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Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                        J. MaenpaaRequest for Comments: 7363                                  G. CamarilloCategory: Standards Track                                       EricssonISSN: 2070-1721                                           September 2014Self-Tuning Distributed Hash Table (DHT)for REsource LOcation And Discovery (RELOAD)Abstract   REsource LOcation And Discovery (RELOAD) is a peer-to-peer (P2P)   signaling protocol that provides an overlay network service.  Peers   in a RELOAD overlay network collectively run an overlay algorithm to   organize the overlay and to store and retrieve data.  This document   describes how the default topology plugin of RELOAD can be extended   to support self-tuning, that is, to adapt to changing operating   conditions such as churn and network size.Status of This Memo   This is an Internet Standards Track document.   This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force   (IETF).  It represents the consensus of the IETF community.  It has   received public review and has been approved for publication by the   Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG).  Further information on   Internet Standards is available inSection 2 of RFC 5741.   Information about the current status of this document, any errata,   and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained athttp://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7363.Copyright Notice   Copyright (c) 2014 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the   document authors.  All rights reserved.   This document is subject toBCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal   Provisions Relating to IETF Documents   (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of   publication of this document.  Please review these documents   carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect   to this document.  Code Components extracted from this document must   include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of   the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as   described in the Simplified BSD License.Maenpaa & Camarillo          Standards Track                    [Page 1]

RFC 7363               Self-Tuning DHT for RELOAD         September 2014Table of Contents1. Introduction ....................................................22. Terminology .....................................................33. Introduction to Stabilization in DHTs ...........................53.1. Reactive versus Periodic Stabilization .....................53.2. Configuring Periodic Stabilization .........................63.3. Adaptive Stabilization .....................................74. Introduction to Chord ...........................................75. Extending Chord-Reload to Support Self-Tuning ...................95.1. Update Requests ............................................95.2. Neighbor Stabilization ....................................105.3. Finger Stabilization ......................................115.4. Adjusting Finger Table Size ...............................115.5. Detecting Partitioning ....................................115.6. Leaving the Overlay .......................................116. Self-Tuning Chord Parameters ...................................126.1. Estimating Overlay Size ...................................126.2. Determining Routing Table Size ............................136.3. Estimating Failure Rate ...................................136.3.1. Detecting Failures .................................146.4. Estimating Join Rate ......................................146.5. Estimate Sharing ..........................................156.6. Calculating the Stabilization Interval ....................177. Overlay Configuration Document Extension .......................178. Security Considerations ........................................189. IANA Considerations ............................................189.1. Message Extensions ........................................189.2. New Overlay Algorithm Type ................................199.3. A New IETF XML Registry ...................................1910. Acknowledgments ...............................................1911. References ....................................................1911.1. Normative References .....................................1911.2. Informative References ...................................201.  Introduction   REsource LOcation And Discovery (RELOAD) [RFC6940] is a peer-to-peer   signaling protocol that can be used to maintain an overlay network   and to store data in and retrieve data from the overlay.  For   interoperability reasons, RELOAD specifies one overlay algorithm,   called "chord-reload", that is mandatory to implement.  This document   extends the chord-reload algorithm by introducing self-tuning   behavior.   DHT-based overlay networks are self-organizing, scalable, and   reliable.  However, these features come at a cost: peers in the   overlay network need to consume network bandwidth to maintain routingMaenpaa & Camarillo          Standards Track                    [Page 2]

RFC 7363               Self-Tuning DHT for RELOAD         September 2014   state.  Most DHTs use a periodic stabilization routine to counter the   undesirable effects of churn on routing.  To configure the parameters   of a DHT, some characteristics such as churn rate and network size   need to be known in advance.  These characteristics are then used to   configure the DHT in a static fashion by using fixed values for   parameters such as the size of the successor set, size of the routing   table, and rate of maintenance messages.  The problem with this   approach is that it is not possible to achieve a low failure rate and   a low communication overhead by using fixed parameters.  Instead, a   better approach is to allow the system to take into account the   evolution of network conditions and adapt to them.   This document extends the mandatory-to-implement chord-reload   algorithm by making it self-tuning.  The use of the self-tuning   feature is optional.  However, when used, it needs to be supported by   all peers in the RELOAD overlay network.  The fact that a RELOAD   overlay uses the self-tuning feature is indicated in the RELOAD   overlay configuration document using the CHORD-SELF-TUNING algorithm   name specified inSection 9.2 in the topology-plugin element.  Two   main advantages of self-tuning are that users no longer need to tune   every DHT parameter correctly for a given operating environment and   that the system adapts to changing operating conditions.   The remainder of this document is structured as follows:Section 2   provides definitions of terms used in this document.Section 3   discusses alternative approaches to stabilization operations in DHTs,   including reactive stabilization, periodic stabilization, and   adaptive stabilization.Section 4 gives an introduction to the Chord   DHT algorithm.Section 5 describes how this document extends the   stabilization routine of the chord-reload algorithm.Section 6   describes how the stabilization rate and routing table size are   calculated in an adaptive fashion.2.  Terminology   The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",   "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and   "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in   [RFC2119].   This document uses terminology and definitions from the RELOAD base   specification [RFC6940].   numBitsInNodeId:  Specifies the number of bits in a RELOAD Node-ID.   DHT:  Distributed Hash Tables are a class of decentralized      distributed systems that provide a lookup service similar to a      regular hash table.  Given a key, any peer participating in theMaenpaa & Camarillo          Standards Track                    [Page 3]

