A description of the expected average Forwarding Delay for packets      matching a specific classification, such as DSCP.   Discussion:      The value of the Expected Average Delay Vector is dependent on the      set of offered vectors and Classification configuration on the      DUT/SUT.  The DUT is configured in a certain way so that      classification occurs when a traffic mix consisting of multiple      streams is applied.      This term captures the expected forwarding behavior from the DUT      receiving multiple Offered Vectors.  The actual algorithm or      mechanism the DUT uses to achieve service differentiation is      implementation specific and is not important when describing the      Expected Average Delay Vector.   Measurement units:      milliseconds   See Also:      Classification      Stream      Forwarding Delay      Intended Vector      Offered Vector      Expected Delay Vector3.4.3.6.  Expected Maximum Delay Vector   Definition:      A description of the expected maximum Forwarding Delay for packets      matching a specific classification, such as DSCP.   Discussion:      The value of the Expected Maximum Delay Vector is dependent on the      set of offered vectors and Classification configuration on the      DUT/SUT.  The DUT is configured in a certain way so that      classification occurs when a traffic mix consisting of multiple      streams is applied.      This term captures the expected forwarding behavior from the DUT      receiving multiple Offered Vectors.  The actual algorithm or      mechanism the DUT uses to achieve service differentiation is      implementation specific and is not important when describing the      Expected Maximum Delay Vector.Poretsky, et al.             Informational                     [Page 19]

RFC 4689       Terminology for Traffic Control Mechanisms   October 2006   Measurement units:      milliseconds   See Also:      Classification      Stream      Forwarding Delay      Intended Vector      Offered Vector      Expected Delay Vector3.4.3.7.  Expected Minimum Delay Vector   Definition:      A description of the expected minimum Forwarding Delay for packets      matching a specific classification, such as DSCP.   Discussion:      The value of the Expected Minimum Delay Vector is dependent on the      set of offered vectors and Classification configuration on the      DUT/SUT.  The DUT is configured in a certain way so that      classification occurs when a traffic mix consisting of multiple      streams is applied.      This term captures the expected forwarding behavior from the DUT      receiving multiple Offered Vectors.  The actual algorithm or      mechanism the DUT uses to achieve service differentiation is      implementation specific and is not important when describing the      Expected Minimum Delay Vector.   Measurement units:      milliseconds   See Also:      Classification      Stream      Forwarding Delay      Intended Vector      Offered Vector      Expected Delay Vector3.4.3.8.  Expected Instantaneous Jitter Vector   Definition:      A description of the expected Instantaneous Jitter between two      consecutive packets arrival times matching a specific      classification, such as DSCP.Poretsky, et al.             Informational                     [Page 20]

RFC 4689       Terminology for Traffic Control Mechanisms   October 2006   Discussion:      Instantaneous Jitter is the absolute value of the difference      between the Forwarding Delay measurement of two packets belonging      to the same stream.      The Forwarding Delay fluctuation between two consecutive packets      in a stream is reported as the "Instantaneous Jitter".      Instantaneous Jitter can be expressed as |D(i) - D(i-1)|, where D      equals the Forwarding Delay and i is the test sequence number.      Packets lost are not counted in the measurement.      The Forwarding Vector may contain several Jitter Vectors.  For n      packets received in a Forwarding Vector, there is a total of (n-1)      Instantaneous Jitter Vectors.   Measurement units:      milliseconds   See Also:      Classification      Stream      Jitter      Intended Vector      Offered Vector3.4.3.9.  Expected Average Jitter Vector   Definition:      A description of the expected average jitter for packets arriving      in a stream matching a specific classification, such as DSCP.   Discussion:      Average Jitter Vector is the average of all the Instantaneous      Jitter Vectors measured during the test duration for the same      stream.      The value of the Expected Average Jitter Vector is dependent on      the set of offered vectors and Classification configuration on the      DUT/SUT.  The DUT is configured in a certain way so that      classification occurs when a traffic mix consisting of multiple      streams is applied.      This term captures the expected forwarding behavior from the DUT      receiving multiple Offered Vectors.  The actual algorithm or      mechanism the DUT uses to achieve service differentiation is      implementation specific and is not important when describing the      Expected Average Jitter Vector.Poretsky, et al.             Informational                     [Page 21]

