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INFORMATIONAL
Network Working Group                                           S. FloydRequest for Comments: 4336                                          ICIRCategory: Informational                                       M. Handley                                                                     UCL                                                               E. Kohler                                                                    UCLA                                                              March 2006Problem Statement for theDatagram Congestion Control Protocol (DCCP)Status of This Memo   This memo provides information for the Internet community.  It does   not specify an Internet standard of any kind.  Distribution of this   memo is unlimited.Copyright Notice   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2006).Abstract   This document describes for the historical record the motivation   behind the Datagram Congestion Control Protocol (DCCP), an unreliable   transport protocol incorporating end-to-end congestion control.  DCCP   implements a congestion-controlled, unreliable flow of datagrams for   use by applications such as streaming media or on-line games.Floyd, et al.                Informational                      [Page 1]

RFC 4336               Problem Statement for DCCP             March 2006Table of Contents1. Introduction ....................................................22. Problem Space ...................................................32.1. Congestion Control for Unreliable Transfer .................42.2. Overhead ...................................................62.3. Firewall Traversal .........................................62.4. Parameter Negotiation ......................................73. Solution Space for Congestion Control of Unreliable Flows .......73.1. Providing Congestion Control Above UDP .....................83.1.1. The Burden on the Application Designer ..............83.1.2. Difficulties with ECN ...............................83.1.3. The Evasion of Congestion Control ..................103.2. Providing Congestion Control Below UDP ....................103.2.1. Case 1: Congestion Feedback at the Application .....113.2.2. Case 2: Congestion Feedback at a Layer Below UDP ...113.3. Providing Congestion Control at the Transport Layer .......123.3.1. Modifying TCP? .....................................123.3.2. Unreliable Variants of SCTP? .......................133.3.3. Modifying RTP? .....................................143.3.4. Designing a New Transport Protocol .................144. Selling Congestion Control to Reluctant Applications ...........155. Additional Design Considerations ...............................156. Transport Requirements of Request/Response Applications ........167. Summary of Recommendations .....................................178. Security Considerations ........................................189. Acknowledgements ...............................................18   Informative References ............................................191.  Introduction   Historically, the great majority of Internet unicast traffic has used   congestion-controlled TCP, with UDP making up most of the remainder.   UDP has mainly been used for short, request-response transfers, like   DNS and SNMP, that wish to avoid TCP's three-way handshake,   retransmission, and/or stateful connections.  UDP also avoids TCP's   built-in end-to-end congestion control, and UDP applications tended   not to implement their own congestion control.  However, since UDP   traffic volume was small relative to congestion-controlled TCP flows,   the network didn't collapse.   Recent years have seen the growth of applications that use UDP in a   different way.  These applications, including streaming audio,   Internet telephony, and multiplayer and massively multiplayer on-line   games, share a preference for timeliness over reliability.  TCP can   introduce arbitrary delay because of its reliability and in-order   delivery requirements; thus, the applications use UDP instead.  This   growth of long-lived non-congestion-controlled traffic, relative toFloyd, et al.                Informational                      [Page 2]