RFC 7363               Self-Tuning DHT for RELOAD         September 2014      system can retrieve the value associated with that key.  The      responsibility for maintaining the mapping from keys to values is      distributed among the peers.   Chord Ring:  The Chord DHT uses ring topology and orders identifiers      on an identifier circle of size 2^numBitsInNodeId.  This      identifier circle is called the Chord ring.  On the Chord ring,      the responsibility for a key k is assigned to the node whose      identifier equals to or immediately follows k.   Finger Table:  A data structure with up to (but typically less than)      numBitsInNodeId entries maintained by each peer in a Chord-based      overlay.  The ith entry in the finger table of peer n contains the      identity of the first peer that succeeds n by at least      2^(numBitsInNodeId-i) on the Chord ring.  This peer is called the      ith finger of peer n.  As an example, the first entry in the      finger table of peer n contains a peer halfway around the Chord      ring from peer n.  The purpose of the finger table is to      accelerate lookups.   n.id:  In this document, this abbreviation is used to refer to the      Node-ID of peer n.   O(g(n)):  Informally, saying that some equation f(n) = O(g(n)) means      that f(n) is less than some constant multiple of g(n).  For the      formal definition, please refer to [Weiss1998].   Omega(g(n)):  Informally, saying that some equation f(n) =      Omega(g(n)) means that f(n) is more than some constant multiple of      g(n).  For the formal definition, please refer to [Weiss1998].   Percentile:  The Pth (0<=P<=100) percentile of N values arranged in      ascending order is obtained by first calculating the (ordinal)      rank n=(P/100)*N, rounding the result to the nearest integer and      then taking the value corresponding to that rank.   Predecessor List:  A data structure containing the first r      predecessors of a peer on the Chord ring.   Successor List:  A data structure containing the first r successors      of a peer on the Chord ring.   Neighborhood Set:  A term used to refer to the set of peers included      in the successor and predecessor lists of a given peer.Maenpaa & Camarillo          Standards Track                    [Page 4]

RFC 7363               Self-Tuning DHT for RELOAD         September 2014   Routing Table:  Contents of a given peer's routing table include the      set of peers that the peer can use to route overlay messages.  The      routing table is made up of the finger table, successor list, and      predecessor list.3.  Introduction to Stabilization in DHTs   DHTs use stabilization routines to counter the undesirable effects of   churn on routing.  The purpose of stabilization is to keep the   routing information of each peer in the overlay consistent with the   constantly changing overlay topology.  There are two alternative   approaches to stabilization: periodic and reactive [Rhea2004].   Periodic stabilization can either use a fixed stabilization rate or   calculate the stabilization rate in an adaptive fashion.3.1.  Reactive versus Periodic Stabilization   In reactive stabilization, a peer reacts to the loss of a peer in its   neighborhood set or to the appearance of a new peer that should be   added to its neighborhood set by sending a copy of its neighbor table   to all peers in the neighborhood set.  Periodic recovery, in   contrast, takes place independently of changes in the neighborhood   set.  In periodic recovery, a peer periodically shares its   neighborhood set with each or a subset of the members of that set.   The chord-reload algorithm [RFC6940] supports both reactive and   periodic stabilization.  It has been shown in [Rhea2004] that   reactive stabilization works well for small neighborhood sets (i.e.,   small overlays) and moderate churn.  However, in large-scale (e.g.,   1000 peers or more [Rhea2004]) or high-churn overlays, reactive   stabilization runs the risk of creating a positive feedback cycle,   which can eventually result in congestion collapse.  In [Rhea2004],   it is shown that a 1000-peer overlay under churn uses significantly   less bandwidth and has lower latencies when periodic stabilization is   used than when reactive stabilization is used.  Although in the   experiments carried out in [Rhea2004], reactive stabilization   performed well when there was no churn, its bandwidth use was   observed to jump dramatically under churn.  At higher churn rates and   larger scale overlays, periodic stabilization uses less bandwidth and   the resulting lower contention for the network leads to lower   latencies.  For this reason, most DHTs, such as CAN [CAN], Chord   [Chord], Pastry [Pastry], and Bamboo [Rhea2004], use periodic   stabilization [Ghinita2006].  As an example, the first version of   Bamboo used reactive stabilization, which caused Bamboo to suffer   from degradation in performance under churn.  To fix this problem,   Bamboo was modified to use periodic stabilization.Maenpaa & Camarillo          Standards Track                    [Page 5]