RFC 4689       Terminology for Traffic Control Mechanisms   October 2006   Measurement units:      milliseconds   See Also:      Classification      Stream      Jitter      Intended Vector      Offered Vector      Expected Instantaneous Jitter Vector3.4.3.10.  Expected Peak-to-peak Jitter Vector   Definition:      A description of the expected maximum variation in the Forwarding      Delay of packet arrival times for packets arriving in a stream      matching a specific classification, such as DSCP.   Discussion:      Peak-to-peak Jitter Vector is the maximum Forwarding Delay minus      the minimum Forwarding Delay of the packets (in a vector)      forwarded by the DUT/SUT.      Peak-to-peak Jitter is not derived from the Instantaneous Jitter      Vector.  Peak-to-peak Jitter is based upon all the packets during      the test duration, not just two consecutive packets.      The value of the Expected Peak-to-peak Jitter Vector is dependent      on the set of offered vectors and Classification configuration on      the DUT/SUT.  The DUT is configured in a certain way so that      classification occurs when a traffic mix consisting of multiple      streams is applied.      This term captures the expected forwarding behavior from the DUT      receiving multiple Offered Vectors.  The actual algorithm or      mechanism the DUT uses to achieve service differentiation is      implementation specific and is not important when describing the      Expected Peak-to-peak Jitter Vector.   Measurement units:      millisecondsPoretsky, et al.             Informational                     [Page 22]

RFC 4689       Terminology for Traffic Control Mechanisms   October 2006   See Also:      Classification      Stream      Jitter      Intended Vector      Offered Vector      Expected Instantaneous Jitter Vector      Expected Average Jitter Vector3.4.4.  Output Vectors3.4.4.1.  Forwarding Vector   Definition:      The number of packets per second for a stream matching a specific      classification, such as DSCP, that a DUT/SUT is measured to      forward to the correct destination interface successfully in      response to an offered vector.   Discussion:      Forwarding Vector is expressed as a combination of values: the      classification rules AND the measured packets per second for the      stream matching the classification rules.  Forwarding Vector is a      per-hop measurement.  The DUT/SUT MAY remark the specific DSCP (or      IP precedence) value for a multi-hop measurement.  The stream      remains the same.   Measurement units:      N-octet packets per second   See Also:      Classification      Stream      Forwarding Capacity      Intended Vector      Offered Vector      Expected Vector3.4.4.2.  Loss Vector   Definition:      The percentage of packets per second for a stream matching a      specific classification, such as DSCP, that a DUT/SUT is measured      not to transmit to the correct destination interface in response      to an offered vector.Poretsky, et al.             Informational                     [Page 23]

RFC 4689       Terminology for Traffic Control Mechanisms   October 2006   Discussion:      Loss Vector is expressed as a combination of values: the      classification rules AND the measured percentage value of packet      loss.  Loss Vector is a per-hop measurement.  The DUT/SUT MAY      remark the specific DSCP or IP precedence value for a multi-hop      measurement.  The stream remains the same.   Measurement Units:      Percentage of packets   See Also:      Classification      Stream      Intended Vector      Offered Vector      Expected Vector      One-way Packet Loss Metric [Ka99]3.4.4.3.  Sequence Vector   Definition:      The number of packets per second for all packets in a stream      matching a specific classification, such as DSCP, that a DUT/SUT      is measured to transmit in sequence to the correct destination      interface in response to an offered vector.   Discussion:      Sequence Vector is expressed as a combination of values: the      classification rules AND the number of packets per second that are      in-sequence.      Sequence Vector is a per-hop measurement.  The DUT/SUT MAY remark      the specific DSCP or IP precedence value for a multi-hop      measurement.  The stream remains the same.   Measurement Units:      N-octet packets per second   See Also:      Classification      Stream      In-sequence Packet      Intended Vector      Offered Vector      Expected VectorPoretsky, et al.             Informational                     [Page 24]

RFC 4689       Terminology for Traffic Control Mechanisms   October 20063.4.4.4.  Instantaneous Delay Vector   Definition:      The instantaneous Forwarding Delay for a packet in a stream      matching a specific classification, such as DSCP, that a DUT/SUT      is measured to transmit to the correct destination interface      successfully in response to an offered vector.   Discussion:      Instantaneous Delay Vector is expressed as a combination of      values: the classification rules AND Forwarding Delay.  For every      packet received in a Forwarding Vector, there is a corresponding      Instantaneous Delay Vector.      Instantaneous Delay Vector is a per-hop measurement.  The DUT/SUT      MAY remark the specific DSCP or IP precedence value for a multi-      hop measurement.  The stream remains the same.      Instantaneous Delay Vector can be obtained at any offered load.      It is RECOMMENDED that this vector be obtained at or below the      Forwarding Capacity in the absence of Forwarding Congestion.  For      congested Forwarding Delay, run the offered load above the      Forwarding Capacity.   Measurement Units:      milliseconds   See Also:      Classification      Stream      Forwarding Capacity      Forwarding Delay      Intended Vector      Offered Vector      Expected Delay Vector3.4.4.5.  Average Delay Vector   Definition:      The average Forwarding Delay for packets in a stream matching a      specific classification, such as DSCP, that a DUT/SUT is measured      to transmit to the correct destination interface successfully in      response to an offered vector.Poretsky, et al.             Informational                     [Page 25]

