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EXPERIMENTAL
Updated by:5682
Network Working Group                                       P. SarolahtiRequest for Comments: 4138                         Nokia Research CenterCategory: Experimental                                           M. Kojo                                                  University of Helsinki                                                             August 2005Forward RTO-Recovery (F-RTO): An Algorithm for DetectingSpurious Retransmission Timeouts with TCP and theStream Control Transmission Protocol (SCTP)Status of This Memo   This memo defines an Experimental Protocol for the Internet   community.  It does not specify an Internet standard of any kind.   Discussion and suggestions for improvement are requested.   Distribution of this memo is unlimited.Copyright Notice   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2005).Abstract   Spurious retransmission timeouts cause suboptimal TCP performance   because they often result in unnecessary retransmission of the last   window of data.  This document describes the F-RTO detection   algorithm for detecting spurious TCP retransmission timeouts.  F-RTO   is a TCP sender-only algorithm that does not require any TCP options   to operate.  After retransmitting the first unacknowledged segment   triggered by a timeout, the F-RTO algorithm of the TCP sender   monitors the incoming acknowledgments to determine whether the   timeout was spurious.  It then decides whether to send new segments   or retransmit unacknowledged segments.  The algorithm effectively   helps to avoid additional unnecessary retransmissions and thereby   improves TCP performance in the case of a spurious timeout.  The   F-RTO algorithm can also be applied to the Stream Control   Transmission Protocol (SCTP).Sarolahti & Kojo              Experimental                      [Page 1]

RFC 4138                  Forward RTO-Recovery               August 2005Table of Contents1.  Introduction  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .21.1.  Terminology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .42.  F-RTO Algorithm . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .42.1.  The Algorithm . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .52.2.  Discussion  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .63.  SACK-Enhanced Version of the F-RTO Algorithm  . . . . . .84.  Taking Actions after Detecting Spurious RTO . . . . . . .105.  SCTP Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .106.  Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .117.  Acknowledgements  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .128.  References  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .128.1.  Normative References. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .128.2.  Informative References. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .13Appendix A: Scenarios . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .15Appendix B: SACK-Enhanced F-RTO and Fast Recovery . . . . . .20Appendix C: Discussion of Window-Limited Cases  . . . . . . .211.  Introduction   The Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) [Pos81] has two methods for   triggering retransmissions.  First, the TCP sender relies on incoming   duplicate ACKs, which indicate that the receiver is missing some of   the data.  After a required number of successive duplicate ACKs have   arrived at the sender, it retransmits the first unacknowledged   segment [APS99] and continues with a loss recovery algorithm such as   NewReno [FHG04] or SACK-based loss recovery [BAFW03].  Second, the   TCP sender maintains a retransmission timer which triggers   retransmission of segments, if they have not been acknowledged before   the retransmission timeout (RTO) expires.  When the retransmission   timeout occurs, the TCP sender enters the RTO recovery where the   congestion window is initialized to one segment and unacknowledged   segments are retransmitted using the slow-start algorithm.  The   retransmission timer is adjusted dynamically, based on the measured   round-trip times [PA00].   It has been pointed out that the retransmission timer can expire   spuriously and cause unnecessary retransmissions when no segments   have been lost [LK00,GL02,LM03].  After a spurious retransmission   timeout, the late acknowledgments of the original segments arrive at   the sender, usually triggering unnecessary retransmissions of a whole   window of segments during the RTO recovery.  Furthermore, after a   spurious retransmission timeout, a conventional TCP sender increases   the congestion window on each late acknowledgment in slow start.   This injects a large number of data segments into the network within   one round-trip time, thus violating the packet conservation principle   [Jac88].Sarolahti & Kojo              Experimental                      [Page 2]

RFC 4138                  Forward RTO-Recovery               August 2005   There are a number of potential reasons for spurious retransmission   timeouts.  First, some mobile networking technologies involve sudden   delay spikes on transmission because of actions taken during a   hand-off.  Second, given a low-bandwidth link or some other change in   available bandwidth, arrival of competing traffic (possibly with   higher priority) can cause a sudden increase of round-trip time.   This may trigger a spurious retransmission timeout.  A persistently   reliable link layer can also cause a sudden delay when a data frame   and several retransmissions of it are lost for some reason.  This   document does not distinguish between the different causes of such a   delay spike.  Rather, it discusses the spurious retransmission   timeouts caused by a delay spike in general.   This document describes the F-RTO detection algorithm.  It is based   on the detection mechanism of the "Forward RTO-Recovery" (F-RTO)   algorithm [SKR03] that is used for detecting spurious retransmission   timeouts and thus avoids unnecessary retransmissions following the   retransmission timeout.  When the timeout is not spurious, the F-RTO   algorithm reverts back to the conventional RTO recovery algorithm,   and therefore has similar behavior and performance.  In contrast to   alternative algorithms proposed for detecting unnecessary   retransmissions (Eifel [LK00], [LM03] and DSACK-based algorithms   [BA04]), F-RTO does not require any TCP options for its operation,   and it can be implemented by modifying only the TCP sender.  The   Eifel algorithm uses TCP timestamps [BBJ92] for detecting a spurious   timeout upon arrival of the first acknowledgment after the   retransmission.  The DSACK-based algorithms require that the TCP   Selective Acknowledgment Option [MMFR96], with the DSACK extension   [FMMP00], is in use.  With DSACK, the TCP receiver can report if it   has received a duplicate segment, enabling the sender to detect   afterwards whether it has retransmitted segments unnecessarily.  The   F-RTO algorithm only attempts to detect and avoid unnecessary   retransmissions after an RTO.  Eifel and DSACK can also be used for   detecting unnecessary retransmissions caused by other events, such as   packet reordering.   When an RTO expires, the F-RTO sender retransmits the first   unacknowledged segment as usual [APS99].  Deviating from the normal   operation after a timeout, it then tries to transmit new, previously   unsent data, for the first acknowledgment that arrives after the   timeout, given that the acknowledgment advances the window.  If the   second acknowledgment that arrives after the timeout advances the   window (i.e., acknowledges data that was not retransmitted), the F-   RTO sender declares the timeout spurious and exits the RTO recovery.   However, if either of these two acknowledgments is a duplicate ACK,   there will not be sufficient evidence of a spurious timeout.   Therefore, the F-RTO sender retransmits the unacknowledged segments   in slow start similarly to the traditional algorithm.  With aSarolahti & Kojo              Experimental                      [Page 3]