RFC 7363               Self-Tuning DHT for RELOAD         September 2014   In Chord, periodic stabilization is typically done both for   successors and fingers.  An alternative strategy is analyzed in   [Krishnamurthy2008].  In this strategy, called the "correction-on-   change maintenance strategy", a peer periodically stabilizes its   successors but does not do so for its fingers.  Instead, finger   pointers are stabilized in a reactive fashion.  The results obtained   in [Krishnamurthy2008] imply that although the correction-on-change   strategy works well when churn is low, periodic stabilization   outperforms the correction-on-change strategy when churn is high.3.2.  Configuring Periodic Stabilization   When periodic stabilization is used, one faces the problem of   selecting an appropriate execution rate for the stabilization   procedure.  If the execution rate of periodic stabilization is high,   changes in the system can be quickly detected, but at the   disadvantage of increased communication overhead.  Alternatively, if   the stabilization rate is low and the churn rate is high, routing   tables become inaccurate and DHT performance deteriorates.  Thus, the   problem is setting the parameters so that the overlay achieves the   desired reliability and performance even in challenging conditions,   such as under heavy churn.  This naturally results in high cost   during periods when the churn level is lower than expected, or   alternatively, poor performance or even network partitioning in worse   than expected conditions.   In addition to selecting an appropriate stabilization interval,   regardless of whether or not periodic stabilization is used, an   appropriate size needs to be selected for the neighborhood set and   for the finger table.   The current approach is to configure overlays statically.  This works   in situations where perfect information about the future is   available.  In situations where the operating conditions of the   network are known in advance and remain static throughout the   lifetime of the system, it is possible to choose fixed optimal values   for parameters such as stabilization rate, neighborhood set size and   routing table size.  However, if the operating conditions (e.g., the   size of the overlay and its churn rate) do not remain static but   evolve with time, it is not possible to achieve both a low lookup   failure rate and a low communication overhead by using fixed   parameters [Ghinita2006].   As an example, to configure the Chord DHT algorithm, one needs to   select values for the following parameters: size of successor list,   stabilization interval, and size of the finger table.  To select an   appropriate value for the stabilization interval, one needs to know   the expected churn rate and overlay size.  According toMaenpaa & Camarillo          Standards Track                    [Page 6]

RFC 7363               Self-Tuning DHT for RELOAD         September 2014   [Liben-Nowell2002], a Chord network in a ring-like state remains in a   ring-like state as long as peers send Omega(square(log(N))) messages   before N new peers join or N/2 peers fail.  Thus, in a 500-peer   overlay churning at a rate such that one peer joins and one peer   leaves the network every 30 seconds, an appropriate stabilization   interval would be on the order of 93 s.  According to [Chord], the   size of the successor list and finger table should be on the order of   log(N).  Already a successor list of a modest size (e.g., log2(N) or   2*log2(N), which is the successor list size used in [Chord]) makes it   very unlikely that a peer will lose all of its successors, which   would cause the Chord ring to become disconnected.  Thus, in a   500-peer network each peer should maintain on the order of nine   successors and fingers.  However, if the churn rate doubles and the   network size remains unchanged, the stabilization rate should double   as well.  That is, the appropriate maintenance interval would now be   on the order of 46 s.  On the other hand, if the churn rate becomes,   e.g., six-fold and the size of the network grows to 2000 peers, on   the order of 11 fingers and successors should be maintained and the   stabilization interval should be on the order of 42 s.  If one   continued using the old values, this could result in inaccurate   routing tables, network partitioning, and deteriorating performance.3.3.  Adaptive Stabilization   A self-tuning DHT takes into consideration the continuous evolution   of network conditions and adapts to them.  In a self-tuning DHT, each   peer collects statistical data about the network and dynamically   adjusts its stabilization rate, neighborhood set size, and finger   table size based on the analysis of the data [Ghinita2006].   Reference [Mahajan2003] shows that by using self-tuning, it is   possible to achieve high reliability and performance even in adverse   conditions with low maintenance cost.  Adaptive stabilization has   been shown to outperform periodic stabilization in terms of both   lookup failures and communication overhead [Ghinita2006].4.  Introduction to Chord   Chord [Chord] is a structured P2P algorithm that uses consistent   hashing to build a DHT out of several independent peers.  Consistent   hashing assigns each peer and resource a fixed-length identifier.   Peers use SHA-1 as the base hash function to generate the   identifiers.  As specified in RELOAD base [RFC6940], the length of   the identifiers is numBitsInNodeId=128 bits.  The identifiers are   ordered on an identifier circle of size 2^numBitsInNodeId.  On the   identifier circle, key k is assigned to the first peer whose   identifier equals or follows the identifier of k in the identifier   space.  The identifier circle is called the Chord ring.Maenpaa & Camarillo          Standards Track                    [Page 7]

RFC 7363               Self-Tuning DHT for RELOAD         September 2014   Different DHTs differ significantly in performance when bandwidth is   limited.  It has been shown that when compared to other DHTs, the   advantages of Chord include that it uses bandwidth efficiently and   can achieve low lookup latencies at little cost [Li2004].   A simple lookup mechanism could be implemented on a Chord ring by   requiring each peer to only know how to contact its current successor   on the identifier circle.  Queries for a given identifier could then   be passed around the circle via the successor pointers until they   encounter the first peer whose identifier is equal to or larger than   the desired identifier.  Such a lookup scheme uses a number of   messages that grows linearly with the number of peers.  To reduce the   cost of lookups, Chord maintains also additional routing information;   each peer n maintains a data structure with up to numBitsInNodeId   entries, called the finger table.  The first entry in the finger   table of peer n contains the peer halfway around the ring from peer   n.  The second entry contains the peer that is 1/4th of the way   around, the third entry the peer that is 1/8th of the way around,   etc.  In other words, the ith entry in the finger table at peer n   contains the identity of the first peer s that succeeds n by at least   2^(numBitsInNodeId-i) on the Chord ring.  This peer is called the ith   finger of peer n.  The interval between two consecutive fingers is   called a finger interval.  The ith finger interval of peer n covers   the range [n.id + 2^(numBitsInNodeId-i), n.id + 2^(numBitsInNodeId-   i+1)) on the Chord ring.  In an N-peer network, each peer maintains   information about O(log(N)) other peers in its finger table.  As an   example, if N=100000, it is sufficient to maintain 17 fingers.   Chord needs all peers' successor pointers to be up to date in order   to ensure that lookups produce correct results as the set of   participating peers changes.  To achieve this, peers run a   stabilization protocol periodically in the background.  The   stabilization protocol of the original Chord algorithm uses two   operations: successor stabilization and finger stabilization.   However, the Chord algorithm of RELOAD base defines two additional   stabilization components, as will be discussed below.   To increase robustness in the event of peer failures, each Chord peer   maintains a successor list of size r, containing the peer's first r   successors.  The benefit of successor lists is that if each peer   fails independently with probability p, the probability that all r   successors fail simultaneously is only p^r.   The original Chord algorithm maintains only a single predecessor   pointer.  However, multiple predecessor pointers (i.e., a predecessor   list) can be maintained to speed up recovery from predecessor   failures.  The routing table of a peer consists of the successor   list, finger table, and predecessor list.Maenpaa & Camarillo          Standards Track                    [Page 8]

