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EXPERIMENTAL
Network Working Group                                            M. LubyRequest for Comments: 3738                              Digital FountainCategory: Experimental                                          V. Goyal                                                                  M.I.T.                                                              April 2004Wave and Equation Based Rate Control (WEBRC) Building BlockStatus 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 (2004).  All Rights Reserved.Abstract   This document specifies Wave and Equation Based Rate Control (WEBRC),   which provides rate and congestion control for data delivery.  WEBRC   is specifically designed to support protocols using IP multicast.  It   provides multiple-rate, congestion-controlled delivery to receivers,   i.e., different receivers joined to the same session may be receiving   packets at different rates depending on the bandwidths of their   individual connections to the sender and on competing traffic along   these connections.  WEBRC requires no feedback from receivers to the   sender, i.e., it is a completely receiver-driven congestion control   protocol.  Thus, it is designed to scale to potentially massive   numbers of receivers attached to a session from a single sender.   Furthermore, because each individual receiver adjusts to the   available bandwidth between the sender and that receiver, there is   the potential to deliver data to each individual receiver at the   fastest possible rate for that receiver, even in a highly   heterogeneous network architecture, using a single sender.Luby & Goyal                 Experimental                       [Page 1]

RFC 3738                  WEBRC Building Block                April 2004Table of Contents1.  Introduction. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .32.  Rationale . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .53.  Functionality . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .63.1. Sender Operation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .93.1.1. Sender inputs and initialization. . . . . . . . .93.1.2. Sending packets to the session. . . . . . . . . .103.2. Receiver Operation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .123.2.1. Receiver inputs and initialization. . . . . . . .123.2.2. Receiver measurements and calculations. . . . . .133.2.2.1. Average loss probability . . . . . . . .133.2.2.2. Average round-trip time. . . . . . . . .163.2.2.3. Rate Equation. . . . . . . . . . . . . .163.2.2.4. Epochs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .173.2.2.5. Average reception rate . . . . . . . . .173.2.2.6. Slow start . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .193.2.2.7. Target rate. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .203.2.3. Receiver events . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .203.2.3.1. Packet reception . . . . . . . . . . . .203.2.3.2. First packet after join. . . . . . . . .203.2.3.3. Time slot change . . . . . . . . . . . .203.2.3.4. Loss event . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .213.2.3.5. Epoch change . . . . . . . . . . . . . .213.2.3.6. Join the next higher layer . . . . . . .213.2.3.7. Join timeout . . . . . . . . . . . . . .233.2.3.8. Exceptional timeouts . . . . . . . . . .234.  Applicability Statement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .234.1. Environmental Requirements and Considerations. . . . . .235.  Packet Header Fields. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .255.1. Short Format Congestion Control Information. . . . . . .265.2. Long Format Congestion Control Information . . . . . . .276.  Requirements From Other Building Blocks . . . . . . . . . . .287.  Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .288.  References. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .298.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .298.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .309.  Authors' Addresses. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3110. Full Copyright Statement. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .32Luby & Goyal                 Experimental                       [Page 2]

RFC 3738                  WEBRC Building Block                April 20041.  Introduction   This document specifies Wave and Equation Based Rate Control (WEBRC).   WEBRC is a congestion control building block that is designed to be   massively scalable when used with the IP multicast network service.   WEBRC is also suitable as the basis for unicast congestion control,   but this is outside the scope of this document.  WEBRC is designed to   compete fairly with TCP and similar congestion-controlled sessions.   WEBRC can be used as a congestion control protocol for any type of   data delivery, including reliable content delivery and streaming   delivery.   WEBRC is a receiver-driven congestion control protocol in the spirit   of [5] and [18].  This means that all measurements and decisions to   raise or lower the reception rate are made by each individual   receiver, and these decisions are acted upon by sending join and   leave messages for channels to the network.  A receiver using WEBRC   adjusts its reception rate without regard for other concerns such as   reliability.  This is different from TCP, where the congestion   control protocol and the reliability protocol are intricately   interwoven.   WEBRC takes the same basic equation-based approach as TFRC [9].  In   particular, each WEBRC receiver measures parameters that are plugged   into a TCP-like equation to compute the receiver target reception   rate and adjusts its reception rate up and down to closely   approximate the target reception rate.  The sender sends packets to   multiple channels; one channel is called the base channel and the   remaining channels are called wave channels.  Each wave channel   follows the same pattern of packet rate transmission spread out over   equally-spaced intervals of time.  The pattern of each wave is that   it starts at a high rate and the rate decreases gradually and   continually over a long period of time.  (Picture an infinite   sequence of waves.)  The receiver increases its reception rate by   joining the next wave channel earlier in the descent of the wave than   it joined the previous wave channel, and the receiver decreases its   reception rate by joining the next wave channel later in the descent   of the wave than it joined the previous wave channel.   The wave channels are ordered at each point in time from a lowest   layer to a highest layer.  At each point in time, the lowest layer is   the wave channel that among all active wave channels is nearest to   the end of its active period; the highest layer is the wave channel   that is furthest from the end of its active period.  Because waves   are dynamically becoming active and quiescent over time, the   designation of which wave channel is at which layer changes   dynamically over time.  In addition to being joined to the base   channel, at each point in time a receiver is joined to a consecutiveLuby & Goyal                 Experimental                       [Page 3]

RFC 3738                  WEBRC Building Block                April 2004   set of layers starting at the lowest layer and proceeding towards the   highest.   WEBRC introduces a natural notion of a multicast round-trip time   (MRTT).  An MRTT is measured individually by each receiver and   averaged as a substitute for conventional unicast round-trip time   (RTT).  Because the throughput of a TCP session depends strongly on   RTT, having some measure of RTT is essential in making the WEBRC   equation-based rate control protocol "TCP-friendly".  The use of the   MRTT also helps to coordinate and equalize the reception rates of   proximate receivers joined to a session behind a bottleneck link.   This implies that packets for the session that flow through the   bottleneck link are on average sent to almost all downstream   receivers, and thus the efficiencies of multicast are realized.   Furthermore, WEBRC is designed to be massively scalable in the sense   that the sender is insensitive to the number of receivers joined to a   multicast session.   WEBRC is designed for applications that use a fixed packet size and   vary their packet reception rates in response to congestion.  WEBRC   is designed to be reasonably fair when competing for bandwidth with   TCP flows, where a flow is "reasonably fair" if its reception rate is   generally within a factor of two of the reception rate of a TCP flow   under the same conditions.  However WEBRC has a much lower variation   of throughput over time compared to TCP, which makes it more suitable   for applications such as telephony or streaming media where a   relatively smooth rate is of importance.  The penalty of having   smoother throughput than TCP while competing fairly for bandwidth is   that WEBRC responds more slowly than TCP to changes in available   bandwidth.   The receiver measures and performs the calculation of congestion   control parameters (e.g., the average loss probability, the average   MRTT) and makes decisions on how to increase or decrease its rate   based on these parameters.  The receiver-based approach is well   suited to an application where the sender is handling many concurrent   connections and therefore WEBRC is suitable as a building block for   multicast congestion control.   The paper [16] and technical report [15] provide much of the   rationale and intuition for the WEBRC design and describe some   preliminary simulations.   This document describes a building block as defined inRFC 3048 [4].   This document describes a congestion control building block that   conforms toRFC 2357 [3].  This document is a product of the IETF RMT   WG and follows the general guidelines provided inRFC 3269 [2].  The   key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",Luby & Goyal                 Experimental                       [Page 4]

