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EXPERIMENTAL
Network Working Group                                             W. FangRequest for Comments: 2859                           Princeton UniversityCategory: Experimental                                         N. Seddigh                                                                 B. Nandy                                                          Nortel Networks                                                                June 2000A Time Sliding Window Three Colour Marker (TSWTCM)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 (2000).  All Rights Reserved.Abstract   This memo defines a Time Sliding Window Three Colour Marker (TSWTCM),   which can be used as a component in a Diff-Serv traffic conditioner   [RFC2475,RFC2474].  The marker is intended to mark packets that will   be treated by the Assured Forwarding (AF) Per Hop Behaviour (PHB)   [AFPHB] in downstream routers. The TSWTCM meters a traffic stream and   marks packets to be either green, yellow or red based on the measured   throughput relative to two specified rates: Committed Target Rate   (CTR) and Peak Target Rate (PTR).1.0 Introduction   The Time Sliding Window Three Colour Marker (TSWTCM) is designed to   mark packets of an IP traffic stream with colour of red, yellow or   green. The marking is performed based on the measured throughput of   the traffic stream as compared against the Committed Target Rate   (CTR) and the Peak Target Rate (PTR). The TSWTCM is designed to mark   packets contributing to sending rate below or equal to the CTR with   green colour.  Packets contributing to the portion of the rate   between the CTR and PTR are marked yellow. Packets causing the rate   to exceed PTR are marked with red colour.   The TSWTCM has been primarily designed for traffic streams that will   be forwarded based on the AF PHB in core routers.Fang, et al.                  Experimental                      [Page 1]

RFC 2859                         TSWTCM                        June 2000   The TSWTCM operates based on simple control theory principles of   proportionally regulated feedback control.2.0 Overview of TSWTCM   The TSWTCM consists of two independent components: a rate estimator,   and a marker to associate a colour (drop precedence) with each   packet.  The marker uses the algorithm specified insection 4. If the   marker is used with the AF PHB, each colour would correspond to a   level of drop precedence.   The rate estimator provides an estimate of the running average   bandwidth.  It takes into account burstiness and smoothes out its   estimate to approximate the longer-term measured sending rate of the   traffic stream.   The marker uses the estimated rate to probabilistically associate   packets with one of the three colours. Using a probabilistic function   in the marker is beneficial to TCP flows as it reduces the likelihood   of dropping multiple packets within a TCP window.  The marker also   works correctly with UDP traffic, i.e., it associates the appropriate   portion of the UDP packets with yellow or red colour marking if such   flows transmit at a sustained level above the contracted rate.                +---------+                | Rate    | Rate                |estimator| ==========                |         |          |                +---------+          |                   ^                 V                   |             +---------+                   |             |         |     Packet ====================>| Marker  |====> Marked packet stream     Stream                      |         |    (Green, Yellow and Red)                                 +---------+                   Figure 1.  Block diagram for the TSWTCM   The colour of the packet is translated into a DS field packet   marking.  The colours red, yellow and green translate into DS   codepoints representing drop precedence 2, 1 and 0 of a single AF   class respectively.   Based on feedback from four different implementations, the TSWTCM is   simple and straightforward to implement.  The TSWTCM can be   implemented in either software or hardware depending on the nature of   the forwarding engine.Fang, et al.                  Experimental                      [Page 2]

RFC 2859                         TSWTCM                        June 20003.0 Rate Estimator   The Rate Estimator provides an estimate of the traffic stream's   arrival rate.  This rate should approximate the running average   bandwidth of the traffic stream over a specific period of time   (AVG_INTERVAL).   This memo does not specify a particular algorithm for the Rate   Estimator.  However, different Rate Estimators should yield similar   results in terms of bandwidth estimation over the same fixed window   (AVG_INTERVAL) of time.  Examples of Rate Estimation schemes include:   exponential weighted moving average (EWMA) and the time-based rate   estimation algorithm provided in [TON98].   Preferably, the Rate Estimator SHOULD maintain time-based history for   its bandwidth estimation.  However, the Rate Estimator MAY utilize   weight-based history.  In this case, the Estimator used should   discuss how the weight translates into a time-window such as   AVG_INTERVAL.   Since weight-based Estimators track bandwidth based on packet   arrivals, a high-sending traffic stream will decay its past history   faster than a low-sending traffic stream. The time-based Estimator is   intended to address this problem. The latter Rate Estimator utilizes   a low-pass filter decaying function. [FANG99] shows that this Rate   Estimator decays past history independently of the traffic stream's   packet arrival rate.  The algorithm for the Rate Estimator from   [TON98] is shown in Figure 2 below.Fang, et al.                  Experimental                      [Page 3]