RFC 7363               Self-Tuning DHT for RELOAD         September 20145.  Extending Chord-Reload to Support Self-Tuning   This section describes how the mandatory-to-implement chord-reload   algorithm defined in RELOAD base [RFC6940] can be extended to support   self-tuning.   The chord-reload algorithm supports both reactive and periodic   recovery strategies.  When the self-tuning mechanisms defined in this   document are used, the periodic recovery strategy is used.  Further,   chord-reload specifies that at least three predecessors and three   successors need to be maintained.  When the self-tuning mechanisms   are used, the appropriate sizes of the successor list and predecessor   list are determined in an adaptive fashion based on the estimated   network size, as will be described inSection 6.   As specified in RELOAD base [RFC6940], each peer maintains a   stabilization timer.  When the stabilization timer fires, the peer   restarts the timer and carries out the overlay stabilization routine.   Overlay stabilization has four components in chord-reload:   1.  Update the neighbor table.  We refer to this as "neighbor       stabilization".   2.  Refreshing the finger table.  We refer to this as "finger       stabilization".   3.  Adjusting finger table size.   4.  Detecting partitioning.  We refer to this as "strong       stabilization".   As specified in RELOAD base [RFC6940], a peer sends periodic messages   as part of the neighbor stabilization, finger stabilization, and   strong stabilization routines.  In neighbor stabilization, a peer   periodically sends an Update request to every peer in its connection   table.  The default time is every ten minutes.  In finger   stabilization, a peer periodically searches for new peers to include   in its finger table.  This time defaults to one hour.  This document   specifies how the neighbor stabilization and finger stabilization   intervals can be determined in an adaptive fashion based on the   operating conditions of the overlay.  The subsections below describe   how this document extends the four components of stabilization.5.1.  Update Requests   As described in RELOAD base [RFC6940], the neighbor and finger   stabilization procedures are implemented using Update requests.   RELOAD base defines three types of Update requests: 'peer_ready',Maenpaa & Camarillo          Standards Track                    [Page 9]

RFC 7363               Self-Tuning DHT for RELOAD         September 2014   'neighbors', and 'full'.  Regardless of the type, all Update requests   include an 'uptime' field.  The self-tuning extensions require   information on the uptimes of peers in the routing table.  The sender   of an Update request includes its current uptime (in seconds) in the   'uptime' field.  Regardless of the type, all Update requests MUST   include an 'uptime' field.   When self-tuning is used, each peer decides independently the   appropriate size for the successor list, predecessor list, and finger   table.  Thus, the 'predecessors', 'successors', and 'fingers' fields   included in RELOAD Update requests are of variable length.  As   specified in RELOAD [RFC6940], variable-length fields are on the wire   preceded by length bytes.  In the case of the successor list,   predecessor list, and finger table, there are two length bytes   (allowing lengths up to 2^16-1).  The number of NodeId structures   included in each field can be calculated based on the length bytes   since the size of a single NodeId structure is 16 bytes.  If a peer   receives more entries than fit into its successor list, predecessor   list, or finger table, the peer MUST ignore the extra entries.  A   peer may also receive less entries than it currently has in its own   data structure.  In that case, it uses the received entries to update   only a subset of the entries in its data structure.  As an example, a   peer that has a successor list of size 8 may receive a successor list   of size 4 from its immediate successor.  In that case, the received   successor list can only be used to update the first few successors on   the peer's successor list.  The rest of the successors will remain   intact.5.2.  Neighbor Stabilization   In the neighbor stabilization operation of chord-reload, a peer   periodically sends an Update request to every peer in its connection   table.  In a small, low-churn overlay, the amount of traffic this   process generates is typically acceptable.  However, in a large-scale   overlay churning at a moderate or high churn rate, the traffic load   may no longer be acceptable since the size of the connection table is   large and the stabilization interval relatively short.  The self-   tuning mechanisms described in this document are especially designed   for overlays of the latter type.  Therefore, when the self-tuning   mechanisms are used, each peer only sends a periodic Update request   to its first predecessor and first successor on the Chord ring; it   MUST NOT send Update requests to others.   The neighbor stabilization routine is executed when the stabilization   timer fires.  To begin the neighbor stabilization routine, a peer   sends an Update request to its first successor and its first   predecessor.  The type of the Update request MUST be 'neighbors'.   The Update request includes the successor and predecessor lists ofMaenpaa & Camarillo          Standards Track                   [Page 10]