RFC 3738                  WEBRC Building Block                April 2004   "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this   document are to be interpreted as described inBCP 14,RFC 2119 [1].Statement of Intent   This memo contains part of the definitions necessary to fully specify   a Reliable Multicast Transport protocol in accordance withRFC 2357.   As perRFC 2357, the use of any reliable multicast protocol in the   Internet requires an adequate congestion control scheme.  This   document specifies an experimental congestion control scheme.  While   waiting for initial deployment and experience to show this scheme to   be effective and scalable, the IETF publishes this scheme in the   "Experimental" category.   It is the intent of the Reliable Multicast Transport (RMT) Working   Group to re-submit the specification as an IETF Proposed Standard as   soon as the scheme is deemed adequate.2.  Rationale   WEBRC provides congestion control for massively scalable protocols   using the IP multicast network service.  The congestion control that   WEBRC provides is common to a variety of applications, including   reliable content delivery and streaming applications.   WEBRC is designed to provide congestion control for all packets that   are sent to a session.  A session comprises multiple channels   originating at a single sender that are used for some period of time   to carry packets pertaining to the transmission of one or more   objects that can be of interest to receivers.  The logic behind   defining a session as originating from a single sender is that this   is the right granularity to regulate packet traffic via congestion   control.  The rationale for providing congestion control that uses   multiple channels within the same session is that this allows the   data on the channels to be layered, which in turn allows each   receiver to control its reception rate by joining and leaving   channels during its participation in the session.  There are   advantages to layered data for streaming, where the most important   data can be sent to the lower layers and incrementally valuable data   to the higher layers.  For reliable content delivery, as described in   [13], an application can send in packets encoded data generated from   an object in such a way that the arrival of enough packets by a   receiver is sufficient to reliably reconstruct the original object.   A primary advantage of WEBRC is that each receiver controls it   reception rate independent of other receivers.  Thus, for example, a   receiver with a slow connection to the sender does not slow down the   receivers with faster connections.Luby & Goyal                 Experimental                       [Page 5]

RFC 3738                  WEBRC Building Block                April 2004   There are coding techniques that provide massively scalable   reliability and asynchronous delivery which are compatible with   WEBRC, e.g., as described in [11].  When combined the result is a   massively scalable, reliable, asynchronous content delivery protocol   that is network friendly.  WEBRC also provides congestion control   that is suitable for streaming applications.   WEBRC avoids using techniques that are not massively scalable.  For   example, WEBRC does not provide any mechanisms for sending   information from receivers to senders, although this does not rule   out protocols that both use WEBRC and that send information from   receivers to senders.   WEBRC provides congestion control that can be tuned for different   applications that may have differing application requirements.  For   example, a content delivery protocol may aggressively strive to use   all available bandwidth between receivers and the sender, and thus to   maintain fairness it must drastically reduce its rate when there is   competing traffic.  On the other hand, a streaming delivery protocol   may strive to maintain a constant rate instead of trying to use all   available bandwidth, and thus it may not reduce its rate as fast when   there is competing traffic.   WEBRC does not provide any support beyond congestion control, and   thus WEBRC is to be combined with other building blocks to provide a   complete protocol instantiation.  For example, WEBRC does not provide   any means that can be used to identify which session each received   packet belongs to.  As another example, WEBRC does not provide   support for identifying which object each packet is carrying   information about.3.  Functionality   A WEBRC session comprises a logically related set of channels   originating from a single sender that are used for some period of   time to carry data packets with a header carrying WEBRC Congestion   Control Information.  When packets are received, they are first   checked to see that they belong to the appropriate session before   WEBRC is applied.  A session label defined by a protocol   instantiation may be carried in each packet to identify to which   session the packet belongs.  For example, if LCT [12] is being used   with the session, then the sender IP address together with the   Transport Session Identifier supported by LCT would be used to   determine which session a received packet belongs to.  The particular   details of how this filtering is performed is outside the scope of   this document.  In the remainder of this document, references to   channels are always within the scope of a single session.Luby & Goyal                 Experimental                       [Page 6]

RFC 3738                  WEBRC Building Block                April 2004   A channel can be uniquely identified at the network layer by a   (sender IP address, multicast group address) pair, and this is the   address to which the receiver sends messages to join and leave the   channel.  The channels used by a WEBRC session are mapped uniquely to   consecutive channel numbers.  In each packet sent to a channel, the   channel number that corresponds to the channel is carried in the   WEBRC Congestion Control Information.  A WEBRC receiver uses the   channel number to determine which channel within a session a packet   is received from.   At the sender, time is partitioned into time slots, each of duration   TSD seconds.  There is a fixed number T of time slot indices   associated with a session.  As time progresses, the current time slot   index increases by one modulo T each TSD seconds.  The current time   slot index CTSI is carried in the WEBRC Congestion Control   Information.  This allows receivers to perform very coarse-grained   synchronization within a session.   WEBRC congestion control is achieved by having the sender send   packets associated with a given session to several different   channels.  Individual receivers dynamically join and leave these   channels according to the network congestion they experience.  These   congestion control adjustments are performed at each receiver   independently of all other receivers, without any impact on the   sender.  A packet sequence number is carried in the WEBRC Congestion   Control Information.  The packet sequence numbers are consecutively   numbered per channel and are used by receivers to measure packet   loss.   The channels associated with a session consist of one base channel   and T wave channels.  The packet rate for each channel varies over   time.  For the base channel, packets are sent to the channel at a low   rate BCR_P at the beginning of a time slot and this rate gradually   decreases to P*BCR_P at the end of the time slot, where P < 1 is a   constant defined later.  This pattern for the base channel repeats   over each time slot.  For each wave channel i, packets are sent to   channel i at a rate that first increases very quickly to a high rate   and then decreases over time by a fixed fraction P per time slot   until a rate of BCR_P is reached at the end of time slot i.  Then,   for a period of time called the quiescent period, no packets are sent   to wave channel i, and thereafter the whole cycle repeats itself,   where the duration of the cycle is T*TSD seconds.  Thus, the wave   channels are going through the same cyclic pattern of packet rate   transmission spaced out evenly by TSD seconds.   Before joining a session, the receivers MUST obtain enough of the   session description to start the session.  This MUST include the   relevant session parameters needed by a receiver to participate inLuby & Goyal                 Experimental                       [Page 7]

RFC 3738                  WEBRC Building Block                April 2004   the session and perform WEBRC congestion control.  The session   description is determined by the sender and is typically communicated   to the receivers out of band.  How receivers obtain the session   description is outside the scope of this document.   When a receiver initiates a session, it first joins the base channel.   The packets in the base channel help the receiver orient itself in   terms of what the current time slot index is, which in turn allows   the receiver to know the relative rates on the wave channels.  The   receiver remains joined to the base channel for the duration of its   participation in the session.   At each point in time the active (non-quiescent) wave channels are   ordered into layers, where the lowest layer is the active wave   channel whose wave is nearest to completion and the highest layer is   the active wave channel whose wave is furthest from completion.   (This is almost the same as saying that the lowest layer has the   lowest rate and the highest layer has the highest rate.  The possible   deviation from this is due to the optional non-exponential beginnings   of the waves as described in [8].)  Each time a wave channel becomes   active, it is the highest layer.  At the end of each time slot the   lowest-layer wave channel becomes quiescent, and thus all active wave   channels move down a layer at this point in time.  At each point in   time a receiver is joined to the base channel and a consecutive set   of layers starting with the lowest.  Each time a receiver joins a   wave channel it joins the lowest layer not yet joined.  A receiver   always leaves the lowest layer when it becomes quiescent.   After joining a session the receiver adjusts its rate upwards by   joining wave channels in sequence, starting with the lowest layer and   moving towards the highest.  The rates on the active wave channels   are decreasing with time, so the receiver adjusts its rate downwards   simply by refraining from joining additional wave channels.  Since   the layer ordering among the channels changes dynamically over time   depending on the current time slot index, it is important that the   receiver continually monitor the current time slot index contained in   received packets.  The reception rate at the receiver is determined   by how early each wave channel is joined by the receiver: the earlier   the receiver joins a channel with respect to when its wave started,   the higher the reception rate.   Once the receiver is joined to a wave channel, the receiver remains   joined to the wave channel until the channel goes quiescent, at which   point the receiver MUST leave the channel.   The way the receiver adjusts its reception rate is inspired by TFRC   [9].  The receiver at all points in time maintains a target reception   rate, and the receiver is allowed to join the next wave channel ifLuby & Goyal                 Experimental                       [Page 8]