RFC 4689       Terminology for Traffic Control Mechanisms   October 2006   Discussion:      Average Delay Vector is expressed as combination of values: the      classification rules AND average Forwarding Delay.      The average Forwarding Delay is computed by averaging all the      Instantaneous Delay Vectors for a given stream.      Average Delay Vector is a per-hop measurement.  The DUT/SUT MAY      remark the specific DSCP or IP precedence value for a multi-hop      measurement.  The stream remains the same.      Average Delay Vector can be obtained at any offered load.  It is      recommended that the offered load be at or below the Forwarding      Capacity in the absence of congestion.  For congested Forwarding      Delay, run the offered load above the Forwarding Capacity.   Measurement Units:      milliseconds   See Also:      Classification      Stream      Forwarding Capacity      Forwarding Delay      Intended Vector      Offered Vector      Expected Delay Vector      Instantaneous Delay Vector3.4.4.6.  Maximum Delay Vector   Definition:      The maximum Forwarding Delay for packets in a stream matching a      specific classification, such as DSCP, that a DUT/SUT is measured      to transmit to the correct destination interface successfully in      response to an offered vector.   Discussion:      Maximum Delay Vector is expressed as combination of values: the      classification rules AND maximum Forwarding Delay.      The maximum Forwarding Delay is computed by selecting the highest      value from the Instantaneous Delay Vectors for a given stream.      Maximum Delay Vector is a per-hop measurement.  The DUT/SUT MAY      remark the specific DSCP or IP precedence value for a multi-hop      measurement.  The stream remains the same.Poretsky, et al.             Informational                     [Page 26]

RFC 4689       Terminology for Traffic Control Mechanisms   October 2006      Maximum Delay Vector can be obtained at any offered load.  It is      recommended that the offered load be at or below the Forwarding      Capacity in the absence of congestion.  For congested Forwarding      Delay, run the offered load above the Forwarding Capacity.   Measurement Units:      milliseconds   See Also:      Classification      Stream      Forwarding Capacity      Forwarding Delay      Intended Vector      Offered Vector      Expected Delay Vector      Instantaneous Delay Vector3.4.4.7.  Minimum Delay Vector   Definition:      The minimum Forwarding Delay for packets in a stream matching a      specific classification, such as DSCP, that a DUT/SUT is measured      to transmit to the correct destination interface successfully in      response to an offered vector.   Discussion:      Minimum Delay Vector is expressed as a combination of values: the      classification rules AND minimum Forwarding Delay.  The minimum      Forwarding Delay is computed by selecting the lowest value from      the Instantaneous Delay Vectors for a given stream.      Minimum Delay Vector is a per-hop measurement.  The DUT/SUT MAY      remark the specific DSCP or IP precedence value for a multi-hop      measurement.  The stream remains the same.      Minimum Delay Vector can be obtained at any offered load.  It is      recommended that the offered load be at or below the Forwarding      Capacity in the absence of congestion.  For congested Forwarding      Delay, run the offered load above the Forwarding Capacity.   Measurement Units:      millisecondsPoretsky, et al.             Informational                     [Page 27]

RFC 4689       Terminology for Traffic Control Mechanisms   October 2006   See Also:      Classification      Stream      Forwarding Capacity      Forwarding Delay      Intended Vector      Offered Vector      Expected Delay Vector3.4.4.8.  Instantaneous Jitter Vector   Definition:      The jitter for two consecutive packets in a stream matching a      specific classification, such as DSCP, that a DUT/SUT is measured      to transmit to the correct destination interface successfully in      response to an offered vector.   Discussion:      Instantaneous Jitter is the absolute value of the difference      between the Forwarding Delay measurement of two packets belonging      to the same stream.      The Instantaneous Jitter vector is expressed as a pair of numbers.      Both the specific DSCP (or IP precedence) value AND jitter value      combine to make a vector.      The Forwarding Delay fluctuation between two consecutive packets      in a stream is reported as the "Instantaneous Jitter".      Instantaneous Jitter Vector can be expressed as |D(i) - D(i-1)|,      where D equals the Forwarding Delay and i is the test sequence      number.  Packets lost are not counted in the measurement.      The Instantaneous Jitter Vector is a per-hop measurement.  The      DUT/SUT MAY remark the specific DSCP or IP precedence value for a      multi-hop measurement.  The stream remains the same.      There may be several Instantaneous Jitter Vectors for a single      stream.  For n packets measured, there may be (n-1) Instantaneous      Jitter Vectors.   Measurement units:      millisecondsPoretsky, et al.             Informational                     [Page 28]