RFC 7363               Self-Tuning DHT for RELOAD         September 2014   the sender.  If a peer receiving such an Update request learns from   the predecessor and successor lists included in the request that new   peers can be included in its neighborhood set, it sends Attach   requests to the new peers.   After a new peer has been added to the predecessor or successor list,   an Update request of type 'peer_ready' is sent to the new peer.  This   allows the new peer to insert the sender into its neighborhood set.5.3.  Finger Stabilization   Chord-reload specifies two alternative methods for searching for new   peers to the finger table.  Both of the alternatives can be used with   the self-tuning extensions defined in this document.   Immediately after a new peer has been added to the finger table, a   Probe request is sent to the new peer to fetch its uptime.  The   'requested_info' field of the Probe request MUST be set to contain   the ProbeInformationType 'uptime' defined in RELOAD base [RFC6940].5.4.  Adjusting Finger Table Size   The chord-reload algorithm defines how a peer can make sure that the   finger table is appropriately sized to allow for efficient routing.   Since the self-tuning mechanisms specified in this document produce a   network size estimate, this estimate can be directly used to   calculate the optimal size for the finger table.  This mechanism is   used instead of the one specified by chord-reload.  A peer uses the   network size estimate to determine whether it needs to adjust the   size of its finger table each time when the stabilization timer   fires.  The way this is done is explained inSection 6.2.5.5.  Detecting Partitioning   This document does not require any changes to the mechanism chord-   reload uses to detect network partitioning.5.6.  Leaving the Overlay   As specified in RELOAD base [RFC6940], a leaving peer SHOULD send a   Leave request to all members of its neighbor table prior to leaving   the overlay.  The 'overlay_specific_data' field MUST contain the   ChordLeaveData structure.  The Leave requests that are sent to   successors contain the predecessor list of the leaving peer.  The   Leave requests that are sent to the predecessors contain the   successor list of the leaving peer.  If a given successor can   identify better predecessors (that is, predecessors that are closer   to it on the Chord ring than its existing predecessors) than areMaenpaa & Camarillo          Standards Track                   [Page 11]

RFC 7363               Self-Tuning DHT for RELOAD         September 2014   already included in its predecessor lists by investigating the   predecessor list it receives from the leaving peer, it sends Attach   requests to them.  Similarly, if a given predecessor identifies   better successors by investigating the successor list it receives   from the leaving peer, it sends Attach requests to them.6.  Self-Tuning Chord Parameters   This section specifies how to determine an appropriate stabilization   rate and routing table size in an adaptive fashion.  The proposed   mechanism is based on [Mahajan2003], [Liben-Nowell2002], and   [Ghinita2006].  To calculate an appropriate stabilization rate, the   values of three parameters must be estimated: overlay size N, failure   rate U, and join rate L.  To calculate an appropriate routing table   size, the estimated network size N can be used.  Peers in the overlay   MUST recalculate the values of the parameters to self-tune the chord-   reload algorithm at the end of each stabilization period before   restarting the stabilization timer.6.1.  Estimating Overlay Size   Techniques for estimating the size of an overlay network have been   proposed, for instance, in [Mahajan2003], [Horowitz2003],   [Kostoulas2005], [Binzenhofer2006], and [Ghinita2006].  In Chord, the   density of peer identifiers in the neighborhood set can be used to   produce an estimate of the size of the overlay, N [Mahajan2003].   Since peer identifiers are picked randomly with uniform probability   from the numBitsInNodeId-bit identifier space, the average distance   between peer identifiers in the successor set is   (2^numBitsInNodeId)/N.   To estimate the overlay network size, a peer computes the average   inter-peer distance d between the successive peers starting from the   most distant predecessor and ending to the most distant successor in   the successor list.  The estimated network size is calculated as:                         2^numBitsInNodeId                    N = -------------------                                d   This estimate has been found to be accurate within 15% of the real   network size [Ghinita2006].  Of course, the size of the neighborhood   set affects the accuracy of the estimate.Maenpaa & Camarillo          Standards Track                   [Page 12]

RFC 7363               Self-Tuning DHT for RELOAD         September 2014   During the join process, a joining peer fills its routing table by   sending a series of Ping and Attach requests, as specified in RELOAD   base [RFC6940].  Thus, a joining peer immediately has enough   information at its disposal to calculate an estimate of the network   size.6.2.  Determining Routing Table Size   As specified in RELOAD base [RFC6940], the finger table must contain   at least 16 entries.  When the self-tuning mechanisms are used, the   size of the finger table MUST be set to max(ceiling(log2(N)), 16)   using the estimated network size N.   The size of the successor list MUST be set to a maximum of   ceiling(log2(N)).  An implementation can place a lower limit on the   size of the successor list.  As an example, the implementation might   require the size of the successor list to be always at least three.   The size of the predecessor list MUST be set to ceiling(log2(N)).6.3.  Estimating Failure Rate   A typical approach is to assume that peers join the overlay according   to a Poisson process with rate L and leave according to a Poisson   process with rate parameter U [Mahajan2003].  The value of U can be   estimated using peer failures in the finger table and neighborhood   set [Mahajan2003].  If peers fail with rate U, a peer with M unique   peer identifiers in its routing table should observe K failures in   time K/(M*U).  Every peer in the overlay maintains a history of the   last K failures.  The current time is inserted into the history when   the peer joins the overlay.  The estimate of U is calculated as:                             k                     U = --------,                          M * Tk   where M is the number of unique peer identifiers in the routing   table, Tk is the time between the first and the last failure in the   history, and k is the number of failures in the history.  If k is   smaller than K, the estimate is computed as if there was a failure at   the current time.  It has been shown that an estimate calculated in a   similar manner is accurate within 17% of the real value of U   [Ghinita2006].   The size of the failure history K affects the accuracy of the   estimate of U.  One can increase the accuracy by increasing K.   However, this has the side effect of decreasing responsiveness to   changes in the failure rate.  On the other hand, a small history sizeMaenpaa & Camarillo          Standards Track                   [Page 13]