RFC 3738                  WEBRC Building Block                April 2004   after joining its anticipated reception rate from all the layers it   is joined to would be at most its target reception rate.  The target   rate is continually updated based on a set of measured parameters.   The primary parameters are an estimate LOSSP of the average loss   probability and an estimate ARTT of the average multicast round-trip   time.   In the remainder of this document, log(X) denotes the natural   logarithm of X, i.e., the logarithm base 2.71828459... of X.3.1.  Sender Operation   The sender operation is by design much simpler than the receiver   operation.3.1.1.  Sender inputs and initialization   The primary input to the sender for the session is SR_b.  SR_b is an   upper bound to the sender transmission rate in bits per second at any   point in time (with some reasonable granularity) in aggregate to all   channels.  Naturally, this is then also the maximum rate in bits per   second that any receiver could receive data from the session at any   point in time.  It is RECOMMENDED that the sender transmission rate   in aggregate to all channels be made constant as described in [8].   It is also RECOMMENDED that the session description indicate whether   the aggregate transmission rate is constant, unless there is no   ambiguity.   The secondary inputs to the sender are listed below.  These inputs   are secondary because their values will generally be fixed to default   values that will not change, because they will be derived from SR_b,   or because they are chosen based on non-WEBRC considerations.   o  LENP_B is the length of packets in bytes sent to the session.  The      value of LENP_B depends on the complete protocol, but in general      this SHOULD be set to as high a value as possible without      exceeding the MTU size for the network that would cause      fragmentation.   o  BCR_P is the transmission rate on the base channel at the      beginning of a time slot in packets per second.  The default value      for BCR_P is 1.   o  TSD is the time slot duration measured in seconds.  The      RECOMMENDED value for TSD is 10.   o  QD is the minimum quiescent period duration measured in seconds.      The RECOMMENDED value for QD is 300.Luby & Goyal                 Experimental                       [Page 9]

RFC 3738                  WEBRC Building Block                April 2004   o  P is the multiplicative drop in every channel rate over each time      slot.  The default value for P is 0.75.   o  N is the duration in time slots for each wave.  N is also the      number of wave channels active at any time.  (A wave channel is      called active when it is not quiescent.)  A sender may choose any      value that allows it to produce waves that substantially follow      the required exponential shape described inSection 3.1.2.  A      RECOMMENDED mechanism for relating N to SR_b, BCR_P and P is      described in [8].   From these inputs the following fixed sender parameters can be   derived as follows.   o  SR_P = SR_b/(8*LENP_B) is the sender transmission rate in packets      per second.   o  BCR_b = 8*LENP_B*BCR_P is the rate of the base channel at the      beginning of a time slot in bits per second.   o  L = ceil(BCR_P*TSD*(P-1)/log(P)) is the number of base channel      packets sent in each time slot.   o  Q = ceil(QD/TSD) is the number of quiescent time slots per cycle      for a wave channel.   o  T = N + Q is the total number of time slots in a cycle.  T is also      the total number of wave channels.   o  For the base channel CN = T and for the wave channels CN =      0,1,...,T-1.  The sender has the description of the channels      assigned to the session and the mapping between the channels and      the CNs.   o  C = TSD*T is the total duration of a cycle in seconds.3.1.2.  Sending packets to the session   The sender keeps track of the current time slot index CTSI.  The   value of CTSI is incremented by 1 modulo T each TSD seconds.  The   value of CTSI is placed into each packet in the format described inSection 5.  For each packet sent to the session, the sender also   places the channel number CN of the channel into the packets in the   format described inSection 5.  Recall that CN = T for the base   channel and CN = 0,1,...,T-1 for the wave channels.Luby & Goyal                 Experimental                      [Page 10]

RFC 3738                  WEBRC Building Block                April 2004   For each packet sent to the session, the sender calculates a packet   sequence number PSN and places it into the packet.  The value of PSN   is scoped by CN, and the value of PSN is consecutively increasing   within each channel.  Furthermore, for each wave channel, the last   packet sent before the channel becomes quiescent must have the   maximum possible PSN value.  When the short format for Congestion   Control Information is used (seeSection 5.1), this implies that for   any wave channel the last PSN value sent to the channel just before   the channel becomes quiescent is 2^16-1 = 65,535.  Similarly, when   the long format for Congestion Control Information is used (seeSection 5.2), the PSN for the final packet of any wave is 2^32-1 =   4,294,967,295.  The PSN of the initial packet of a wave thus depends   on TSD, P, BCR_P and SR_P.  For the base channel, the first packet of   each time slot has a PSN congruent to zero modulo L.  Hence, instead   of 2^16 - 1 or 2^32 - 1 being the highest PSN used (depending on the   choice of short format or long format Congestion Control   Information), the highest PSN is one less than the largest multiple   of L that does not exceed 2^16 (short format) or 2^32 (long format).   The format for the PSN within packets is described inSection 5.   The rate at which packets are sent to the base channel starts at   BCR_P packets per second at the beginning of each time slot and   decreases exponentially to P*BCR_P at the end of that time slot.   The packet rate for the wave channels is more complicated.  Each wave   channel carries a sequence of waves separated by quiescent periods.   On each wave channel each wave is active during N time slots followed   by a quiescent period of Q time slots.  The waves on wave channel i   end at the ends of time slots with CTSI i.  Therefore wave channel i   is active during time slots i-N+1 modulo T, i-N+2 modulo T, ..., i   and is quiescent for time slots i+1 modulo T, i+2 modulo T, ..., i+Q   modulo T.  Wave channel i first becomes active within time slot i-N+1   modulo T at a point in time that may depend on the value of SR_b.   Except for at most the first two time slots after a wave becomes   active, the packet rate of the wave MUST decrease exponentially by a   factor of P per TSD seconds, down to a rate of BCR_P at the end of   the last active time slot.  At the beginning of each wave, i.e., for   at most the first two time slots when the wave becomes active, the   rate MAY deviate from this exponential form so that the total sending   rate in aggregate to all of the channels is constant.  A RECOMMENDED   design for the beginnings of waves to achieve this goal is described   in [8].Luby & Goyal                 Experimental                      [Page 11]

RFC 3738                  WEBRC Building Block                April 20043.2.  Receiver Operation   The bulk of the complexity in WEBRC is in the receiver operation.   For ease of explanation, suppose for the moment that during the   reception there is no packet loss and packets are arriving at exactly   the rate at which they were sent.  The sender transmission rate to   the channels is designed so that the receiver reception rate behaves   as follows.   Upon entering a session, the receiver immediately joins the base   channel.  When the receiver wants to increase its rate, it joins   consecutive layers starting with the lowest and moving towards the   highest.  (Recall that the designations of lowest to highest change   as waves become active and quiescent.)  When the receiver wants to   maintain its current reception rate and it is already joined to the   lowest NWC layers, if the receiver joins channel i-1+NWC modulo T   sometime during time slot i then the receiver joins channel i+NWC   modulo T TSD seconds later in time slot i+1.  When the lowest layer   becomes quiescent the receiver leaves the channel.   Suppose the receiver wants to decrease its rate till it is joined to   just the base channel.  Assume that a receiver is joined to the   lowest NWC < N-2 layers at the beginning of time slot i, i.e., wave   channels i, i+1 modulo T,..., i+NWC-1 modulo T.  Then, the aggregate   packet reception rate of the receiver over the next NWC time slots   will behave as follows if the receiver does not join any wave   channels during this time.  At the beginning of time slot i the   receiver reception rate is BCR_P*(1 + (1/P) + (1/P)^2 + ... +   (1/P)^NWC).  Then the receiver reception rate decreases by a factor   of P over the duration of each time slot, and at the end of each time   slot the reception rate decreases by an additive amount of P*BCR_P.   At the end of time slot i+NWC-1 mod T, the receiver reception rate is   BCR_P*(1+P), and at the beginning of time slot i+NWC mod T the   receiver is joined only to the base channel and its reception rate is   BCR_P.3.2.1.  Receiver inputs and initialization   Before joining a session the receiver MUST know the mapping between   the CNs and the channels.  Upon joining the session or shortly   thereafter, it SHOULD have the values of LENP_B, BCR_P, TSD, P, N, L,   Q and T.  Some of these values may be computed or measured once the   receiver has joined the session.  For example, the receiver MAY   obtain LENP_B and T from the first packet received from the base   channel, and the receiver MAY measure BCR_P once it is joined to the   base channel.  The values of P, Q and TSD MAY be fixed to default   values built into the receiver that do not change from session to   session, and the value of N MAY be computed as T-Q.  The receiverLuby & Goyal                 Experimental                      [Page 12]