RFC 4336               Problem Statement for DCCP             March 2006   congestion-controlled traffic, poses a real threat to the overall   health of the Internet [RFC2914,RFC3714].   Applications could implement their own congestion control mechanisms   on a case-by-case basis, with encouragement from the IETF.  Some   already do this.  However, experience shows that congestion control   is difficult to get right, and many application writers would like to   avoid reinventing this particular wheel.  We believe that a new   protocol is needed, one that combines unreliable datagram delivery   with built-in congestion control.  This protocol will act as an   enabling technology: existing and new applications could easily use   it to transfer timely data without destabilizing the Internet.   This document provides a problem statement for such a protocol.  We   list the properties the protocol should have, then explain why those   properties are necessary.  We describe why a new protocol is the best   solution for the more general problem of bringing congestion control   to unreliable flows of unicast datagrams, and discuss briefly   subsidiary requirements for mobility, defense against Denial of   Service (DoS) attacks and spoofing, interoperation with RTP, and   interactions with Network Address Translators (NATs) and firewalls.   One of the design preferences that we bring to this question is a   preference for a clean, understandable, low-overhead, and minimal   protocol.  As described later in this document, this results in the   design decision to leave functionality such as reliability or Forward   Error Correction (FEC) to be layered on top, rather than provided in   the transport protocol itself.   This document began in 2002 as a formalization of the goals of DCCP,   the Datagram Congestion Control Protocol [RFC4340].  We intended DCCP   to satisfy this problem statement, and thus the original reasoning   behind many of DCCP's design choices can be found here.  However, we   believed, and continue to believe, that the problem should be solved   whether or not DCCP is the chosen solution.2.  Problem Space   We perceive a number of problems related to the use of unreliable   data flows in the Internet.  The major issues are the following:   o  The potential for non-congestion-controlled datagram flows to      cause congestion collapse of the network.  (SeeSection 5 of      [RFC2914] andSection 2 of [RFC3714].)Floyd, et al.                Informational                      [Page 3]

RFC 4336               Problem Statement for DCCP             March 2006   o  The difficulty of correctly implementing effective congestion      control mechanisms for unreliable datagram flows.   o  The lack of a standard solution for reliably transmitting      congestion feedback for an unreliable data flow.   o  The lack of a standard solution for negotiating Explicit      Congestion Notification (ECN) [RFC3168] usage for unreliable      flows.   o  The lack of a choice of TCP-friendly congestion control      mechanisms.   We assume that most application writers would use congestion control   for long-lived unreliable flows if it were available in a standard,   easy-to-use form.   More minor issues include the following:   o  The difficulty of deploying applications using UDP-based flows in      the presence of firewalls.   o  The desire to have a single way to negotiate congestion control      parameters for unreliable flows, independently of the signalling      protocol used to set up the flow.   o  The desire for low per-packet byte overhead.   The subsections below discuss these problems of providing congestion   control, traversing firewalls, and negotiating parameters in more   detail.  A separate subsection also discusses the problem of   minimizing the overhead of packet headers.2.1.  Congestion Control for Unreliable Transfer   We aim to bring easy-to-use congestion control mechanisms to   applications that generate large or long-lived flows of unreliable   datagrams, such as RealAudio, Internet telephony, and multiplayer   games.  Our motivation is to avoid congestion collapse.  (The short   flows generated by request-response applications, such as DNS and   SNMP, don't cause congestion in practice, and any congestion control   mechanism would take effect between flows, not within a single end-   to-end transfer of information.)  However, before designing a   congestion control mechanism for these applications, we must   understand why they use unreliable datagrams in the first place, lest   we destroy the very properties they require.Floyd, et al.                Informational                      [Page 4]

RFC 4336               Problem Statement for DCCP             March 2006   There are several reasons why protocols currently use UDP instead of   TCP, among them:   o  Startup Delay: they wish to avoid the delay of a three-way      handshake before initiating data transfer.   o  Statelessness: they wish to avoid holding connection state, and      the potential state-holding attacks that come with this.   o  Trading of Reliability against Timing: the data being sent is      timely in the sense that if it is not delivered by some deadline      (typically a small number of RTTs), then the data will not be      useful at the receiver.   Of these issues, applications that generate large or long-lived flows   of datagrams, such as media transfer and games, mostly care about   controlling the trade-off between timing and reliability.  Such   applications use UDP because when they send a datagram, they wish to   send the most appropriate data in that datagram.  If the datagram is   lost, they may or may not resend the same data, depending on whether   the data will still be useful at the receiver.  Data may no longer be   useful for many reasons:   o  In a telephony or streaming video session, data in a packet      comprises a timeslice of a continuous stream.  Once a timeslice      has been played out, the next timeslice is required immediately.      If the data comprising that timeslice arrives at some later time,      then it is no longer useful.  Such applications can cope with      masking the effects of missing packets to some extent, so when the      sender transmits its next packet, it is important for it to only      send data that has a good chance of arriving in time for its      playout.   o  In an interactive game or virtual-reality session, position      information is transient.  If a datagram containing position      information is lost, resending the old position does not usually      make sense -- rather, every position information datagram should      contain the latest position information.   In a congestion-controlled flow, the allowed packet sending rate   depends on measured network congestion.  Thus, some control is given   up to the congestion control mechanism, which determines precisely   when packets can be sent.  However, applications could still decide,   at transmission time, which information to put in a packet.  TCP   doesn't allow control over this; these applications demand it.   Often, these applications (especially games and telephony   applications) work on very short playout timescales.  Whilst they areFloyd, et al.                Informational                      [Page 5]