RFC 7363               Self-Tuning DHT for RELOAD         September 2014   may cause a peer to overreact each time a new failure occurs.  In   [Ghinita2006], K is set to 25% of the routing table size.  Use of   this value is RECOMMENDED.6.3.1.  Detecting Failures   A new failure is inserted to the failure history in the following   cases:   1.  A Leave request is received from a neighbor.   2.  A peer fails to reply to a Ping request sent in the situation       explained below.  If no packets have been received on a       connection during the past 2*Tr seconds (where Tr is the       inactivity timer defined by Interactive Connectivity       Establishment (ICE) [RFC5245]), a RELOAD Ping request MUST be       sent to the remote peer.  RELOAD mandates the use of Session       Traversal Utilities for NAT (STUN) [RFC5389] for keepalives.       STUN keepalives take the form of STUN Binding Indication       transactions.  As specified in ICE [RFC5245], a peer sends a STUN       Binding Indication if there has been no packet sent on a       connection for Tr seconds.  Tr is configurable and has a default       of 15 seconds.  Although STUN Binding Indications do not generate       a response, the fact that a peer has failed can be learned from       the lack of packets (Binding Indications or application protocol       packets) received from the peer.  If the remote peer fails to       reply to the Ping request, the sender should consider the remote       peer to have failed.   As an alternative to relying on STUN keepalives to detect peer   failure, a peer could send additional, frequent RELOAD messages to   every peer in its connection table.  These messages could be Update   requests, in which case they would serve two purposes: detecting peer   failure and stabilization.  However, as the cost of this approach can   be very high in terms of bandwidth consumption and traffic load,   especially in large-scale overlays experiencing churn, its use is NOT   RECOMMENDED.6.4.  Estimating Join Rate   Reference [Ghinita2006] proposes that a peer can estimate the join   rate based on the uptime of the peers in its routing table.  An   increase in peer join rate will be reflected by a decrease in the   average age of peers in the routing table.  Thus, each peer   maintained an array of the ages of the peers in its routing table   sorted in increasing order.  Using this information, an estimate of   the global peer join rate L is calculated as:Maenpaa & Camarillo          Standards Track                   [Page 14]

RFC 7363               Self-Tuning DHT for RELOAD         September 2014                                  N                    L = ----------------------,                         Ages[floor(rsize/2)]   where Ages is an array containing the ages of the peers in the   routing table sorted in increasing order and rsize is the size of the   routing table.  It has been shown that the estimate obtained by using   this method is accurate within 22% of the real join rate   [Ghinita2006].  Of course, the size of the routing table affects the   accuracy.   In order for this mechanism to work, peers need to exchange   information about the time they have been present in the overlay.   Peers receive the uptimes of their successors and predecessors during   the stabilization operations since all Update requests carry uptime   values.  A joining peer learns the uptime of the admitting peer since   it receives an Update from the admitting peer during the join   procedure.  Peers learn the uptimes of new fingers since they can   fetch the uptime using a Probe request after having attached to the   new finger.6.5.  Estimate Sharing   To improve the accuracy of network size, join rate, and leave rate   estimates, peers share their estimates.  When the stabilization timer   fires, a peer selects number-of-peers-to-probe random peers from its   finger table and send each of them a Probe request.  The targets of   Probe requests are selected from the finger table rather than from   the neighbor table since neighbors are likely to make similar errors   when calculating their estimates.  The number-of-peers-to-probe is a   new element in the overlay configuration document.  It is defined inSection 7.  Both the Probe request and the answer returned by the   target peer MUST contain a new message extension whose   MessageExtensionType is 'self_tuning_data'.  This extension type is   defined inSection 9.1.  The 'extension_contents' field of the   MessageExtension structure MUST contain a SelfTuningData structure:               struct {                 uint32                   network_size;                 uint32                   join_rate;                 uint32                   leave_rate;               } SelfTuningData;Maenpaa & Camarillo          Standards Track                   [Page 15]

RFC 7363               Self-Tuning DHT for RELOAD         September 2014   The contents of the SelfTuningData structure are as follows:   network_size      The latest network size estimate calculated by the sender.   join_rate      The latest join rate estimate calculated by the sender.   leave_rate      The latest leave rate estimate calculated by the sender.   The join and leave rates are expressed as joins or failures per 24   hours.  As an example, if the global join rate estimate a peer has   calculated is 0.123 peers/s, it would include in the 'join_rate'   field the ceiling of the value 10627.2 (24*60*60*0.123 = 10627.2),   that is, the value 10628.   The 'type' field of the MessageExtension structure MUST be set to   contain the value 'self_tuning_data'.  The 'critical' field of the   structure MUST be set to False.   A peer stores all estimates it receives in Probe requests and answers   during a stabilization interval.  When the stabilization timer fires,   the peer calculates the estimates to be used during the next   stabilization interval by taking the 75th percentile (i.e., third   quartile) of a data set containing its own estimate and the received   estimates.   The default value for number-of-peers-to-probe is 4.  This default   value is recommended to allow a peer to receive a sufficiently large   set of estimates from other peers.  With a value of 4, a peer   receives four estimates in Probe answers.  On the average, each peer   also receives four Probe requests each carrying an estimate.  Thus,   on the average, each peer has nine estimates (including its own) that   it can use at the end of the stabilization interval.  A value smaller   than 4 is NOT RECOMMENDED to keep the number of received estimates   high enough.  As an example, if the value were 2, there would be   peers in the overlay that would only receive two estimates during a   stabilization interval.  Such peers would only have three estimates   available at the end of the interval, which may not be reliable   enough since even a single exceptionally high or low estimate can   have a large impact.Maenpaa & Camarillo          Standards Track                   [Page 16]