RFC 3738                  WEBRC Building Block                April 2004   SHOULD know whether the sender is employing a technique to produce   constant aggregate rate as described in [8].   When a receiver first joins a session, it MUST first join just the   base channel and start receiving packets to determine the current   time slot index.  If during the course of the session the receiver   continually loses a high fraction of the packets from the base   channel even when the receiver is only joined to the base channel,   the receiver SHOULD leave the session.   The receiver MAY also have other individually set parameters that may   be used to determine its behavior.  One such parameter is MRR_b:   o  MRR_b is the maximum receiver reception rate in bits per second.      This may be used to determine the maximum reception rate this      receiver is willing to reach.  Thus, the maximum reception rate      that the receiver can possibly achieve in the session is the      minimum of SR_b and MRR_b.  A recommended value of MRR_b for a      receiver is the bandwidth capacity of the last link to the      receiver.  MRR_P is the maximum receiver reception rate in packets      per second, i.e., MRR_P = MRR_b/(8*LENP_B).3.2.2.  Receiver measurements and calculations   As outlined in the introduction, the way a receiver adjusts its   reception rate is inspired by TFRC [9]. The receiver at all points in   time maintains a target reception rate, and the receiver is allowed   to join the next wave channel if joining would increase its reception   rate to at most its target reception rate.  The target rate is   continually updated based on a set of measured parameters.   Two primary parameters are the estimate LOSSP of the average loss   probability and the estimate ARTT of the average MRTT.  Both LOSSP   and ARTT are moving averages of measurements based on discrete   events.  For many of the other estimates calculated by WEBRC, using   an exponentially weighted moving average (EWMA) with a fixed   averaging fraction is sufficient.  However, the calculations of LOSSP   and ARTT require a more general and sophisticated filtering approach.3.2.2.1.  Average loss probability   The design of TFRC [9] reflects that, because the average packet loss   probability can vary by orders of magnitude, any estimate of the   average loss probability based on either a fixed number of packets or   on a fixed period of time with a fixed averaging fraction will be   poor.  In TFRC the average is estimated from the numbers of packets   between beginnings of loss events, and the number of loss events used   is fixed.Luby & Goyal                 Experimental                      [Page 13]

RFC 3738                  WEBRC Building Block                April 2004   The estimate LOSSP of the average loss probability of the receiver is   maintained in a manner somewhat similar to that described in TFRC   [9].  The WEBRC receiver estimates the inverse of the average loss   probability by applying two EWMA filters to the packet reception   measurements, a time-based filter with smoothing constant 0 < Nu < 1   and a loss-based filter with smoothing constant 0 < Delta < 1.  The   recommended values for the smoothing constants are Nu = 0.3 and Delta   = 0.3.  The reason for the time-based filter is that the loss events   in WEBRC are bursty; they typically occur just after a new wave has   been joined.  To smooth out this burstiness, the time-based filter is   applied to the packet reception measurements at the end of each epoch   to smooth out the bursty loss events over a few time slot durations.   Intuitively, the time-based filter averages packet reception events   such that the events are smoothed out over an interval of time   proportional to TSD/Nu seconds.  The loss-based filter, similar to   what is suggested in TFRC, is applied to the output of the time-based   filter to produce the estimate of the inverse of the average loss   probability.  Intuitively, the loss-based filter averages loss events   such that each loss event is averaged in with weight Delta.   As described later, LOSSP is initialized at the end of slow start and   occasionally reset due to other events.  Let W and X be counts of   packets, let Y be a count of loss events and let Z be the long-term   estimate of the inverse of the average loss probability.  Whenever   the value of LOSSP is initialized or reset, the values of W, X, Y and   Z are also initialized or reset.   Recall that TSD is the duration of a time slot.  The epoch length EL   is the duration of time between decisions to adjust the reception   rate.  Generally EL is much smaller than TSD, and the RECOMMENDED   values are EL = 0.5 seconds and TSD = 10 seconds.   Define G = Nu*EL/TSD as the amount of time-based smoothing to perform   at the end of each epoch.  The update rules for W, X, Y, Z, and LOSSP   are the following:   o  At the end of each epoch, adjust X, Y and Z and compute LOSSP as      follows:         Z = Z*(1-Delta)^(G*Y) + G*X/(G*Y+1)*(1-(1-Delta)^(G*Y+1))         X = X*(1-G)         Y = Y*(1-G)         Z1 = Z*(1-Delta)^Y + X/(Y+1)*(1-(1-Delta)^(Y+1))         Z2 = Z*(1-Delta)^(Y+1) + (X+W+1)/(Y+2)*(1-(1-Delta)^(Y+2))Luby & Goyal                 Experimental                      [Page 14]

RFC 3738                  WEBRC Building Block                April 2004         LOSSP = 1/max{Z1,Z2,1}   o  For each packet event (whether it is a received packet or a lost      packet), W = W + 1   o  At the beginning of each loss event, update W, X, and Y as      follows:         X = X + W         W = 0         Y = Y + 1   The intuition behind these update rules is the following.  If just   loss-filtering were used to update Z, then Z would be decreased by a   multiplicative amount 1 - Delta for each loss event and Z would be   increased by an additive amount Delta for each packet.  To smooth out   loss events over more than one time slot, these adjustments are   filtered into Z over time, at the rate of a fraction G at the end of   each epoch.  Thus, the variables X and Y are counts of the portions   of the packets and loss events, respectively, that have not yet been   filtered into the long-term memory Z.  W is the count of packets   since the last loss event started.  This explains why W is increased   by one for each packet and Y is increased by one for each loss event.   At the end of each epoch a fraction G of both X and Y are filtered   into Z according to the loss-filter rule described above, and then   the same fraction G is removed from both X and Y to account for the   fact that this portion has been filtered into Z.  The LOSSP   calculation combines the short-term history (X,Y) with the long-term   history Z and also allows the arrivals since the last loss W to have   some influence.  The value of Z2 is what Z1 would become were the   next packet to be lost.   To reset the loss calculation to a value LOSSP = a, the state   variables are set as follows:         W = 0         X = 0         Y = 0         Z = 1/aLuby & Goyal                 Experimental                      [Page 15]

RFC 3738                  WEBRC Building Block                April 20043.2.2.2.  Average round-trip time   The receiver maintains an average round-trip time, ARTT, as a   measurement-based filter of MRTT measurements using a smoothing   constant 0 < Alpha < 1.  The RECOMMENDED value for Alpha is 0.25.   Each time the receiver joins a channel (either the base channel upon   entering a session or wave channels continually), it makes a   measurement of the multicast round-trip time MRTT as follows.  Let V   be an auxiliary variable that is used that keep track of the average   of the square of the MRTT measurements.  When the receiver sends the   join for the channel it records the current time JoinTime and sets a   Boolean variable JOINING to true.  When the first packet is received   from the channel the receiver records the current time FirstTime and   resets the value of JOINING to false.  If it is the base channel that   has been joined, ARTT is set to FirstTime-JoinTime and V is set to   ARTT*ARTT.  Otherwise, the value of MRTT is set to (FirstTime -   JoinTime) - log(1/P)/2/(1-P)/BCR_P * P^NWC.  (Note that this value   can be negative.)  Then, ARTT is updated as follows.  Let Omega =   Alpha*ARTT*ARTT/V, and at the Kth MRTT measurement let Rho =   Omega/(1-(1-Omega)^(K+1)).  (Note that as K grows Rho approaches   Omega.)  Then, V is updated to (1-Rho)*V+Rho*MRTT*MRTT and ARTT is   updated to max{P*ARTT,(1-Rho)*ARTT+Rho*MRTT}.   Usually ARTT is updated to the second term in the max, and in this   case ARTT is the EWMA of the previous value of ARTT and the new MRTT,   with a weighting on the new MRTT that as K grows is proportional to   the square of the previous ARTT divided by the previous average V of   the square of the MRTT.  Thus, if there is not much variance in the   previous MRTTs relative to the square of their average then the new   MRTT will be filtered into ARTT with a high weight, whereas  if there   is a lot of variance in the previous MRTTs relative to the square of   their average then the new MRTT will be filtered into ARTT with a low   weight.  The intuitive rationale for this is that in general the   number of measurements needed to compute a meaningful average for a   random variable is proportional to its variance divided by the square   of its average; see, e.g., [6]. By making the weight factor depend on   previous measurements in this way, the appropriate weight to use to   average the new MRTT into the ARTT self-adjusts automatically to the   variability in the measurements.3.2.2.3.  Rate Equation   The receiver calculates the reception rate REQN based on the TCP   equation as follows: REQN = 1/(ARTT*sqrt{LOSSP}(0.816 +   7.35*LOSSP*(1+32*LOSSP^2))).  This equation comes from TFRC [9].Luby & Goyal                 Experimental                      [Page 16]