RFC 4138                  Forward RTO-Recovery               August 2005   SACK-enhanced version of the F-RTO algorithm, spurious timeouts may   be detected even if duplicate ACKs arrive after an RTO   retransmission.   The F-RTO algorithm can also be applied to the Stream Control   Transmission Protocol (SCTP) [Ste00], because SCTP has acknowledgment   and packet retransmission concepts similar to TCP.  For convenience,   this document mostly refers to TCP, but the algorithms and other   discussion are valid for SCTP as well.   This document is organized as follows.Section 2 describes the basic   F-RTO algorithm.Section 3 outlines an optional enhancement to the   F-RTO algorithm that takes advantage of the TCP SACK option.Section4 discusses the possible actions to be taken after detecting a   spurious RTO.Section 5 gives considerations on applying F-RTO with   SCTP, andSection 6 discusses the security considerations.1.1.  Terminology   The keywords MUST, MUST NOT, REQUIRED, SHALL, SHALL NOT, SHOULD,   SHOULD NOT, RECOMMENDED, MAY, and OPTIONAL, when they appear in this   document, are to be interpreted as described in [RFC2119].2.  F-RTO Algorithm   A timeout is considered spurious if it would have been avoided had   the sender waited longer for an acknowledgment to arrive [LM03].   F-RTO affects the TCP sender behavior only after a retransmission   timeout.  Otherwise, the TCP behavior remains the same.  When the RTO   expires, the F-RTO algorithm monitors incoming acknowledgments and if   the TCP sender gets an acknowledgment for a segment that was not   retransmitted due to timeout, the F-RTO algorithm declares a timeout   spurious.  The actions taken in response to a spurious timeout are   not specified in this document, but we discuss some alternatives inSection 4.  This section introduces the algorithm and then discusses   the different steps of the algorithm in more detail.   Following the practice used with the Eifel Detection algorithm   [LM03], we use the "SpuriousRecovery" variable to indicate whether   the retransmission is declared spurious by the sender.  This variable   can be used as an input for a corresponding response algorithm.  With   F-RTO, the value of SpuriousRecovery can be either SPUR_TO   (indicating a spurious retransmission timeout) or FALSE (indicating   that the timeout is not declared spurious), and the TCP sender should   follow the conventional RTO recovery algorithm.Sarolahti & Kojo              Experimental                      [Page 4]

RFC 4138                  Forward RTO-Recovery               August 20052.1.  The Algorithm   A TCP sender MAY implement the basic F-RTO algorithm.  If it chooses   to apply the algorithm, the following steps MUST be taken after the   retransmission timer expires.  If the sender implements some loss   recovery algorithm other than Reno or NewReno [FHG04], the F-RTO   algorithm SHOULD NOT be entered when earlier fast recovery is   underway.   1) When RTO expires, retransmit the first unacknowledged segment and      set SpuriousRecovery to FALSE.  Also, store the highest sequence      number transmitted so far in variable "recover".   2) When the first acknowledgment after the RTO retransmission arrives      at the sender, the sender chooses one of the following actions,      depending on whether the ACK advances the window or whether it is      a duplicate ACK.      a) If the acknowledgment is a duplicate ACK OR it acknowledges a         sequence number equal to the value of "recover" OR it does not         acknowledge all of the data that was retransmitted in step 1,         revert to the conventional RTO recovery and continue by         retransmitting unacknowledged data in slow start.  Do not enter         step 3 of this algorithm.  The SpuriousRecovery variable         remains as FALSE.      b) Else, if the acknowledgment advances the window AND it is below         the value of "recover", transmit up to two new (previously         unsent) segments and enter step 3 of this algorithm.  If the         TCP sender does not have enough unsent data, it can send only         one segment.  In addition, the TCP sender MAY override the         Nagle algorithm [Nag84] and immediately send a segment if         needed.  Note that sending two segments in this step is allowed         by TCP congestion control requirements [APS99]: An F-RTO TCP         sender simply chooses different segments to transmit.         If the TCP sender does not have any new data to send, or the         advertised window prohibits new transmissions, the recommended         action is to skip step 3 of this algorithm and continue with         slow start retransmissions, following the conventional RTO         recovery algorithm.  However, alternative ways of handling the         window-limited cases that could result in better performance         are discussed inAppendix C.   3) When the second acknowledgment after the RTO retransmission      arrives at the sender, the TCP sender either declares the timeout      spurious, or starts retransmitting the unacknowledged segments.Sarolahti & Kojo              Experimental                      [Page 5]