RFC 4689       Terminology for Traffic Control Mechanisms   October 2006   See Also:      Classification      Stream      Forwarding Delay      Jitter      Forwarding Vector      Expected Vectors3.4.4.9.  Average Jitter Vector   Definition:      The average jitter for packets in a stream matching a specific      classification, such as DSCP, that a DUT/SUT is measured to      transmit to the correct destination interface successfully in      response to an offered vector.   Discussion:      Average jitter is calculated by the average of all the      Instantaneous Jitter Vectors of the same stream measured during      the test duration.  Average Jitter Vector is expressed as a      combination of values:  the classification rules AND average      Jitter.      Average Jitter Vector is a per-hop measurement.  The DUT/SUT MAY      remark the specific DSCP or IP precedence value for a multi-hop      measurement.  The stream remains the same.   Measurement units:      milliseconds   See Also:      Classification      Stream      Jitter      Forwarding Vector      Expected Vector      Instantaneous Jitter Vector3.4.4.10.  Peak-to-peak Jitter Vector   Definition:      The maximum possible variation in the Forwarding Delay for packets      in a stream matching a specific classification, such as DSCP, that      a DUT/SUT is measured to transmit to the correct destination      interface successfully in response to an offered vector.Poretsky, et al.             Informational                     [Page 29]

RFC 4689       Terminology for Traffic Control Mechanisms   October 2006   Discussion:      Peak-to-peak Jitter Vector is calculated by subtracting the      maximum Forwarding Delay from the minimum Forwarding Delay of the      packets forwarded by the DUT/SUT.  Jitter vector is expressed as a      combination of values:  the classification rules AND peak-to-peak      Jitter.      Peak-to-peak Jitter is not derived from the Instantaneous Jitter      Vector.  Peak-to-peak Jitter is based upon all the packets during      the test duration, not just two consecutive packets.   Measurement units:      milliseconds   See Also:      Jitter      Forwarding Vector      Stream      Expected Vectors      Instantaneous Jitter Vector      Average Jitter Vector4.  Security Considerations   Documents of this type do not directly affect the security of the   Internet or of corporate networks as long as benchmarking is not   performed on devices or systems connected to production networks.   Packets with unintended and/or unauthorized DSCP or IP precedence   values may present security issues.  Determining the security   consequences of such packets is out of scope for this document.5.  Acknowledgements   The authors gratefully acknowledge the contributions of the IETF's   Benchmarking Methodology Working Group members in reviewing this   document.  The authors would like to express our thanks to David   Newman for his consistent and valuable assistance throughout the   development of this document.  The authors would also like to thank   Al Morton and Kevin Dubray for their ideas and support.Poretsky, et al.             Informational                     [Page 30]

RFC 4689       Terminology for Traffic Control Mechanisms   October 20066.  References6.1.  Normative References   [Br91] Bradner, S., "Benchmarking terminology for network          interconnection devices",RFC 1242, July 1991.   [Br97] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate          Requirement Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119, March 1997.   [Br98] Braden, B., Clark, D., Crowcroft, J., Davie, B., Deering, S.,          Estrin, D., Floyd, S., Jacobson, V., Minshall, G., Partridge,          C., Peterson, L., Ramakrishnan, K., Shenker, S., Wroclawski,          J., and L. Zhang, "Recommendations on Queue Management and          Congestion Avoidance in the Internet",RFC 2309, April 1998.   [Ma98] Mandeville, R., "Benchmarking Terminology for LAN Switching          Devices",RFC 2285, February 1998.   [Ni98] Nichols, K., Blake, S., Baker, F., and D. Black, "Definition          of the Differentiated Services Field (DS Field) in the IPv4          and IPv6 Headers",RFC 2474, December 1998.   [St91] Steinberg, L., "Techniques for managing asynchronously          generated alerts",RFC 1224, May 1991.6.2.  Informative References   [Al99] Almes, G., Kalidindi, S., and M. Zekauskas, "A One-way Delay          Metric for IPPM",RFC 2679, September 1999.   [Bl98] Blake, S., Black, D., Carlson, M., Davies, E., Wang, Z., and          W. Weiss, "An Architecture for Differentiated Service",RFC2475, December 1998.   [Br99] Bradner, S. and J. McQuaid, "Benchmarking Methodology for          Network Interconnect Devices",RFC 2544, March 1999.   [De02] Demichelis, C. and P. Chimento, "IP Packet Delay Variation          Metric for IP Performance Metrics (IPPM)",RFC 3393, November          2002.   [Ec98]http://www3.ietf.org/proceedings/98mar/98mar-edited-135.htm   [Fl93] Floyd, S., and Jacobson, V., "Random Early Detection gateways          for Congestion Avoidance", IEEE/ACM Transactions on          Networking, V.1 N.4, August 1993, p. 397-413.  URL          "ftp://ftp.ee.lbl.gov/papers/early.pdf".Poretsky, et al.             Informational                     [Page 31]