RFC 3738                  WEBRC Building Block                April 20043.2.2.4.  Epochs   The receiver makes decisions on whether or not to join another wave   channel at equally-spaced units of time called epochs.  The duration   of an epoch in seconds, EL, is set to be a small fraction of TSD, so   that decisions to join a channel can be made at a much finer   granularity than TSD.  A standard setting is EL = TSD/20.  Thus, with   the recommended setting of TSD = 10, it is RECOMMENDED that EL = 0.5.3.2.2.5.  Average reception rate   There are two averaged reception rates maintained by the receiver:   TRR_P, the true reception rate, and ARR_P, the anticipated reception   rate.  These are used for different purposes and thus are calculated   quite differently.  Recommended values for the filtering weights Beta   and Zeta are provided at the end of this subsection.   In start-up mode, the true reception rate TRR_P is used to ensure   that the receiver does not increase its reception rate too quickly   above its current reception rate.  In the transition from start-up   mode to normal operation and in normal operation, TRR_P is used in   setting the slow start rate.  TRR_P is calculated based on the   measurement of RR_P, where RR_P is the receiver reception rate in   packets per second measured at the beginning of an epoch averaged   over the epoch that just ended.  TRR_P is initialized to BCR_P +   k*log(P)/TSD when the first base channel packet of the session   arrives, where k is the PSN of the packet reduced modulo L.  TRR_P is   updated to (1-Zeta)*TRR_P + Zeta*RR_P at the beginning of each epoch   after RR_P is measured for the previous epoch.   The anticipated reception rate ARR_P is the receiver's estimate of   the total instantaneous rate of the currently joined channels.  It is   used to compare against the target rate to decide whether or not the   receiver should increase its reception rate by joining the next   higher unjoined layer.  ARR_P is calculated based on a measurement   IRR_P and on the number of joined wave channels NWC.  The ideal   reception rate IRR_P is the reception rate in packets per second   including both received and lost packets; like RR_P, it is measured   at the beginning of the epoch and averaged over the previous epoch.   ARR_P, IRR_P and NWC are updated as follows:   o  NWC is initialized to 0.   o  When the first base channel packet arrives, ARR_P is set to BCR_P      + k*log(P)/TSD, where k is the PSN of the packet reduced modulo L.Luby & Goyal                 Experimental                      [Page 17]

RFC 3738                  WEBRC Building Block                April 2004   o  At the beginning of each epoch, IRR_P is measured over the      previous epoch and then ARR_P is updated to      P^(EL/TSD)*(1-Beta)*ARR_P + Beta*IRR_P.  Then if ARR_P exceeds      ARR_P_max = ((1/P)^(NWC+1)-1)/((1/P)-1)*BCR_P, ARR_P is updated to      ARR_P_max.   o  When a join is made to the next higher unjoined layer, NWC is      updated to NWC+1 and then ARR_P is multiplicatively increased by      the factor ((1/P)^(NWC+1)-1)/((1/P)^NWC-1).  (Joins happen at      epoch boundaries; this adjustment is in addition to the adjustment      above.)   o  Each time a next time slot index is detected, ARR_P is additively      increased by (1-P)*BCR_P to account for the change in rate on the      base channel.  In addition, the bottom layer in the previous time      slot has just gone quiescent and thus a message to leave this      layer has been sent, ARR_P is additively decreased by BCR_P and      NWC is decremented by 1.  Thus, the combination of these effects      on ARR_P is that it is additively decreased by P*BCR_P.   Consider for the moment what happens if Beta = 0 and ARR_P is an   accurate estimate of the total rate of the joined channels.  The   adjustments to ARR_P upon joining and leaving wave channels, with the   passage of epochs, and with the detection of time slot changes will   then cause ARR_P to remain an accurate estimate.  In practice, Beta   MUST be positive; allowing an influence of IRR_P prevents ARR_P from   drifting away from being an accurate estimate of the total joined   rate.   The motivation for separate estimates TRR_P and ARR_P is as follows.   ARR_P is needed for comparison with the TFRC-inspired target rate   because there is no lag before it reflects the potential rate   increase resulting from joining the next higher layer and because it   measures the total possible impact on the network since it also   includes lost packets.  TRR_P is needed because it reflects the rate   of data arriving at the receiver and this is used to ensure that   there is not a large gap between the joined rate and the receiving   rate.   The recommended values for Beta and Zeta depend on whether the   receiver is in start-up mode (SSR_P = infinity).  In start-up mode,   it is RECOMMENDED that Beta = (1 - P^(0.25))/2 and Zeta = sqrt(P)/(1   + sqrt(P)).  In normal operation, it is RECOMMENDED that Beta = 1 -   (P/(1+P))^(EL/TSD) and Zeta = 2*EL/(4+TSD).Luby & Goyal                 Experimental                      [Page 18]

RFC 3738                  WEBRC Building Block                April 20043.2.2.6.  Slow start   WEBRC uses a slow start mechanism to quickly ramp up its rate at both   the beginning of the session and in the middle of a session when the   rate drops precipitously.  To enact this, the receiver maintains the   following parameters:   o  SSMINR_P is the minimum allowed slow start threshold rate in      packets per second.  The recommended value for SSMINR_P is      BCR_P*(1+1/P+1/P^2).   o  SSR_P is the slow start threshold rate in packets per second.  It      is adjusted at the beginning of loss events as described inSection 3.2.3.4. SSR_P is initialized to infinity and is first set      to a finite value when the receiver leaves the initial start-up      period as described below.   At the beginning of a session, the receiver cannot compute a   meaningful target rate from its measurements.  Thus, it uses SSR_P =   infinity until one of the following events causes an end to this   start-up mode:   o  A packet loss is detected.  In this case the value of SSR_P is      updated to max{SSMINR_P, P*TRR_P} as with the beginning of any      other loss event.   o  A sharp increase in MRTT is detected.  While SSR_P = infinity the      receiver MUST compute, in the notation ofSection 3.2.2.2,      differences in successive measurements of (FirstTime-JoinTime)      from successive waves and MUST set SSR_P to max{SSMINR_P, P*TRR_P}      when a large increase in (FirstTime-JoinTime) is observed.  It is      RECOMMENDED that an increase in (FirstTime-JoinTime) be considered      large if it exceeds (P^(NWC+1)-1)/(P*log(P)) / ARR_P.   o  The maximum reception rate is reached.  When SSR_P = infinity, if      (P^(-NWC-2)-1)/(P^(-NWC-1)-1)*ARR_P exceeds MRR_P or SR_P, the      receiver MUST set SSR_P to max{SSMINR_P, TRR_P}.   o  TRR_P is not increasing consistent with the last join of a wave      channel.  While SSR_P = infinity, it is RECOMMENDED that the      receiver wait at least one full epoch after the first packet of a      wave is received before joining the next wave.  If the TRR_P after      that full epoch is greatly below ARR_P the receiver SHOULD NOT      join and SHOULD then set SSR_P to max{SSMINR_P, TRR_P}.  It is      RECOMMENDED that TRR_P be considered greatly below ARR_P if TRR_P      < c * ARR_P - 2/EL, where c = Zeta + (1-Zeta)*(P^(-EL/TSD))*(Zeta      + (1-Zeta)*sqrt(P)*(P^(-EL/TSD)))/g with g = (P^(-NWC-1)-1)/(P^(-      NWC)-1).Luby & Goyal                 Experimental                      [Page 19]