RFC 4336               Problem Statement for DCCP             March 2006   usually able to adjust their transmission rate based on congestion   feedback, they do have constraints on how this adaptation can be   performed so that it has minimal impact on the quality of the   session.  Thus, they tend to need some control over the short-term   dynamics of the congestion control algorithm, whilst being fair to   other traffic on medium timescales.  This control includes, but is   not limited to, some influence on which congestion control algorithm   should be used -- for example, TCP-Friendly Rate Control (TFRC)   [RFC3448] rather than strict TCP-like congestion control.  (TFRC has   been standardized in the IETF as a congestion control mechanism that   adjusts its sending rate more smoothly than TCP does, while   maintaining long-term fair bandwidth sharing with TCP [RFC3448].)2.2.  Overhead   The applications we are concerned with often send compressed data, or   send frequent small packets.  For example, when Internet telephony or   streaming media are used over low-bandwidth modem links, highly   compressing the payload data is essential.  For Internet telephony   applications and for games, the requirement is for low delay, and   hence small packets are sent frequently.   For example, a telephony application sending a 5.6 Kbps data stream   but wanting moderately low delay may send a packet every 20 ms,   sending only 14 data bytes in each packet.  In addition, 20 bytes is   taken up by the IP header, with additional bytes for transport and/or   application headers.  Clearly, it is desirable for such an   application to have a low-overhead transport protocol header.   In some cases, the correct solution would be to use link-based packet   header compression to compress the packet headers, although we cannot   guarantee the availability of such compression schemes on any   particular link.   The delay of data until after the completion of a handshake also   represents potentially unnecessary overhead.  A new protocol might   therefore allow senders to include some data on their initial   datagrams.2.3.  Firewall Traversal   Applications requiring a flow of unreliable datagrams currently tend   to use signalling protocols such as the Real Time Streaming Protocol   (RTSP) [RFC2326], SIP [RFC3261], and H.323 in conjunction with UDP   for the data flow.  The initial setup request uses a signalling   protocol to locate the correct remote end-system for the data flow,   sometimes after being redirected or relayed to other machines.Floyd, et al.                Informational                      [Page 6]