RFC 4689       Terminology for Traffic Control Mechanisms   October 2006   [Ja99] Davie, B., Charny, A., Bennet, J.C., Benson, K., Le Boudec,          J., Courtney, W., Davari, S., Firoiu, V., and D. Stiliadis,          "An Expedited Forwarding PHB (Per-Hop Behavior)",RFC 3246,          March 2002.   [Ka99] Almes, G., Kalidindi, S., and M. Zekauskas, "A One-way Packet          Loss Metric for IPPM",RFC 2680, September 1999.   [Ma91] Mankin, A. and K. Ramakrishnan, "Gateway Congestion Control          Survey",RFC 1254, August 1991.   [Ma00] Mandeville, R. and J. Perser, "Benchmarking Methodology for          LAN Switching Devices",RFC 2889, August 2000.   [Mo03] Morton, A., Ciavattone, L., Ramachandran, G., Shalunov, S.,          Perser, J., "Packet Reordering Metric for IPPM", Work in          Progress.   [Na84] Nagle, J., "Congestion control in IP/TCP internetworks",RFC896, January 1984.   [Ra99] Ramakrishnan, K., Floyd, S., and D. Black, "The Addition of          Explicit Congestion Notification (ECN) to IP",RFC 3168,          September 2001.   [Sc96] Schulzrinne, H., Casner, S., Frederick, R., and V. Jacobson,          "RTP: A Transport Protocol for Real-Time Applications", STD          64,RFC 3550, July 2003.Poretsky, et al.             Informational                     [Page 32]

RFC 4689       Terminology for Traffic Control Mechanisms   October 2006Authors' Addresses   Jerry Perser   Veriwave   8770 SW Nimbus Ave.   Suite B   Beaverton, OR 97008   USA   USA   Phone: + 1 818 338 4112   EMail: jerry@perser.org   Scott Poretsky   Reef Point Systems   8 New England Executive Park   Burlington, MA 01803   USA   Phone: + 1 508 439 9008   EMail: sporetsky@reefpoint.com   Shobha Erramilli   Telcordia Technologies   331 Newman Springs Road   Red Bank, New Jersey 07701   USA   EMail: shobha@research.telcordia.com   Sumit Khurana   Motorola   7700 West Parmer Ln.   Austin, TX 78729   USA   Phone: +1 512 996 6604   Email: skhurana@motorola.comPoretsky, et al.             Informational                     [Page 33]

RFC 4689       Terminology for Traffic Control Mechanisms   October 2006Full Copyright Statement   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2006).   This document is subject to the rights, licenses and restrictions   contained inBCP 78, and except as set forth therein, the authors   retain all their rights.   This document and the information contained herein are provided on an   "AS IS" basis and THE CONTRIBUTOR, THE ORGANIZATION HE/SHE REPRESENTS   OR IS SPONSORED BY (IF ANY), THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET   ENGINEERING TASK FORCE DISCLAIM ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED,   INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE   INFORMATION HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED   WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.Intellectual Property   The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any   Intellectual Property Rights or other rights that might be claimed to   pertain to the implementation or use of the technology described in   this document or the extent to which any license under such rights   might or might not be available; nor does it represent that it has   made any independent effort to identify any such rights.  Information   on the procedures with respect to rights in RFC documents can be   found inBCP 78 andBCP 79.   Copies of IPR disclosures made to the IETF Secretariat and any   assurances of licenses to be made available, or the result of an   attempt made to obtain a general license or permission for the use of   such proprietary rights by implementers or users of this   specification can be obtained from the IETF on-line IPR repository athttp://www.ietf.org/ipr.   The IETF invites any interested party to bring to its attention any   copyrights, patents or patent applications, or other proprietary   rights that may cover technology that may be required to implement   this standard.  Please address the information to the IETF at   ietf-ipr@ietf.org.Acknowledgement   Funding for the RFC Editor function is provided by the IETF   Administrative Support Activity (IASA).Poretsky, et al.             Informational                     [Page 34]

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