RFC 3738                  WEBRC Building Block                April 2004   In any of these four cases, the variables associated with LOSSP are   reset to make REQN, calculated as inSection 3.2.2.3 with the current   value of ARTT, equal TRR_P.3.2.2.7.  Target rate   In typical operation, SSR_P has a finite value and the target rate   TRATE is computed as TRATE = min{max{SSR_P, REQN}, MRR_P}.  When   SSR_P = infinity, TRATE is computed as TRATE = min{4*TRR_P, MRR_P}.3.2.3.  Receiver events   There are various receiver events, some of which are triggered by the   passing of time on the receiver, and others by events such as packet   reception, detection of packet loss, reception of a first packet from   a channel, and exceptional time-outs.3.2.3.1.  Packet reception   Most packet reception events require the receiver to merely register   the reception for later calculation of RR_P and IRR_P (seeSection3.2.2.5) and increment W for later calculation of LOSSP (seeSection3.2.2.1).   Additional actions, described in the following three subsections, are   required if the packet is the first packet received in response to a   join operation, the CTSI of the packet indicates a time slot change,   or the CN and PSN of the packet indicate a packet loss.3.2.3.2.  First packet after join   When channel i is the most recently joined channel and the Boolean   variable JOINING is true, the reception of a packet with PSN = i is a   special event because it is the first packet received in response to   the most recent join.  MRTT is calculated and ARTT and V are updated   as described inSection 3.2.2.2, and JOINING is set to false.  The   first received packet of the session furthermore necessitates   initialization of ARR_P and TRR_P as described inSection 3.2.2.5.3.2.3.3.  Time slot change   This is an event that is triggered by the reception of a packet with   a CTSI value that is one larger modulo T than the previous CTSI   value.  When a packet with a new CTSI = i is received, a leave is   sent for the lowest layer in the previous time slot, i.e., wave   channel i-1 modulo T, NWC is updated to NWC-1, and ARR_P is updatedLuby & Goyal                 Experimental                      [Page 20]

RFC 3738                  WEBRC Building Block                April 2004   to ARR_P - P*BCR_P as described inSection 3.2.2.5. If the channel   for which the leave is sent is also the most recently joined wave   channel and JOINING is true, then JOINING is set to false.   It is possible due to packet reordering for some packets from the   previous time slot to be received after packets from the current time   slot.  It is RECOMMENDED that measures be put into place to handle   this situation appropriately, i.e., to not trigger a time slot change   in this situation.  One simple mechanism for this is as follows:   Compute the difference i-j modulo T, where i is the CTSI of the   received packet and j is the current CTSI of the receiver.  A   difference of zero is, of course, not a time slot change.  In   addition, a very large difference, for example a difference larger   than T-Q/2, should also not trigger a time slot change.3.2.3.4.  Loss event   Each time the receiver detects a lost packet (based on the sequence   numbers in the packets scoped by the channel number), the receiver   records the start of a new loss event and sets a Boolean variable   LOSS_EVENT to true that will automatically reset to false after ARTT   seconds.  All subsequent packet loss for a period of ARTT seconds is   considered as part of the same loss event.  When a start of a loss   event is detected, the value of SSR_P is updated to max{SSMINR_P,   P*TRR_P}.   It is RECOMMENDED that the receiver account for simple misordering of   packets without inferring a loss.3.2.3.5.  Epoch change   This is an event that is triggered by the passage of time at the   receiver, which occurs each EL seconds.  When this happens, TRR_P and   ARR_P are computed as described inSection 3.2.2.5. Immediately after   these updates, a decision is made about whether to join the next   higher layer as described inSection 3.2.3.6.3.2.3.6.  Join the next higher layer   At the beginning of each epoch, after updating the values of ARR_P   and TRR_P as described inSection 3.2.2.5, the receiver decides   whether or not to join the next higher layer as follows:   o  If the first base channel packet has not yet arrived the receiver      MUST not join.   o  If there is a loss event in progress (LOSS_EVENT = true) the      receiver MUST not join.Luby & Goyal                 Experimental                      [Page 21]

RFC 3738                  WEBRC Building Block                April 2004   o  If a join of a channel is in progress (JOINING = true) the      receiver MUST not join.   o  If NWC = N the receiver MUST not join.   o  If the receiver is employing the OPTIONAL rule described inSection 3.2.2.6, SSR_P = infinity, and a full epoch has not passed      since the first packet arrival on the most recently joined wave      channel then the receiver MUST not join.   o  If the receiver is employing the OPTIONAL rule described inSection 3.2.2.6, SSR_P = infinity, and a full epoch has passed      since the first packet arrival on the most recently joined wave      channel, then the receiver checks if TRR_P is greatly below ARR_P      as described inSection 3.2.2.6. If TRR_P is greatly below ARR_P      the receiver MUST not join.   o  The receiver calculates REQN as described inSection 3.2.2.3.   o  The receiver calculates TRATE as described inSection 3.2.2.7.   o  If the sender is not sending at constant aggregate rate and TRATE      < ARR_P*((1/P)^{NWC+2}-1)/((1/P)^{NWC+1}-1), the receiver MUST not      join. If the sender is sending at constant aggregate rate and      TRATE < ARR_P*((1/P)^{NWC+2}-1)/((1/P)^{NWC+1}-1) and TRATE <      SR_P, the receiver MUST not join.   o  If SSR_P is finite and the sender is not sending at constant      aggregate rate or SSR_P is finite and the sender is sending at      constant aggregate rate and TRATE < SR_P then the receiver MAY      apply one additional OPTIONAL check before deciding to join.      It is RECOMMENDED that the receiver not join if the value of RR_P      is not sufficiently lower than the maximum value of RR_P observed      since the last join.  It is RECOMMENDED that RR_P is sufficiently      low to allow a join if RR_P <= max{RRmax-2/EL,P*RRmax}, where      RRmax is the maximum measured RR_P since the last join.      If the receiver does not join because RR_P is not sufficiently      small then a value of LOSSP is calculated so as to make the value      of the REQN equation given inSection 3.2.2.3 evaluate to      ARR_P*((1/P)^(NWC+2)-1)/((1/P)^(NWC+1)-1) with respect to the      current value of ARR_P.  Then, the variables associated with LOSSP      are reset based on this calculated value of LOSSP as described at      the end ofSection 3.2.2.1.   o Otherwise, the receiver MAY join the next higher layer.Luby & Goyal                 Experimental                      [Page 22]

RFC 3738                  WEBRC Building Block                April 2004   Suppose the receiver has decided to join and CTSI = i.  The receiver   joins the next higher wave channel, i.e., the wave channel with CN =   i+NWC modulo T, increments NWC by 1, and then updates ARR_P to   ARR_P*((1/P)^{NWC+1}-1)/((1/P)^NWC-1) as described inSection3.2.2.5.  The time of the join is recorded for use in updating ARTT   as described inSection 3.2.2.2.3.2.3.7.  Join timeout   When no packet arrives in response to the join of channel for a long   period of time, the join times out.  The receiver sets JOINING to   false, updates ARR_P to ARR_P*((1/P)^NWC-1)/((1/P)^{NWC+1}-1), and   then decrements NWC by 1.   The RECOMMENDED threshold for a join timeout is max{2*V/ARTT,10*ARTT}   seconds.3.2.3.8.  Exceptional timeouts   These are timeouts when the packet reception behavior is far from   what it should be and these MUST trigger the receiver to leave the   session.  Exceptional timeouts include   o  No packets are received for a long period.  A RECOMMENDED      threshold is max{10,TSD} seconds.   o  There is no change in time slot index for a long period.  A      RECOMMENDED threshold is max{20,2*TSD} seconds.4.  Applicability Statement   WEBRC is intended to be a congestion control scheme that can be used   in a complete protocol instantiation that delivers objects and   streams (both reliable content delivery and streaming of multimedia   information).  WEBRC is most applicable for delivery of objects or   streams of substantial length, i.e., objects or streams that range in   length from hundreds of kilobytes to many gigabytes, and whose   transfer time is on the order of tens of seconds or more.4.1.  Environmental Requirements and Considerations   WEBRC can be used with both multicast and unicast networks.  However,   the scope of this document is limited to multicast.  WEBRC requires   connectivity between a sender and receivers, but does not require   connectivity from receivers to the sender.   WEBRC inherently works with all types of networks, including LANs,   WANs, Intranets, the Internet, asymmetric networks, wirelessLuby & Goyal                 Experimental                      [Page 23]