RFC 2859                         TSWTCM                        June 2000========================================================================|Initially:                                                            ||                                                                      ||      AVG_INTERVAL = a constant;                                      ||      avg-rate     = CTR;                                             ||      t-front      = 0;                                               ||                                                                      ||Upon each packet's arrival, the rate estimator updates its variables: ||                                                                      ||      Bytes_in_win = avg-rate * AVG_INTERVAL;                         ||      New_bytes    = Bytes_in_win + pkt_size;                         ||      avg-rate     = New_bytes/( now - t-front + AVG_INTERVAL);       ||      t-front      = now;                                             ||                                                                      ||Where:                                                                ||      now          = The time of the current packet arrival           ||      pkt_size     = The packet size in bytes of the arriving packet  ||      avg-rate     = Measured Arrival Rate of traffic stream          ||      AVG_INTERVAL = Time window over which history is kept           ||                                                                      ||                                                                      ||              Figure 2. Example Rate Estimator Algorithm              ||                                                                      |========================================================================   The Rate Estimator MAY operate in the Router Forwarding Path or as a   background function.  In the latter case, the implementation MUST   ensure that the Estimator provides a reasonably accurate estimation   of the sending rate over a window of time.  The Rate Estimator MAY   sample only certain packets to determine the rate.4.0 Marker   The Marker determines the colour of a packet based on the algorithm   presented in Figure 3.  The overall effect of the marker on the   packets of a traffic stream is to ensure that:   - If the estimated average rate is less than or equal to the CTR,     packets of the stream are designated green.   - If the estimated average rate is greater than the CTR but less     than or equal to the PTR, packets are designated yellow with     probability P0 and designated green with probability (1-P0).     P0 is the fraction of packets contributing to the measured     rate beyond the CTR.Fang, et al.                  Experimental                      [Page 4]

RFC 2859                         TSWTCM                        June 2000   ===================================================================   |       avg-rate = Estimated Avg Sending Rate of Traffic Stream   |   |                                                                 |   |       if (avg-rate <= CTR)                                      |   |               the packet is green;                              |   |       else if (avg-rate <= PTR) AND (avg-rate > CTR)            |   |                                 (avg-rate - CTR)                |   |               calculate P0  =   ----------------                |   |                                       avg-rate                  |   |               with probability P0 the packet is yellow;         |   |               with probability (1-P0) the packet is green;      |   |       else                                                      |   |                                 (avg-rate - PTR)                |   |               calculate P1  =   ----------------                |   |                                      avg-rate                   |   |                                 (PTR - CTR)                     |   |               calculate P2  =   -----------                     |   |                                  avg-rate                       |   |               with probability P1 the packet is red;            |   |               with probability P2 the packet is yellow;         |   |               with probability (1-(P1+P2)) the packet is green; |   |                                                                 |   |                 Figure 3. TSWTCM Marking Algorithm              |   ===================================================================   - If the estimated average rate is greater than the PTR,     packets are designated red with probability P1, designated     yellow with probability P2 and designated green with probability     (1-(P1+P2)). P1 is the fraction of packets contributing     to the measured rate beyond the PTR. P2 is the fraction of     packets contributing to that part of the measured rate     between CTR and PTR.     The marker MUST operate in the forwarding path of all packets.5.0 Configuration5.1 Rate estimator   If the Rate Estimator is time-based, it should base its bandwidth   estimate on the last AVG_INTERVAL of time.  AVG_INTERVAL is the   amount of history (recent time) that should be used by the algorithm   in estimating the rate. Essentially it represents the window of time   included in the Rate Estimator's most recent result.   The value of AVG_INTERVAL SHOULD be configurable, and MAY be   specified in either milliseconds or seconds.Fang, et al.                  Experimental                      [Page 5]