RFC 4138                  Forward RTO-Recovery               August 2005      a) If the acknowledgment is a duplicate ACK, set the congestion         window to no more than 3 * MSS, and continue with the slow         start algorithm retransmitting unacknowledged segments.  The         congestion window can be set to 3 * MSS, because two round-trip         times have elapsed since the RTO, and a conventional TCP sender         would have increased cwnd to 3 during the same time.  Leave         SpuriousRecovery set to FALSE.      b) If the acknowledgment advances the window (i.e., if it         acknowledges data that was not retransmitted after the         timeout), declare the timeout spurious, set SpuriousRecovery to         SPUR_TO, and set the value of the "recover" variable to SND.UNA         (the oldest unacknowledged sequence number [Pos81]).2.2.  Discussion   The F-RTO sender takes cautious actions when it receives duplicate   acknowledgments after a retransmission timeout.  Because duplicate   ACKs may indicate that segments have been lost, reliably detecting a   spurious timeout is difficult due to the lack of additional   information.  Therefore, it is prudent to follow the conventional TCP   recovery in those cases.   If the first acknowledgment after the RTO retransmission covers the   "recover" point at algorithm step (2a), there is not enough evidence   that a non-retransmitted segment has arrived at the receiver after   the timeout.  This is a common case when a fast retransmission is   lost and has been retransmitted again after an RTO, while the rest of   the unacknowledged segments were successfully delivered to the TCP   receiver before the retransmission timeout.  Therefore, the timeout   cannot be declared spurious in this case.   If the first acknowledgment after the RTO retransmission does not   acknowledge all of the data that was retransmitted in step 1, the TCP   sender reverts to the conventional RTO recovery.  Otherwise, a   malicious receiver acknowledging partial segments could cause the   sender to declare the timeout spurious in a case where data was lost.   The TCP sender is allowed to send two new segments in algorithm   branch (2b) because the conventional TCP sender would transmit two   segments when the first new ACK arrives after the RTO retransmission.   If sending new data is not possible in algorithm branch (2b), or if   the receiver window limits the transmission, the TCP sender has to   send something in order to prevent the TCP transfer from stalling.   If no segments were sent, the pipe between sender and receiver might   run out of segments, and no further acknowledgments would arrive.   Therefore, in the window-limited case, the recommendation is toSarolahti & Kojo              Experimental                      [Page 6]

RFC 4138                  Forward RTO-Recovery               August 2005   revert to the conventional RTO recovery with slow start   retransmissions.Appendix C discusses some alternative solutions for   window-limited situations.   If the retransmission timeout is declared spurious, the TCP sender   sets the value of the "recover" variable to SND.UNA in order to allow   fast retransmit [FHG04].  The "recover" variable was proposed for   avoiding unnecessary, multiple fast retransmits when RTO expires   during fast recovery with NewReno TCP.  Because the sender   retransmits only the segment that triggered the timeout, the problem   of unnecessary multiple fast retransmits [FHG04] cannot occur.   Therefore, if three duplicate ACKs arrive at the sender after the   timeout, they probably indicate a packet loss, and thus fast   retransmit should be used to allow efficient recovery.  If there are   not enough duplicate ACKs arriving at the sender after a packet loss,   the retransmission timer expires again and the sender enters step 1   of this algorithm.   When the timeout is declared spurious, the TCP sender cannot detect   whether the unnecessary RTO retransmission was lost.  In principle,   the loss of the RTO retransmission should be taken as a congestion   signal.  Thus, there is a small possibility that the F-RTO sender   will violate the congestion control rules, if it chooses to fully   revert congestion control parameters after detecting a spurious   timeout.  The Eifel detection algorithm has a similar property, while   the DSACK option can be used to detect whether the retransmitted   segment was successfully delivered to the receiver.   The F-RTO algorithm has a side-effect on the TCP round-trip time   measurement.  Because the TCP sender can avoid most of the   unnecessary retransmissions after detecting a spurious timeout, the   sender is able to take round-trip time samples on the delayed   segments.  If the regular RTO recovery was used without TCP   timestamps, this would not be possible due to the retransmission   ambiguity.  As a result, the RTO is likely to have more accurate and   larger values with F-RTO than with the regular TCP after a spurious   timeout that was triggered due to delayed segments.  We believe this   is an advantage in the networks that are prone to delay spikes.   There are some situations where the F-RTO algorithm may not avoid   unnecessary retransmissions after a spurious timeout.  If packet   reordering or packet duplication occurs on the segment that triggered   the spurious timeout, the F-RTO algorithm may not detect the spurious   timeout due to incoming duplicate ACKs.  Additionally, if a spurious   timeout occurs during fast recovery, the F-RTO algorithm often cannot   detect the spurious timeout because the segments that were   transmitted before the fast recovery trigger duplicate ACKs.   However, we consider these cases rare, and note that in cases whereSarolahti & Kojo              Experimental                      [Page 7]

RFC 4138                  Forward RTO-Recovery               August 2005   F-RTO fails to detect the spurious timeout, it retransmits the   unacknowledged segments in slow start, and thus performs similarly to   the regular RTO recovery.3.  SACK-Enhanced Version of the F-RTO Algorithm   This section describes an alternative version of the F-RTO algorithm   that uses the TCP Selective Acknowledgment Option [MMFR96].  By using   the SACK option, the TCP sender detects spurious timeouts in most of   the cases when packet reordering or packet duplication is present.   If the SACK blocks acknowledge new data that was not transmitted   after the RTO retransmission, the sender may declare the timeout   spurious, even when duplicate ACKs follow the RTO.   Given that the TCP Selective Acknowledgment Option [MMFR96] is   enabled for a TCP connection, a TCP sender MAY implement the   SACK-enhanced F-RTO algorithm.  If the sender applies the   SACK-enhanced F-RTO algorithm, it MUST follow the steps below.  This   algorithm SHOULD NOT be applied if the TCP sender is already in SACK   loss recovery when retransmission timeout occurs.  However, when   retransmission timeout occurs during existing loss recovery, it   should be possible to apply the principle of F-RTO within certain   limitations.  This is a topic for further research.Appendix B   briefly discusses the related issues.   The steps of the SACK-enhanced version of the F-RTO algorithm are as   follows.   1) When the RTO expires, retransmit the first unacknowledged segment      and set SpuriousRecovery to FALSE.  Set variable "recover" to      indicate the highest segment transmitted so far.  Following the      recommendation in SACK specification [MMFR96], reset the SACK      scoreboard.   2) Wait until the acknowledgment of the data retransmitted due to the      timeout arrives at the sender.  If duplicate ACKs arrive before      the cumulative acknowledgment for retransmitted data, adjust the      scoreboard according to the incoming SACK information.  Stay in      step 2 and wait for the next new acknowledgment.  If RTO expires      again, go to step 1 of the algorithm.      a) if a cumulative ACK acknowledges a sequence number equal to         "recover", revert to the conventional RTO recovery and set the         congestion window to no more than 2 * MSS, like a regular TCP         would do.  Do not enter step 3 of this algorithm.Sarolahti & Kojo              Experimental                      [Page 8]