RFC 7363               Self-Tuning DHT for RELOAD         September 20146.6.  Calculating the Stabilization Interval   According to [Liben-Nowell2002], a Chord network in a ring-like state   remains in a ring-like state as long as peers send   Omega(square(log(N))) messages before N new peers join or N/2 peers   fail.  We can use the estimate of peer failure rate, U, to calculate   the time Tf in which N/2 peers fail:                                  1                           Tf = ------                                 2*U   Based on this estimate, a stabilization interval Tstab-1 is   calculated as:                                           Tf                           Tstab-1 = -----------------                                      square(log2(N))   On the other hand, the estimated join rate L can be used to calculate   the time in which N new peers join the overlay.  Based on the   estimate of L, a stabilization interval Tstab-2 is calculated as:                                               N                            Tstab-2 = ---------------------                                       L * square(log2(N))   Finally, the actual stabilization interval Tstab that is used can be   obtained by taking the minimum of Tstab-1 and Tstab-2.   The results obtained in [Maenpaa2009] indicate that making the   stabilization interval too small has the effect of making the overlay   less stable (e.g., in terms of detected loops and path failures).   Thus, a lower limit should be used for the stabilization period.   Based on the results in [Maenpaa2009], a lower limit of 15 s is   RECOMMENDED, since using a stabilization period smaller than this   will with a high probability cause too much traffic in the overlay.7.  Overlay Configuration Document Extension   This document extends the RELOAD overlay configuration document by   adding one new element, "number-of-peers-to-probe", inside each   "configuration" element.   self-tuning:number-of-peers-to-probe:  The number of fingers to which      Probe requests are sent to obtain their network size, join rate,      and leave rate estimates.  The default value is 4.Maenpaa & Camarillo          Standards Track                   [Page 17]

RFC 7363               Self-Tuning DHT for RELOAD         September 2014   The RELAX NG grammar for this element is:   namespace self-tuning = "urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:p2p:self-tuning"   parameter &= element self-tuning:number-of-peers-to-probe {   xsd:unsignedInt }?   This namespace is added into the <mandatory-extension> element in the   overlay configuration file.8.  Security Considerations   In the same way as malicious or compromised peers implementing the   RELOAD base protocol [RFC6940] can advertise false network metrics or   distribute false routing table information for instance in RELOAD   Update messages, malicious peers implementing this specification may   share false join rate, leave rate, and network size estimates.  For   such attacks, the same security concerns apply as in the RELOAD base   specification.  In addition, as long as the amount of malicious peers   in the overlay remains modest, the statistical mechanisms applied inSection 6.5 (i.e., the use of 75th percentiles) to process the shared   estimates a peer obtains help ensure that estimates that are clearly   different from (i.e., larger or smaller than) other received   estimates will not significantly influence the process of adapting   the stabilization interval and routing table size.  However, it   should be noted that if an attacker is able to impersonate a high   number of other peers in the overlay in strategic locations, it may   be able to send a high enough number of false estimates to a victim   and therefore influence the victim's choice of a stabilization   interval.9.  IANA Considerations9.1.  Message Extensions   This document introduces one additional extension to the "RELOAD   Extensions Registry":                  +------------------+-------+---------------+                  | Extension Name   |  Code | Specification |                  +------------------+-------+---------------+                  | self_tuning_data |   0x3 |RFC 7363 |                  +------------------+-------+---------------+   The contents of the extension are defined inSection 6.5.Maenpaa & Camarillo          Standards Track                   [Page 18]

RFC 7363               Self-Tuning DHT for RELOAD         September 20149.2.  New Overlay Algorithm Type   This document introduces one additional overlay algorithm type to the   "RELOAD Overlay Algorithm Types" registry:                  +-------------------+-----------+                  | Algorithm Name    | Reference |                  +-------------------+-----------+                  | CHORD-SELF-TUNING |RFC 7363  |                  +-------------------+-----------+9.3.  A New IETF XML Registry   This document registers one new URI for the self-tuning namespace in   the "ns" subregistry of the IETF XML registry defined in [RFC3688].   URI: urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:p2p:self-tuning   Registrant Contact: The IESG   XML: N/A, the requested URI is an XML namespace10.  Acknowledgments   The authors would like to thank Jani Hautakorpi for his contributions   to the document.  The authors would also like to thank Carlos   Bernardos, Martin Durst, Alissa Cooper, Tobias Gondrom, and Barry   Leiba for their comments on the document.11.  References11.1.  Normative References   [RFC2119]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate              Requirement Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119, March 1997.   [RFC5245]  Rosenberg, J., "Interactive Connectivity Establishment              (ICE): A Protocol for Network Address Translator (NAT)              Traversal for Offer/Answer Protocols",RFC 5245, April              2010.   [RFC5389]  Rosenberg, J., Mahy, R., Matthews, P., and D. Wing,              "Session Traversal Utilities for NAT (STUN)",RFC 5389,              October 2008.Maenpaa & Camarillo          Standards Track                   [Page 19]