RFC 2859                         TSWTCM                        June 2000   [TON98] recommends that for the case where a single TCP flow   constitutes the contracted traffic, AVG_INTERVAL be configured to   approximately the same value as the RTT of the TCP flow.  Subsequent   experimental studies in [GLOBE99] utilized an AVG_INTERVAL value of 1   second for scenarios where the contracted traffic consisted of   multiple TCP flows, some with different RTT values. The latter work   showed that AVG_INTERVAL values larger than the largest RTT for a TCP   flow in an aggregate can be used as long as the long-term bandwidth   assurance for TCP aggregates is measured at a granularity of seconds.   The AVG_INTERVAL value of 1 second was also used successfully for   aggregates with UDP flows.   If the Rate Estimator is weight-based, the factor used in weighting   history - WEIGHT - SHOULD be a configurable parameter.   The Rate Estimator measures the average sending rate of the traffic   stream based on the bytes in the IP header and IP payload. It does   not include link-specific headers in its estimation of the sending   rate.5.2 Marker   The TSWTCM marker is configured by assigning values to its two   traffic parameters: Committed Target Rate (CTR) and Peak Target Rate   (PTR).   The PTR MUST be equal to or greater than the CTR.   The CTR and PTR MAY be specifiable in bits per second or bytes per   second.   The TSWTCM can be configured so that it essentially operates with a   single rate. If the PTR is set to the same value as the CTR then all   packets will be coloured either green or red. There will be no yellow   packets.   If the PTR is set to link speed and the CTR is set below the PTR then   all packets will be coloured either green or yellow. There will be no   red packets.6.0 Scaling properties   The TSWTCM can work with both sender-based service level agreements   and receiver-based service level agreements.Fang, et al.                  Experimental                      [Page 6]

RFC 2859                         TSWTCM                        June 20007.0 Services   There are no restrictions on the type of traffic stream for which the   TSWTCM can be utilized. It can be used to meter and mark individual   TCP flows, aggregated TCP flows, aggregates with both TCP and UDP   flows [UDPTCP] etc.   The TSWTCM can be used in conjunction with the AF PHB to create a   service where a service provider can provide decreasing levels of   bandwidth assurance for packets originating from customer sites.   With sufficient over-provisioning, customers are assured of mostly   achieving their CTR.  Sending rates beyond the CTR will have lesser   assurance of being achieved. Sending rates beyond the PTR have the   least chance of being achieved due to high drop probability of red   packets.   Based on the above, the Service Provider can charge a tiered level of   service based on the final achieved rate.8.0 Security Considerations   TSWTCM has no known security concerns.9.0 Acknowledgements   The authors would like to thank Juha Heinanen, Kenjiro Cho, Ikjun   Yeom and Jamal Hadi Salim for their comments on earlier versions of   this document. Their suggestions are incorporated in this memo.10.0 References   [TON98]   D.D. Clark, W. Fang, "Explicit Allocation of Best Effort             Packet Delivery Service", IEEE/ACM Transactions on             Networking, August 1998, Vol 6. No. 4, pp. 362-373.   [RFC2474] 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.   [RFC2475] Black, D., Blake, S., Carlson, M., Davies, E., Wang, Z. and             W. Weiss, "An Architecture for Differentiated Services",RFC 2475, December 1998.   [FANG99]  Fang, W. "The 'Expected Capacity' Framework: Simulation             Results", Princeton University Technical Report, TR-601-99,             March, 1999.Fang, et al.                  Experimental                      [Page 7]

RFC 2859                         TSWTCM                        June 2000   [YEOM99]  I. Yeom, N. Reddy, "Impact of Marking Strategy on             Aggregated Flows in a Differentiated Services Network",             Proceedings of IwQoS, May 1999.   [AFPHB]   Heinanen, J., Baker, F., Weiss, W. and J. Wroclawski,             "Assured Forwarding PHB Group",RFC 2597, June 1999.   [UDPTCP]  P. Pieda, N. Seddigh, B. Nandy, "The Dynamics of TCP and             UDP Interaction in IP-QoS Differentiated Service Networks",             Proceedings of the 3rd Canadian Conference on Broadband             Research (CCBR), Ottawa, November 1999   [GLOBE99] N. Seddigh, B. Nandy, P. Pieda, "Bandwidth Assurance Issues             for TCP flows in a Differentiated Services Network",             Proceedings of Global Internet Symposium, Globecom 99, Rio             De Janeiro, December 1999.11.0 Authors' Addresses   Wenjia Fang   Computer Science Dept.   35 Olden Street,   Princeton, NJ08540   EMail: wfang@cs.princeton.edu   Nabil Seddigh   Nortel Networks,   3500 Carling Ave   Ottawa, ON, K2H 8E9   Canada   EMail: nseddigh@nortelnetworks.com   Biswajit Nandy   Nortel Networks,   3500 Carling Ave   Ottawa, ON, K2H 8E9   Canada   EMail: bnandy@nortelnetworks.comFang, et al.                  Experimental                      [Page 8]

RFC 2859                         TSWTCM                        June 200012.  Full Copyright Statement   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2000).  All Rights Reserved.   This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to   others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it   or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published   and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any   kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are   included on all such copies and derivative works.  However, this   document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing   the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other   Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of   developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for   copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be   followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than   English.   The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be   revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assigns.   This document and the information contained herein is provided on an   "AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING   TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS 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.Acknowledgement   Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the   Internet Society.Fang, et al.                  Experimental                      [Page 9]

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