RFC 4138                  Forward RTO-Recovery               August 2005      b) else, if a cumulative ACK acknowledges a sequence number         (smaller than "recover", but larger than SND.UNA) transmit up         to two new (previously unsent) segments and proceed to step 3.         If the TCP sender is not able to transmit any previously unsent         data -- either due to receiver window limitation, or because it         does not have any new data to send -- the recommended action is         to refrain from entering step 3 of this algorithm.  Rather,         continue with slow start retransmissions following the         conventional RTO recovery algorithm.         It is also possible to apply some of the alternatives for         handling window-limited cases discussed inAppendix C.  In this         case, the TCP sender should follow the recommendations         concerning acknowledgments of retransmitted segments given inAppendix B.   3) The next acknowledgment arrives at the sender.  Either a duplicate      ACK or a new cumulative ACK (advancing the window) applies in this      step.      a) if the ACK acknowledges a sequence number above "recover",         either in SACK blocks or as a cumulative ACK, set the         congestion window to no more than 3 * MSS and proceed with the         conventional RTO recovery, retransmitting unacknowledged         segments.  Take this branch also when the acknowledgment is a         duplicate ACK and it does not acknowledge any new, previously         unacknowledged data below "recover" in the SACK blocks.  Leave         SpuriousRecovery set to FALSE.      b) if the ACK does not acknowledge sequence numbers above         "recover" AND it acknowledges data that was not acknowledged         earlier (either with cumulative acknowledgment or using SACK         blocks), declare the timeout spurious and set SpuriousRecovery         to SPUR_TO.  The retransmission timeout can be declared         spurious, because the segment acknowledged with this ACK was         transmitted before the timeout.   If there are unacknowledged holes between the received SACK blocks,   those segments are retransmitted similarly to the conventional SACK   recovery algorithm [BAFW03].  If the algorithm exits with   SpuriousRecovery set to SPUR_TO, "recover" is set to SND.UNA, thus   allowing fast recovery on incoming duplicate acknowledgments.Sarolahti & Kojo              Experimental                      [Page 9]

RFC 4138                  Forward RTO-Recovery               August 20054.  Taking Actions after Detecting Spurious RTO   Upon retransmission timeout, a conventional TCP sender assumes that   outstanding segments are lost and starts retransmitting the   unacknowledged segments.  When the retransmission timeout is detected   to be spurious, the TCP sender should not continue retransmitting   based on the timeout.  For example, if the sender was in congestion   avoidance phase transmitting new, previously unsent segments, it   should continue transmitting previously unsent segments after   detecting a spurious RTO.  This document does not describe the   response to spurious timeouts, but a response algorithm is described   inRFC 4015 [LG04].   Additionally, different response variants to spurious retransmission   timeout have been discussed in various research papers [SKR03, GL03,   Sar03] and IETF documents [SL03].  The different response   alternatives vary in whether the spurious retransmission timeout   should be taken as a congestion signal, thus causing the congestion   window or slow start threshold to be reduced at the sender, or   whether the congestion control state should be fully reverted to the   state valid prior to the retransmission timeout.5.  SCTP Considerations   SCTP has similar retransmission algorithms and congestion control to   TCP.  The SCTP T3-rtx timer for one destination address is maintained   in the same way as the TCP retransmission timer, and after a T3-rtx   expires, an SCTP sender retransmits unacknowledged data chunks in   slow start like TCP does.  Therefore, SCTP is vulnerable to the   negative effects of the spurious retransmission timeouts similarly to   TCP.  Due to similar RTO recovery algorithms, F-RTO algorithm logic   can be applied also to SCTP.  Since SCTP uses selective   acknowledgments, the SACK-based variant of the algorithm is   recommended, although the basic version can also be applied to SCTP.   However, SCTP contains features that are not present with TCP that   need to be discussed when applying the F-RTO algorithm.   SCTP associations can be multi-homed.  The current retransmission   policy states that retransmissions should go to alternative   addresses.  If the retransmission was due to spurious timeout caused   by a delay spike, it is possible that the acknowledgment for the   retransmission arrives back at the sender before the acknowledgments   of the original transmissions arrive.  If this happens, a possible   loss of the original transmission of the data chunk that was   retransmitted due to the spurious timeout may remain undetected when   applying the F-RTO algorithm.  Because the timeout was caused by a   delay spike, and it was spurious in that respect, a suitable response   is to continue by sending new data.  However, if the originalSarolahti & Kojo              Experimental                     [Page 10]