RFC 4336               Problem Statement for DCCP             March 2006   As UDP flows contain no explicit setup and teardown, it is hard for   firewalls to handle them correctly.  Typically, the firewall needs to   parse RTSP, SIP, and H.323 to obtain the information necessary to   open a hole in the firewall.  Although, for bi-directional flows, the   firewall can open a bi-directional hole if it receives a UDP packet   from inside the firewall, in this case the firewall can't easily know   when to close the hole again.   While we do not consider these to be major problems, they are   nonetheless issues that application designers face.  Currently,   streaming media players attempt UDP first, and then switch to TCP if   UDP is not successful.  Streaming media over TCP is undesirable and   can result in the receiver needing to temporarily halt playout while   it "rebuffers" data.  Telephony applications don't even have this   option.2.4.  Parameter Negotiation   Different applications have different requirements for congestion   control, which may map into different congestion feedback.  Examples   include ECN capability and desired congestion control dynamics (the   choice of congestion control algorithm and, therefore, the form of   feedback information required).  Such parameters need to be reliably   negotiated before congestion control can function correctly.   While this negotiation could be performed using signalling protocols   such as SIP, RTSP, and H.323, it would be desirable to have a single   standard way of negotiating these transport parameters.  This is of   particular importance with ECN, where sending ECN-marked packets to a   non-ECN-capable receiver can cause significant congestion problems to   other flows.  We discuss the ECN issue in more detail below.3.  Solution Space for Congestion Control of Unreliable Flows   We thus want to provide congestion control for unreliable flows,   providing both ECN and the choice of different forms of congestion   control, and providing moderate overhead in terms of packet size,   state, and CPU processing.  There are a number of options for   providing end-to-end congestion control for the unicast traffic that   currently uses UDP, in terms of the layer that provides the   congestion control mechanism:   o  Congestion control above UDP.   o  Congestion control below UDP.   o  Congestion control at the transport layer in an alternative to      UDP.Floyd, et al.                Informational                      [Page 7]

RFC 4336               Problem Statement for DCCP             March 2006   We explore these alternatives in the sections below.  The concerns   from the discussions below have convinced us that the best way to   provide congestion control for unreliable flows is to provide   congestion control at the transport layer, as an alternative to the   use of UDP and TCP.3.1.  Providing Congestion Control Above UDP   One possibility would be to provide congestion control at the   application layer, or at some other layer above UDP.  This would   allow the congestion control mechanism to be closely integrated with   the application itself.3.1.1.  The Burden on the Application Designer   A key disadvantage of providing congestion control above UDP is that   it places an unnecessary burden on the application-level designer,   who might be just as happy to use the congestion control provided by   a lower layer.  If the application can rely on a lower layer that   gives a choice between TCP-like or TFRC-like congestion control, and   that offers ECN, then this might be highly satisfactory to many   application designers.   The long history of debugging TCP implementations [RFC2525,PF01]   makes the difficulties in implementing end-to-end congestion control   abundantly clear.  It is clearly more robust for congestion control   to be provided for the application by a lower layer.  In rare cases,   there might be compelling reasons for the congestion control   mechanism to be implemented in the application itself, but we do not   expect this to be the general case.  For example, applications that   use RTP over UDP might be just as happy if RTP itself implemented   end-to-end congestion control.  (SeeSection 3.3.3 for more   discussion of RTP.)   In addition to congestion control issues, we also note the problems   with firewall traversal and parameter negotiation discussed in   Sections2.3 and2.4.  Implementing on top of UDP requires that the   application designer also address these issues.3.1.2.  Difficulties with ECN   There is a second problem with providing congestion control above   UDP: it would require either giving up the use of ECN or giving the   application direct control over setting and reading the ECN field in   the IP header.  Giving up the use of ECN would be problematic, since   ECN can be particularly useful for unreliable flows, where a dropped   packet will not be retransmitted by the data sender.Floyd, et al.                Informational                      [Page 8]