RFC 3738                  WEBRC Building Block                April 2004   networks, and satellite networks.  Thus, the inherent raw scalability   of WEBRC is unlimited.  However, in some network environments varying   reception rates to receivers may not be advantageous.  For example,   the network may have dedicated a fixed amount of bandwidth to the   session or there may be no effective way for receivers to dynamically   vary the set of channels they are joined to, as in a satellite   network.   Receivers join and leave channels using the appropriate multicast   join and leave messages.  For IPv4 multicast, IGMP messages are used   by receivers to join and leave channels.  For IPv6, MLDv2 messages   are used by receivers to join and leave channels.  This is the only   dependency of WEBRC on the IP version.   WEBRC requires receivers to be able to uniquely identify and   demultiplex packets associated with a session in order to effectively   perform congestion control over all packets associated with the   session.  How receivers achieve this is outside the scope of this   document.   WEBRC is presumed to be used with an underlying network or transport   service that is a "best effort" service that does not guarantee   packet reception, packet reception order, and which does not have any   support for flow or congestion control.  For example, the Any-Source   Multicast (ASM) model of IP multicast as defined inRFC 1112 [7] is   such a best effort network service.  While the basic service provided   byRFC 1112 is largely scalable, providing congestion control or   reliability should be done carefully to avoid severe scalability   limitations, especially in the presence of heterogeneous sets of   receivers.   There are currently two models of multicast delivery, the Any-Source   Multicast (ASM) model as defined inRFC 1112 [7] and the Source-   Specific Multicast (SSM) model as defined in [10].  WEBRC works with   both multicast models, but in a slightly different way with somewhat   different environmental concerns.  When using ASM, a sender S sends   packets to a multicast group G, and the WEBRC channel address   consists of the pair (S,G), where S is the IP address of the sender   and G is a multicast group address.  When using SSM, a sender S sends   packets to an SSM channel (S,G), and the WEBRC channel address   coincides with the SSM channel address.   A sender can locally allocate unique SSM channel addresses, and this   makes allocation of channel addresses easy with SSM.  To allocate   channel addresses using ASM, the sender must uniquely chose the ASM   multicast group address across the scope of the group, and this makes   allocation of WEBRC channel addresses more difficult with ASM.  This   is an issue for WEBRC because several channels are used per session.Luby & Goyal                 Experimental                      [Page 24]

RFC 3738                  WEBRC Building Block                April 2004   WEBRC channels and SSM channels coincide, and thus the receiver will   only receive packets sent to the requested WEBRC channel.  With ASM,   the receiver joins a channel by joining a multicast group G, and all   packets sent to G, regardless of the sender, may be received by the   receiver.  Thus, SSM has compelling security advantages over ASM for   prevention of denial of service attacks.  In either case, receivers   SHOULD use mechanisms to filter out packets from unwanted sources.   WEBRC assumes that the packet route between the sender and a   particular receiver is the same for all channels associated with a   session.  For SSM this assumption is true because the multicast tree   is a shortest path tree from each receiver to the sender and   generally this path changes infrequently.  For ASM there are some   issues that if not properly considered may invalidate this   assumption.  With ASM, the packet route between the sender and   receivers may initially be through the Rendezvous Point (RP) and then   switch over to the shortest path to the sender as packets start   flowing in a channel.  The first issue is that the RP may not be the   same for all channels associated with a session, and thus the first   packets sent to the channels may follow a route that depends on the   RP of the channel.  This depends on the RP configuration for the   sender.  If the sender registers all channels associated with the   session with the same RP then the assumption is true, but if the   sender registers different channels with different RPs then the   assumption may not be true.  Thus, it is RECOMMENDED that the sender   register all channels associated with a session with the same RP.   Another issue is that when the channel switches over from the RP to   the sender-based tree then the route to the receivers may vary within   a channel.  Furthermore, this may cause either the receipt of   duplicate packets at receivers or loss of packets depending on the   smoothness of the switchover.  Thus, it is RECOMMENDED that the RP be   placed as close as possible to the sender.  The best location for the   RP is that it be the first-hop router closest to the sender, in which   case the path to the sender and the path to the RP is the same for   each receiver and the problems mentioned above are eliminated.  The   consequences of this assumption not being true are that the receiver   reaction to congestion may not be appropriate.  Generally, the WEBRC   receiver will act conservatively and reduce its reception rate too   much if this assumption is not true, but there can be cases where the   receivers will act inappropriately.5.  Packet Header Fields   Packets sent to a session using WEBRC MUST include Congestion Control   Information fields as specified in this section. This document   specifies short and long formats for the Congestion Control   Information, and it is RECOMMENDED that protocol instantiations use   one of these two formats.  Other formats for the Congestion ControlLuby & Goyal                 Experimental                      [Page 25]

RFC 3738                  WEBRC Building Block                April 2004   Information fields MAY be used by protocol instantiations, but all   protocol instantiations are REQUIRED to use these fields in a format   that is compatible with the interpretations of these fields.  Thus,   if a protocol does use a different format for the fields in the   Congestion Control Information then it MUST specify the lengths and   positions of these fields within the packet header.   All integer fields are carried in "big-endian" or "network order"   format, that is, most significant byte (octet) first.  All constants,   unless otherwise specified, are expressed in base ten.5.1.  Short Format Congestion Control Information   The short format for the Congestion Control Information is shown in   Fig. 1.  The total length of the short format is 32-bits.    0                   1                   2                   3    0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |      CTSI     | Channel Number|    Packet Sequence Number     |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   Fig. 1 - Short format for Congestion Control Information   The function of each field in the Congestion Control Information is   the following.      Current Time Slot Index (CTSI): 8 bits         CTSI indicates the index of the current time slot.  This must         be sent in each packet within the session.  The Current Time         Slot Index increases by one modulo T each TSD seconds at the         sender, where T is the number of time slots associated with the         session and TSD is the time slot duration.  Note that T is also         the number of wave channels associated with the session, and         thus T MUST be at most 255.      Channel Number (CN): 8 bits         CN is the channel number that this packet belongs to.  CN for         the base channel is T, and the CNs for the wave channels are 0         through T-1.  Thus, T+1 channels in total are used, and thus T         MUST be at most 255.      Packet Sequence Number (PSN): 16 bits         The PSN of each packet is scoped by its CN value.  The sequence         numbers of consecutive packets sent to the base channel areLuby & Goyal                 Experimental                      [Page 26]

RFC 3738                  WEBRC Building Block                April 2004         numbered consecutively modulo 2^16.  The same sequence of PSNs         are used for each wave channel in each cycle.  The sequence         numbers of consecutive packets sent to a wave channel are         numbered consecutively modulo 2^16 within each cycle, ending         with the last packet sent to the channel before the channel         goes quiescent with PSN = 2^16-1.5.2.  Long Format Congestion Control Information   The long format for the Congestion Control Information is shown in   Fig.  2.  The total length of the long format is 64-bits.    0                   1                   2                   3    0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |             CTSI              |        Channel Number         |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                     Packet Sequence Number                    |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   Fig. 2 - Long format for Congestion Control Information   The meaning of each field for the long format is the same as for the   short format, the only difference is that each field is twice as   long.      Current Time Slot Index (CTSI): 16 bits         CTSI indicates the index of the current time slot.  This must         be sent in each packet within the session.  The Current Time         Slot Index increases by one modulo T each TSD seconds at the         sender, where T is the number of time slots associated with the         session and TSD is the time slot duration.  Note that T is also         the number of wave channels associated with the session, and         thus T MUST be at most 65,535.      Channel Number (CN): 16 bits         CN is the channel number that this packet belongs to.  CN for         the base channel is T, and the CNs for the wave channels are 0         through T-1.  Thus, T+1 channels in total are used, and thus T         MUST be at most 65,535.      Packet Sequence Number (PSN): 32 bits         The PSN of each packet is scoped by its CN value.  The sequence         numbers of consecutive packets sent to the base channel are         numbered consecutively modulo 2^32.  The same sequence of PSNsLuby & Goyal                 Experimental                      [Page 27]