RFC 4138                  Forward RTO-Recovery               August 2005   transmission was lost, fully reverting the congestion control   parameters is too aggressive.  Therefore, taking conservative actions   on congestion control is recommended, if the SCTP association is   multi-homed and retransmissions go to alternative addresses.  The   information in duplicate TSNs can be then used for reverting   congestion control, if desired [BA04].   Note that the forward transmissions made in F-RTO algorithm step (2b)   should be destined to the primary address, since they are not   retransmissions.   When making a retransmission, an SCTP sender can bundle a number of   unacknowledged data chunks and include them in the same packet.  This   needs to be considered when implementing F-RTO for SCTP.  The basic   principle of F-RTO still holds: in order to declare the timeout   spurious, the sender must get an acknowledgment for a data chunk that   was not retransmitted after the retransmission timeout.  In other   words, acknowledgments of data chunks that were bundled in RTO   retransmission must not be used for declaring the timeout spurious.6.  Security Considerations   The main security threat regarding F-RTO is the possibility that a   receiver could mislead the sender into setting too large a congestion   window after an RTO.  There are two possible ways a malicious   receiver could trigger a wrong output from the F-RTO algorithm.   First, the receiver can acknowledge data that it has not received.   Second, it can delay acknowledgment of a segment it has received   earlier, and acknowledge the segment after the TCP sender has been   deluded to enter algorithm step 3.   If the receiver acknowledges a segment it has not really received,   the sender can be led to declare spurious timeout in the F-RTO   algorithm, step 3.  However, because the sender will have an   incorrect state, it cannot retransmit the segment that has never   reached the receiver.  Therefore, this attack is unlikely to be   useful for the receiver to maliciously gain a larger congestion   window.   A common case for a retransmission timeout is that a fast   retransmission of a segment is lost.  If all other segments have been   received, the RTO retransmission causes the whole window to be   acknowledged at once.  This case is recognized in F-RTO algorithm   branch (2a).  However, if the receiver only acknowledges one segment   after receiving the RTO retransmission, and then the rest of the   segments, it could cause the timeout to be declared spurious when it   is not.  Therefore, it is suggested that, when an RTO expires duringSarolahti & Kojo              Experimental                     [Page 11]

RFC 4138                  Forward RTO-Recovery               August 2005   fast recovery phase, the sender would not fully revert the congestion   window even if the timeout was declared spurious.  Instead, the   sender would reduce the congestion window to 1.   If there is more than one segment missing at the time of a   retransmission timeout, the receiver does not benefit from misleading   the sender to declare a spurious timeout because the sender would   have to go through another recovery period to retransmit the missing   segments, usually after an RTO has elapsed.7.  Acknowledgements   We are grateful to Reiner Ludwig, Andrei Gurtov, Josh Blanton, Mark   Allman, Sally Floyd, Yogesh Swami, Mika Liljeberg, Ivan Arias   Rodriguez, Sourabh Ladha, Martin Duke, Motoharu Miyake, Ted Faber,   Samu Kontinen, and Kostas Pentikousis for the discussion and feedback   contributed to this text.8.  References8.1.  Normative References   [APS99]   Allman, M., Paxson, V., and W. Stevens, "TCP Congestion             Control",RFC 2581, April 1999.   [BAFW03]  Blanton, E., Allman, M., Fall, K., and L. Wang, "A             Conservative Selective Acknowledgment (SACK)-based Loss             Recovery Algorithm for TCP",RFC 3517, April 2003.   [RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate             Requirement Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119, March 1997.   [FHG04]   Floyd, S., Henderson, T., and A. Gurtov, "The NewReno             Modification to TCP's Fast Recovery Algorithm",RFC 3782,             April 2004.   [MMFR96]  Mathis, M., Mahdavi, J., Floyd, S., and A. Romanow, "TCP             Selective Acknowledgement Options",RFC 2018, October 1996.   [PA00]    Paxson, V. and M. Allman, "Computing TCP's Retransmission             Timer",RFC 2988, November 2000.   [Pos81]   Postel, J., "Transmission Control Protocol", STD 7,RFC793, September 1981.Sarolahti & Kojo              Experimental                     [Page 12]

RFC 4138                  Forward RTO-Recovery               August 2005   [Ste00]   Stewart, R., Xie, Q., Morneault, K., Sharp, C.,             Schwarzbauer, H., Taylor, T., Rytina, I., Kalla, M., Zhang,             L., and V. Paxson, "Stream Control Transmission Protocol",RFC 2960, October 2000.8.2.  Informative References   [ABF01]   Allman, M., Balakrishnan, H., and S. Floyd, "Enhancing             TCP's Loss Recovery Using Limited Transmit",RFC 3042,             January 2001.   [BA04]    Blanton, E. and M. Allman, "Using TCP Duplicate Selective             Acknowledgement (DSACKs) and Stream Control Transmission             Protocol (SCTP) Duplicate Transmission Sequence Numbers             (TSNs) to Detect Spurious Retransmissions",RFC 3708,             February 2004.   [BBJ92]   Jacobson, V., Braden, R., and D. Borman, "TCP Extensions             for High Performance",RFC 1323, May 1992.   [FMMP00]  Floyd, S., Mahdavi, J., Mathis, M., and M. Podolsky, "An             Extension to the Selective Acknowledgement (SACK) Option             for TCP",RFC 2883, July 2000.   [GL02]    A. Gurtov and R. Ludwig.  Evaluating the Eifel Algorithm             for TCP in a GPRS Network.  In Proc. of European Wireless,             Florence, Italy, February 2002.   [GL03]    A. Gurtov and R. Ludwig, Responding to Spurious Timeouts in             TCP.  In Proceedings of IEEE INFOCOM 03, San Francisco, CA,             USA, March 2003.   [Jac88]   V. Jacobson. Congestion Avoidance and Control.  In             Proceedings of ACM SIGCOMM 88.   [LG04]    Ludwig, R. and A. Gurtov, "The Eifel Response Algorithm for             TCP",RFC 4015, February 2005.   [LK00]    R. Ludwig and R.H. Katz.  The Eifel Algorithm: Making TCP             Robust Against Spurious Retransmissions.  ACM SIGCOMM             Computer Communication Review, 30(1), January 2000.   [LM03]    Ludwig, R. and M. Meyer, "The Eifel Detection Algorithm for             TCP",RFC 3522, April 2003.   [Nag84]   Nagle, J., "Congestion Control in IP/TCP Internetworks",RFC 896, January 1984.Sarolahti & Kojo              Experimental                     [Page 13]