RFC 4336               Problem Statement for DCCP             March 2006   With the development of the ECN nonce, ECN can be useful even in the   absence of network support.  The data sender can use the ECN nonce,   along with feedback from the data receiver, to verify that the data   receiver is correctly reporting all lost packets.  This use of ECN   can be particularly useful for an application using unreliable   delivery, where the receiver might otherwise have little incentive to   report lost packets.   In order to allow the use of ECN by a layer above UDP, the UDP socket   would have to allow the application to control the ECN field in the   IP header.  In particular, the UDP socket would have to allow the   application to specify whether or not the ECN-Capable Transport (ECT)   codepoints should be set in the ECN field of the IP header.   The ECN contract is that senders who set the ECT codepoint must   respond to Congestion Experienced (CE) codepoints by reducing their   sending rates.  Therefore, the ECT codepoint can only safely be set   in the packet header of a UDP packet if the following is guaranteed:   o  if the CE codepoint is set by a router, the receiving IP layer      will pass the CE status to the UDP layer, which will pass it to      the receiving application at the data receiver; and   o  upon receiving a packet that had the CE codepoint set, the      receiving application will take the appropriate congestion control      action, such as informing the data sender.   However, the UDP implementation at the data sender has no way of   knowing if the UDP implementation at the data receiver has been   upgraded to pass a CE status up to the receiving application, let   alone whether or not the application will use the conformant end-to-   end congestion control that goes along with use of ECN.   In the absence of the widespread deployment of mechanisms in routers   to detect flows that are not using conformant congestion control,   allowing applications arbitrary control of the ECT codepoints for UDP   packets would seem like an unnecessary opportunity for applications   to use ECN while evading the use of end-to-end congestion control.   Thus, there is an inherent "chicken-and-egg" problem of whether first   to deploy policing mechanisms in routers, or first to enable the use   of ECN by UDP flows.  Without the policing mechanisms in routers, we   would not advise adding ECN-capability to UDP sockets at this time.   In the absence of more fine-grained mechanisms for dealing with a   period of sustained congestion, one possibility would be for routers   to discontinue using ECN with UDP packets during the congested   period, and to use ECN only with TCP or DCCP packets.  This would be   a reasonable response, for example, if TCP or DCCP flows were foundFloyd, et al.                Informational                      [Page 9]

RFC 4336               Problem Statement for DCCP             March 2006   to be more likely to be using conformant end-to-end congestion   control than were UDP flows.  If routers were to adopt such a policy,   then DCCP flows could be more likely to receive the benefits of ECN   in times of congestion than would UDP flows.3.1.3.  The Evasion of Congestion Control   A third problem of providing congestion control above UDP is that   relying on congestion control at the application level makes it   somewhat easier for some users to evade end-to-end congestion   control.  We do not claim that a transport protocol such as DCCP   would always be implemented in the kernel, and do not attempt to   evaluate the relative difficulty of modifying code inside the kernel   vs. outside the kernel in any case.  However, we believe that putting   the congestion control at the transport level rather than at the   application level makes it just slightly less likely that users will   go to the trouble of modifying the code in order to avoid using end-   to-end congestion control.3.2.  Providing Congestion Control Below UDP   Instead of providing congestion control above UDP, a second   possibility would be to provide congestion control for unreliable   applications at a layer below UDP, with applications using UDP as   their transport protocol.  Given that UDP does not itself provide   sequence numbers or congestion feedback, there are two possible forms   for this congestion feedback:   1) Feedback at the application: The application above UDP could      provide sequence numbers and feedback to the sender, which would      then communicate loss information to the congestion control      mechanism.  This is the approach currently standardized by the      Congestion Manager (CM) [RFC3124].   2) Feedback at the layer below UDP: The application could use UDP,      and a protocol could be implemented using a shim header between IP      and UDP to provide sequence number information for data packets      and return feedback to the data sender.  The original proposal for      the Congestion Manager [BRS99] suggested providing this layer for      applications that did not have their own feedback about dropped      packets.   We discuss these two cases separately below.Floyd, et al.                Informational                     [Page 10]