RFC 3738                  WEBRC Building Block                April 2004         are used for each wave channel in each cycle.  The sequence         numbers of consecutive packets sent to a wave channel are         numbered consecutively modulo 2^32 within each cycle, ending         with the last packet sent to the channel before the channel         goes quiescent with PSN = 2^32-1.6.  Requirements From Other Building Blocks   As described inRFC 3048 [4], WEBRC is a building block that is   intended to be used, in conjunction with other building blocks, to   help specify a protocol instantiation.   WEBRC does not provide higher level session support, e.g., how   receivers obtain the necessary session description and how the   receivers demultiplex received packets based on their session.  There   is support provided by other building blocks that can be used in   conjunction with WEBRC to provide some of this support.  For example,   LCT [12] can provide some of the higher level in-band session support   that may be needed by receivers, and the WEBRC Congestion Control   Information (CCI) required in each packet can be carried in the CCI   field of the LCT header [12].   WEBRC does not provide any type of reliability, and in particular   does not provide support for retransmission of loss packets.   Reliability can be added by independent means, such as by the use of   FEC codes as described in [13] and specified in the FEC building   block [14].7.  Security Considerations   WEBRC can be subject to denial-of-service attacks by attackers that   try to confuse the congestion control mechanism for receivers by   injecting forged packets into the multicast stream.  This attack most   adversely affects network elements and receivers downstream of the   attack, and much less significantly the rest of the network and other   receivers.  Because of this and because of the potential attacks due   to the use of FEC described above, it is RECOMMENDED that Reverse   Path Forwarding checks be enabled in all network routers and switches   along the path from the sender to receivers to limit the possibility   of a bad agent injecting forged packets into the multicast tree data   path.   It is also RECOMMENDED that packet authentication be used to   authenticate each packet immediately upon receipt before the receiver   performs any WEBRC actions based upon its receipt.  Unfortunately,   there are currently no practical multicast packet authentication   schemes that offer instant packet authentication upon receipt.   However, TESLA [17] can be used to authenticate each packet a fewLuby & Goyal                 Experimental                      [Page 28]

RFC 3738                  WEBRC Building Block                April 2004   seconds after receipt.  Thus, TESLA could be used in conjunction with   WEBRC to authenticate packets and for example terminate the session   upon detection of a forged packet.  However, it is RECOMMENDED that   the normal WEBRC receiver responses to received packets occur   immediately -- not delayed by the TESLA authentication process.  This   is because the overall WEBRC performance would be greatly degraded if   the receiver delayed its WEBRC response to packet receipt for several   seconds.   A receiver with an incorrect or corrupted implementation of WEBRC may   affect health of the network in the path between the sender and the   receiver, and may also affect the reception rates of other receivers   joined to the session.  It is therefore RECOMMENDED that receivers be   required to identify themselves as legitimate before they receive the   session description needed to join the session.   Another vulnerability of WEBRC is the potential of receivers   obtaining an incorrect session description for the session.  The   consequences of this could be that legitimate receivers with the   wrong session description are unable to correctly receive the session   content, or that receivers inadvertently try to receive at a much   higher rate than they are capable of, thereby disrupting traffic in   portions of the network.  To avoid these problems, it is RECOMMENDED   that measures be taken to prevent receivers from accepting incorrect   session descriptions, e.g., by using source authentication to ensure   that receivers only accept legitimate session descriptions from   authorized senders.8.  References8.1.  Normative References   [1]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement        Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119, March 1997.   [2]  Kermode, R. and L. Vicisano, "Author Guidelines for Reliable        Multicast Transport (RMT) Building Blocks and Protocol        Instantiation documents",RFC 3269, April 2002.   [3]  Mankin, A., Romanow, A., Bradner, S. and V. Paxson, "IETF        Criteria for Evaluating Reliable Multicast Transport and        Application Protocols",RFC 2357, June 1998.   [4]  Whetten, B., Vicisano, L., Kermode, R., Handley, M., Floyd, S.        and M. Luby, "Reliable Multicast Transport Building Blocks for        One-to-Many Bulk-Data Transfer",RFC 3048, January 2001.Luby & Goyal                 Experimental                      [Page 29]

RFC 3738                  WEBRC Building Block                April 20048.2.  Informative References   [5]  Byers, J., Horn, G., Luby, M., Mitzenmacher, M. and W. Shaver.        "FLID-DL: Congestion control for layered multicast," IEEE J. on        Selected Areas in Communications, Special Issue on Network        Support for Multicast Communication, Vol. 20, No. 8, October        2002, pp. 1558-1570.   [6]  Dagum, P., Karp, R., Luby, M. and S. Ross, "An optimal algorithm        for Monte Carlo estimation," SIAM J. Comput., 29(5):1484-1496,        April 2000.   [7]  Deering, S., "Host Extensions for IP Multicasting", STD 5,RFC1112, August 1989.   [8]  Goyal, V., "On WEBRC Wave Design and Server Implementation",        Digital Fountain Technical Report no. DF2002-09-001, September        2002, available athttp://www.digitalfountain.com/technology/.   [9]  Handley, M., Floyd, S., Padhye, J. and J. Widmer, "TCP Friendly        Rate Control (TFRC): Protocol Specification",RFC 3448, January        2003.   [10] Holbrook, H., "A Channel Model for Multicast", Ph.D.        Dissertation, Stanford University, Department of Computer        Science, Stanford, California, August 2001.   [11] Luby, M., Gemmell, J., Vicisano, L., Rizzo, L. and J. Crowcroft,        "Asynchronous Layered Coding (ALC) Protocol Instantiation",RFC3450, December 2002.   [12] Luby, M., Gemmell, J., Vicisano, L., Rizzo, L., Handley, M. and        J.  Crowcroft, "Layered Coding Transport (LCT) Building Block",RFC 3451, December 2002.   [13] Luby, M., Vicisano, L., Gemmell, J., Rizzo, L., Handley, M. and        J. Crowcroft, "The Use of Forward Error Correction (FEC) in        Reliable Multicast",RFC 3453, December 2002.   [14] Luby, M., Vicisano, L., Gemmell, J., Rizzo, L., Handley, M. and        J.  Crowcroft, "Forward Error Correction (FEC) Building Block",RFC 3452, December 2002.   [15] Luby, M. and V. Goyal, "Wave and Equation Based Rate Control        Using Multicast Round Trip Time: Extended Report", Digital        Fountain Technical Report no. DF2002-07-001, September 2002,        available athttp://www.digitalfountain.com/technology/.Luby & Goyal                 Experimental                      [Page 30]

RFC 3738                  WEBRC Building Block                April 2004   [16] Luby, M., Goyal, V., Skaria, S. and G. Horn, "Wave and Equation        Based Rate Control Using Multicast Round Trip Time", Proc. ACM        SIGCOMM 2002, Pittsburgh, PA,  August 2002, pp. 191-214.   [17] Perrig, A., Canetti, R., Song, D. and J. Tygar, "Efficient and        Secure Source Authentication for Multicast", Network and        Distributed System Security Symposium, NDSS 2001, pp. 35-46,        February 2001.   [18] Vicisano, L., Rizzo, L. and J. Crowcroft, "TCP-like Congestion        Control for Layered Multicast Data Transfer", Proc. IEEE Infocom        '98, San Francisco, CA, March-April 1998, pp. 996-1003.9.  Authors' Addresses   Michael Luby   Digital Fountain   39141 Civic Center Drive, Suite 300   Fremont, CA, USA, 94538   EMail: luby@digitalfountain.com   Vivek K Goyal   Massachusetts Institute of Technology   Room 36-690   77 Massachusetts Avenue   Cambridge, MA, USA, 02139   EMail: v.goyal@ieee.orgLuby & Goyal                 Experimental                      [Page 31]

RFC 3738                  WEBRC Building Block                April 200410.  Full Copyright Statement   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2004).  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.Luby & Goyal                 Experimental                      [Page 32]

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