RFC 4138                  Forward RTO-Recovery               August 2005   [SKR03]   P. Sarolahti, M. Kojo, and K. Raatikainen.  F-RTO: An             Enhanced Recovery Algorithm for TCP Retransmission             Timeouts.  ACM SIGCOMM Computer Communication Review,             33(2), April 2003.   [Sar03]   P. Sarolahti.  Congestion Control on Spurious TCP             Retransmission Timeouts.  In Proceedings of IEEE Globecom             2003, San Francisco, CA, USA. December 2003.   [SL03]    Y. Swami and K. Le, "DCLOR: De-correlated Loss Recovery             using SACK Option for Spurious Timeouts", work in progress,             September 2003.Sarolahti & Kojo              Experimental                     [Page 14]

RFC 4138                  Forward RTO-Recovery               August 2005Appendix A: Scenarios   This section discusses different scenarios where RTOs occur and how   the basic F-RTO algorithm performs in those scenarios.  The   interesting scenarios are: a sudden delay triggering retransmission   timeout, loss of a retransmitted packet during fast recovery, link   outage causing the loss of several packets, and packet reordering.  A   performance evaluation with a more thorough analysis on a real   implementation of F-RTO is given in [SKR03].A.1.  Sudden Delay   The main motivation behind the F-RTO algorithm is to improve TCP   performance when a delay spike triggers a spurious retransmission   timeout.  The example below illustrates the segments and   acknowledgments transmitted by the TCP end hosts when a spurious   timeout occurs, but no packets are lost.  For simplicity, delayed   acknowledgments are not used in the example.  The example below   applies the Eifel Response Algorithm [LG04] after detecting a   spurious timeout.         ...          (cwnd = 6, ssthresh < 6, FlightSize = 6)         1.          <---------------------------- ACK 5         2.  SEND 10 ---------------------------->          (cwnd = 6, ssthresh < 6, FlightSize = 6)         3.          <---------------------------- ACK 6         4.  SEND 11 ---------------------------->          (cwnd = 6, ssthresh < 6, FlightSize = 6)         5.                       |                               [delay]                                  |             [RTO]             [F-RTO step (1)]         6.  SEND 6  ---------------------------->          (cwnd = 6, ssthresh = 3, FlightSize = 6)                     <earlier xmitted SEG 6>  --->         7.          <---------------------------- ACK 7             [F-RTO step (2b)]         8.  SEND 12 ---------------------------->         9.  SEND 13 ---------------------------->          (cwnd = 7, ssthresh = 3, FlightSize = 7)                     <earlier xmitted SEG 7>  --->         10.         <---------------------------- ACK 8             [F-RTO step (3b)]             [SpuriousRecovery <- SPUR_TO]           (cwnd = 7, ssthresh = 6, FlightSize = 6)Sarolahti & Kojo              Experimental                     [Page 15]

RFC 4138                  Forward RTO-Recovery               August 2005         11. SEND 14 ---------------------------->           (cwnd = 7, ssthresh = 6, FlightSize = 7)         12.         <---------------------------- ACK 9         13. SEND 15 ---------------------------->           (cwnd = 7, ssthresh = 6, FlightSize = 7)         14.         <---------------------------- ACK 10         15. SEND 16 ---------------------------->           (cwnd = 7, ssthresh = 6, FlightSize = 7)         ...   When a sudden delay (long enough to trigger timeout) occurs at step   5, the TCP sender retransmits the first unacknowledged segment (step   6).  The next ACK covers the RTO retransmission because the   originally transmitted segment 6 arrived at the receiver, and the TCP   sender continues by sending two new data segments (steps 8, 9).  Note   that on F-RTO steps (1) and (2b), congestion window and FlightSize   are not yet reset because in the case of spurious timeout, the   segments sent before the timeout are still in the network.  However,   the sender should still be equally aggressive toward conventional   TCP.  Because the second acknowledgment arriving after the RTO   retransmission acknowledges data that was not retransmitted due to   timeout (step 10), the TCP sender declares the timeout to be spurious   and continues by sending new data on the next acknowledgments.  Also,   the congestion control state is reversed, as required by the Eifel   Response Algorithm.A.2.  Loss of a Retransmission   If a retransmitted segment is lost, the only way to retransmit it is   to wait for the timeout to trigger the retransmission.  Once the   segment is successfully received, the receiver usually acknowledges   several segments at once, because other segments in the same window   have been successfully delivered before the retransmission arrives at   the receiver.  The example below shows a scenario where   retransmission (of segment 6) is lost, as well as a later segment   (segment 9) in the same window.  The limited transmit [ABF01] or SACK   TCP [MMFR96] enhancements are not in use in this example.         ...          (cwnd = 6, ssthresh < 6, FlightSize = 6)             <segment 6 lost>             <segment 9 lost>         1.          <---------------------------- ACK 5         2.  SEND 10 ---------------------------->          (cwnd = 6, ssthresh < 6, FlightSize = 6)         3.          <---------------------------- ACK 6         4.  SEND 11 ---------------------------->          (cwnd = 6, ssthresh < 6, FlightSize = 6)Sarolahti & Kojo              Experimental                     [Page 16]