RFC 7363               Self-Tuning DHT for RELOAD         September 2014   [RFC6940]  Jennings, C., Lowekamp, B., Rescorla, E., Baset, S., and              H. Schulzrinne, "REsource LOcation And Discovery (RELOAD)              Base Protocol",RFC 6940, January 2014.11.2.  Informative References   [Binzenhofer2006]              Binzenhofer, A., Kunzmann, G., and R. Henjes, "A Scalable              Algorithm to Monitor Chord-Based P2P Systems at Runtime",              In Proceedings of the 20th IEEE International Parallel and              Distributed Processing Symposium (IPDPS), pp. 1-8, April              2006.   [CAN]      Ratnasamy, S., Francis, P., Handley, M., Karp, R., and S.              Schenker, "A Scalable Content-Addressable Network", In              Proceedings of the 2001 Conference on Applications,              Technologies, Architectures and Protocols for Computer              Communications, pp. 161-172, August 2001.   [Chord]    Stoica, I., Morris, R., Liben-Nowell, D., Karger, D.,              Kaashoek, M., Dabek, F., and H. Balakrishnan, "Chord: A              Scalable Peer-to-peer Lookup Service for Internet              Applications", IEEE/ACM Transactions on Networking, Volume              11, Issue 1, pp. 17-32, February 2003.   [Ghinita2006]              Ghinita, G. and Y. Teo, "An Adaptive Stabilization              Framework for Distributed Hash Tables", In Proceedings of              the 20th IEEE International Parallel and Distributed              Processing Symposium (IPDPS), pp. 29-38, April 2006.   [Horowitz2003]              Horowitz, K. and D. Malkhi, "Estimating Network Size from              Local Information", Information Processing Letters, Volume              88, Issue 5, pp. 237-243, December 2003.   [Kostoulas2005]              Kostoulas, D., Psaltoulis, D., Gupta, I., Birman, K., and              A. Demers, "Decentralized Schemes for Size Estimation in              Large and Dynamic Groups", In Proceedings of the 4th IEEE              International Symposium on Network Computing and              Applications, pp. 41-48, July 2005.Maenpaa & Camarillo          Standards Track                   [Page 20]

RFC 7363               Self-Tuning DHT for RELOAD         September 2014   [Krishnamurthy2008]              Krishnamurthy, S., El-Ansary, S., Aurell, E., and S.              Haridi, "Comparing Maintenance Strategies for Overlays",              In Proceedings of the 16th Euromicro Conference on              Parallel, Distributed and Network-Based Processing, pp.              473-482, February 2008.   [Li2004]   Li, J., Strinbling, J., Gil, T., Morris, R., and M.              Kaashoek, "Comparing the Performance of Distributed Hash              Tables Under Churn", Peer-to-Peer Systems III, Volume 3279              of Lecture Notes in Computer Science, Springer, pp. 87-99,              February 2005.   [Liben-Nowell2002]              Liben-Nowell, D., Balakrishnan, H., and D. Karger,              "Observations on the Dynamic Evolution of Peer-to-Peer              Networks", In Proceedings of the 1st International              Workshop on Peer-to-Peer Systems (IPTPS), pp. 22-33, March              2002.   [Maenpaa2009]              Maenpaa, J. and G. Camarillo, "A Study on Maintenance              Operations in a Chord-Based Peer-to-Peer Session              Initiation Protocol Overlay Network", In Proceedings of              the 23rd IEEE International Parallel and Distributed              Processing Symposium (IPDPS), pp. 1-9, May 2009.   [Mahajan2003]              Mahajan, R., Castro, M., and A. Rowstron, "Controlling the              Cost of Reliability in Peer-to-Peer Overlays", In              Proceedings of the 2nd International Workshop on Peer-to-              Peer Systems (IPTPS), pp. 21-32, February 2003.   [Pastry]   Rowstron, A. and P. Druschel, "Pastry: Scalable,              Decentralized Object Location and Routing for Large-Scale              Peer-to-Peer Systems", In Proceedings of the IFIP/ACM              International Conference on Distributed Systems Platforms,              pp. 329-350, November 2001.   [RFC3688]  Mealling, M., "The IETF XML Registry",BCP 81,RFC 3688,              January 2004.   [Rhea2004]              Rhea, S., Geels, D., Roscoe, T., and J. Kubiatowicz,              "Handling Churn in a DHT", In Proceedings of the USENIX              Annual Technical Conference, pp. 127-140, June 2004.Maenpaa & Camarillo          Standards Track                   [Page 21]

RFC 7363               Self-Tuning DHT for RELOAD         September 2014   [Weiss1998]              Weiss, M., "Data Structures and Algorithm Analysis in              C++", Addison-Wesley Longman Publishing Co., Inc., 2nd              Edition, ISBN 0201361221, 1998.Authors' Addresses   Jouni Maenpaa   Ericsson   Hirsalantie 11   Jorvas  02420   Finland   EMail: Jouni.Maenpaa@ericsson.com   Gonzalo Camarillo   Ericsson   Hirsalantie 11   Jorvas  02420   Finland   EMail: Gonzalo.Camarillo@ericsson.comMaenpaa & Camarillo          Standards Track                   [Page 22]

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