RFC 4138                  Forward RTO-Recovery               August 2005         5.          <---------------------------- ACK 6         6.          <---------------------------- ACK 6         7.          <---------------------------- ACK 6         8.  SEND 6  --------------X          (cwnd = 6, ssthresh = 3, FlightSize = 6)             <segment 6 lost>         9.          <---------------------------- ACK 6         10. SEND 12 ---------------------------->          (cwnd = 7, ssthresh = 3, FlightSize = 7)         11.         <---------------------------- ACK 6         12. SEND 13 ---------------------------->          (cwnd = 8, ssthresh = 3, FlightSize = 8)             [RTO]         13. SEND 6  ---------------------------->          (cwnd = 8, ssthresh = 2, FlightSize = 8)         14.         <---------------------------- ACK 9             [F-RTO step (2b)]         15. SEND 14 ---------------------------->         16. SEND 15 ---------------------------->          (cwnd = 7, ssthresh = 2, FlightSize = 7)         17.         <---------------------------- ACK 9             [F-RTO step (3a)]             [SpuriousRecovery <- FALSE]          (cwnd = 3, ssthresh = 2, FlightSize = 7)         18. SEND 9  ---------------------------->         19. SEND 10 ---------------------------->         20. SEND 11 ---------------------------->         ...   In the example above, segment 6 is lost and the sender retransmits it   after three duplicate ACKs in step 8.  However, the retransmission is   also lost, and the sender has to wait for the RTO to expire before   retransmitting it again.  Because the first ACK following the RTO   retransmission acknowledges the RTO retransmission (step 14), the   sender transmits two new segments.  The second ACK in step 17 does   not acknowledge any previously unacknowledged data.  Therefore, the   F-RTO sender enters the slow start and sets cwnd to 3 * MSS.  The   congestion window can be set to three segments, because two round-   trips have elapsed after the retransmission timeout.  Finally, the   receiver acknowledges all segments transmitted prior to entering   recovery and the sender can continue transmitting new data in   congestion avoidance.Sarolahti & Kojo              Experimental                     [Page 17]

RFC 4138                  Forward RTO-Recovery               August 2005A.3.  Link Outage   The example below illustrates the F-RTO behavior when 4 consecutive   packets are lost in the network causing the TCP sender to fall back   to RTO recovery.  Limited transmit and SACK are not used in this   example.         ...          (cwnd = 6, ssthresh < 6, FlightSize = 6)             <segments 6-9 lost>         1.          <---------------------------- ACK 5         2.  SEND 10 ---------------------------->          (cwnd = 6, ssthresh < 6, FlightSize = 6)         3.          <---------------------------- ACK 6         4.  SEND 11 ---------------------------->          (cwnd = 6, ssthresh < 6, FlightSize = 6)         5.          <---------------------------- ACK 6                                  |                                  |             [RTO]         6.  SEND 6  ---------------------------->          (cwnd = 6, ssthresh = 3, FlightSize = 6)         7.          <---------------------------- ACK 7             [F-RTO step (2b)]         8.  SEND 12 ---------------------------->         9.  SEND 13 ---------------------------->          (cwnd = 7, ssthresh = 3, FlightSize = 7)         10.         <---------------------------- ACK 7             [F-RTO step (3a)]             [SpuriousRecovery <- FALSE]          (cwnd = 3, ssthresh = 3, FlightSize = 7)         11. SEND 7  ---------------------------->         12. SEND 8  ---------------------------->         13. SEND 9  ---------------------------->   Again, F-RTO sender transmits two new segments (steps 8 and 9) after   the RTO retransmission is acknowledged.  Because the next ACK does   not acknowledge any data that was not retransmitted after the   retransmission timeout (step 10), the F-RTO sender proceeds with   conventional recovery and slow start retransmissions.A.4.  Packet Reordering   Because F-RTO modifies the TCP sender behavior only after a   retransmission timeout and it is intended to avoid unnecessary   retransmissions only after spurious timeout, we limit the discussion   on the effects of packet reordering on F-RTO behavior to the cases   where it occurs immediately after the retransmission timeout.  WhenSarolahti & Kojo              Experimental                     [Page 18]

RFC 4138                  Forward RTO-Recovery               August 2005   the TCP receiver gets an out-of-order segment, it generates a   duplicate ACK.  If the TCP sender implements the basic F-RTO   algorithm, this may prevent the sender from detecting a spurious   timeout.   However, if the TCP sender applies the SACK-enhanced F-RTO, it is   possible to detect a spurious timeout when packet reordering occurs.   Below, we illustrate the behavior of SACK-enhanced F-RTO when segment   8 arrives before segments 6 and 7, and segments starting from segment   6 are delayed in the network.  In this example the TCP sender reduces   the congestion window and slow start threshold in response to   spurious timeout.         ...          (cwnd = 6, ssthresh < 6, FlightSize = 6)         1.          <---------------------------- ACK 5         2.  SEND 10 ---------------------------->          (cwnd = 6, ssthresh < 6, FlightSize = 6)         3.          <---------------------------- ACK 6         4.  SEND 11 ---------------------------->         5.                       |                               [delay]                                  |             [RTO]         6.  SEND 6  ---------------------------->          (cwnd = 6, ssthresh = 3, FlightSize = 6)                     <earlier xmitted SEG 8>  --->         7.          <---------------------------- ACK 6                                                   [SACK 8]             [SACK F-RTO stays in step 2]         8.          <earlier xmitted SEG 6>  --->         9.          <---------------------------- ACK 7                                                   [SACK 8]             [SACK F-RTO step (2b)]         10. SEND 12 ---------------------------->         11. SEND 13 ---------------------------->           (cwnd = 7, ssthresh = 3, FlightSize = 7)         12.         <earlier xmitted SEG 7>  --->         13.         <---------------------------- ACK 9             [SACK F-RTO step (3b)]             [SpuriousRecovery <- SPUR_TO]           (cwnd = 7, ssthresh = 6, FlightSize = 6)         14. SEND 14 ---------------------------->           (cwnd = 7, ssthresh = 6, FlightSize = 7)         15.         <---------------------------- ACK 10         16. SEND 15 ---------------------------->         ...Sarolahti & Kojo              Experimental                     [Page 19]

RFC 4138                  Forward RTO-Recovery               August 2005   After RTO expires and the sender retransmits segment 6 (step 6), the   receiver gets segment 8 and generates duplicate ACK with SACK for   segment 8.  In response to the acknowledgment, the TCP sender does   not send anything but stays in F-RTO step 2.  Because the next   acknowledgment advances the cumulative ACK point (step 9), the sender   can transmit two new segments according to SACK-enhanced F-RTO.  The   next segment acknowledges new data between 7 and 11 that was not   acknowledged earlier (segment 7), so the F-RTO sender declares the   timeout spurious.Appendix B: SACK-enhanced F-RTO and Fast Recovery   We believe that a slightly modified, SACK-enhanced F-RTO algorithm   can be used to detect spurious timeouts also when RTO expires while   an earlier loss recovery is underway.  However, there are issues that   need to be considered if F-RTO is applied in this case.   In step 3, the original SACK-based F-RTO algorithm requires that an   ACK acknowledges previously unacknowledged non-retransmitted data   between SND.UNA and send_high.  If RTO expires during earlier   (SACK-based) loss recovery, the F-RTO sender must use only   acknowledgments for non-retransmitted segments transmitted before the   SACK-based loss recovery started.  This means that in order to   declare timeout spurious, the TCP sender must receive an   acknowledgment for non-retransmitted segment between SND.UNA and   RecoveryPoint in algorithm step 3.  RecoveryPoint is defined in   conservative SACK-recovery algorithm [BAFW03], and it is set to   indicate the highest segment transmitted so far when SACK-based loss   recovery begins.  In other words, if the TCP sender receives   acknowledgment for a segment that was transmitted more than one RTO   ago, it can declare the timeout spurious.  Defining an efficient   algorithm for checking these conditions remains a future work item.   When spurious timeout is detected according to the rules given above,   it may be possible that the response algorithm needs to consider this   case separately, for example, in terms of which segments to   retransmit after RTO expires, and whether it is safe to revert the   congestion control parameters.  This is considered a topic for future   research.Sarolahti & Kojo              Experimental                     [Page 20]

RFC 4138                  Forward RTO-Recovery               August 2005Appendix C: Discussion of Window-Limited Cases   When the advertised window limits the transmission of two new   previously unsent segments, or there are no new data to send, it is   recommended in F-RTO algorithm step (2b) that the TCP sender continue   with the conventional RTO recovery algorithm.  The disadvantage is   that the sender may continue unnecessary retransmissions due to   possible spurious timeout.  This section briefly discusses the   options that can potentially improve performance when transmitting   previously unsent data is not possible.   - The TCP sender could reserve an unused space of a size of one or     two segments in the advertised window to ensure the use of     algorithms such as F-RTO or Limited Transmit [ABF01] in window-     limited situations.  On the other hand, while doing this, the TCP     sender should ensure that the window of outstanding segments is     large enough for proper utilization of the available pipe.   - Use additional information if available, e.g., TCP timestamps with     the Eifel Detection algorithm, for detecting a spurious timeout.     However, Eifel detection may yield different results from F-RTO     when ACK losses and an RTO occur within the same round-trip time     [SKR03].   - Retransmit data from the tail of the retransmission queue and     continue with step 3 of the F-RTO algorithm.  It is possible that     the retransmission will be made unnecessarily.  Thus, this option     is not encouraged, except for hosts that are known to operate in an     environment that is prone to spurious timeouts.  On the other hand,     with this method it is possible to limit unnecessary     retransmissions due to spurious timeout to one retransmission.   - Send a zero-sized segment below SND.UNA, similar to TCP Keep-Alive     probe, and continue with step 3 of the F-RTO algorithm.  Because     the receiver replies with a duplicate ACK, the sender is able to     detect whether the timeout was spurious from the incoming     acknowledgment.  This method does not send data unnecessarily, but     it delays the recovery by one round-trip time in cases where the     timeout was not spurious.  Therefore, this method is not     encouraged.   - In receiver-limited cases, send one octet of new data, regardless     of the advertised window limit, and continue with step 3 of the     F-RTO algorithm.  It is possible that the receiver will have free     buffer space to receive the data by the time the segment has     propagated through the network, in which case no harm is done.  If     the receiver is not capable of receiving the segment, it rejects     the segment and sends a duplicate ACK.Sarolahti & Kojo              Experimental                     [Page 21]

RFC 4138                  Forward RTO-Recovery               August 2005Authors' Addresses   Pasi Sarolahti   Nokia Research Center   P.O. Box 407   FIN-00045 NOKIA GROUP   Finland   Phone: +358 50 4876607   EMail: pasi.sarolahti@nokia.comhttp://www.cs.helsinki.fi/u/sarolaht/   Markku Kojo   University of Helsinki   Department of Computer Science   P.O. Box 68   FIN-00014 UNIVERSITY OF HELSINKI   Finland   Phone: +358 9 191 51305   EMail: kojo@cs.helsinki.fiSarolahti & Kojo              Experimental                     [Page 22]

RFC 4138                  Forward RTO-Recovery               August 2005Full Copyright Statement   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2005).   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 currently provided by the   Internet Society.Sarolahti & Kojo              Experimental                     [Page 23]

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