RFC 4336               Problem Statement for DCCP             March 20063.2.1.  Case 1: Congestion Feedback at the Application   In this case, the application provides sequence numbers and   congestion feedback above UDP, but communicates that feedback to a   congestion manager below UDP, which regulates when packets can be   sent.  This approach suffers from most of the problems described inSection 3.1, namely, forcing the application designer to reinvent the   wheel each time for packet formats and parameter negotiation, and   problems with ECN usage, firewalls, and evasion.   It would avoid the application writer needing to implement the   control part of the congestion control mechanism, but it is unclear   how easily multiple congestion control algorithms (such as receiver-   based TFRC) can be supported, given that the form of congestion   feedback usually needs to be closely coupled to the congestion   control algorithm being used.  Thus, this design limits the choice of   congestion control mechanisms available to applications while   simultaneously burdening the applications with implementations of   congestion feedback.3.2.2.  Case 2: Congestion Feedback at a Layer Below UDP   Providing feedback at a layer below UDP would require an additional   packet header below UDP to carry sequence numbers in addition to the   8-byte header for UDP itself.  Unless this header were an IP option   (which is likely to cause problems for many IPv4 routers), its   presence would need to be indicated using a different IP protocol   value from UDP.  Thus, the packets would no longer look like UDP on   the wire, and the modified protocol would face deployment challenges   similar to those of an entirely new protocol.   To use congestion feedback at a layer below UDP most effectively, the   semantics of the UDP socket Application Programming Interface (API)   would also need changing, both to support a late decision on what to   send and to provide access to sequence numbers (so that the   application wouldn't need to duplicate them for its own purposes).   Thus, the socket API would no longer look like UDP to end hosts.   This would effectively be a new transport protocol.   Given these complications, it seems cleaner to actually design a new   transport protocol, which also allows us to address the issues of   firewall traversal, flow setup, and parameter negotiation.  We note   that any new transport protocol could also use a Congestion Manager   approach to share congestion state between flows using the same   congestion control algorithm, if this were deemed to be desirable.Floyd, et al.                Informational                     [Page 11]

RFC 4336               Problem Statement for DCCP             March 20063.3.  Providing Congestion Control at the Transport Layer   The concerns from the discussions above have convinced us that the   best way to provide congestion control to applications that currently   use UDP is to provide congestion control at the transport layer, in a   transport protocol used as an alternative to UDP.  One advantage of   providing end-to-end congestion control in an unreliable transport   protocol is that it could be used easily by a wide range of the   applications that currently use UDP, with minimal changes to the   application itself.  The application itself would not have to provide   the congestion control mechanism, or even the feedback from the data   receiver to the data sender about lost or marked packets.   The question then arises of whether to adapt TCP for use by   unreliable applications, to use an unreliable variant of the Stream   Control Transmission Protocol (SCTP) or a version of RTP with built-   in congestion control, or to design a new transport protocol.   As we argue below, the desire for minimal overhead results in the   design decision to use a transport protocol containing only the   minimal necessary functionality, and to leave other functionality   such as reliability, semi-reliability, or Forward Error Correction   (FEC) to be layered on top.3.3.1.  Modifying TCP?   One alternative might be to create an unreliable variant of TCP, with   reliability layered on top for applications desiring reliable   delivery.  However, our requirement is not simply for TCP minus in-   order reliable delivery, but also for the application to be able to   choose congestion control algorithms.  TCP's feedback mechanism works   well for TCP-like congestion control, but is inappropriate (or at the   very least, inefficient) for TFRC.  In addition, TCP sequence numbers   are in bytes, not datagrams.  This would complicate both congestion   feedback and any attempt to allow the application to decide, at   transmission time, what information should go into a packet.   Finally, there is the issue of whether a modified TCP would require a   new IP protocol number as well; a significantly modified TCP using   the same IP protocol number could have unwanted interactions with   some of the middleboxes already deployed in the network.   It seems best simply to leave TCP as it is, and to create a new   congestion control protocol for unreliable transfer.  This is   especially true since any change to TCP, no matter how small, takes   an inordinate amount of time to standardize and deploy, given TCP's   importance in the current Internet and the historical difficulty of   getting TCP implementations right.Floyd, et al.                Informational                     [Page 12]

RFC 4336               Problem Statement for DCCP             March 20063.3.2.  Unreliable Variants of SCTP?   SCTP, the Stream Control Transmission Protocol [RFC2960], was in part   designed to accommodate multiple streams within a single end-to-end   connection, modifying TCP's semantics of reliable, in-order delivery   to allow out-of-order delivery.  However, explicit support for   multiple streams over a single flow at the transport layer is not   necessary for an unreliable transport protocol such as DCCP, which of   necessity allows out-of-order delivery.  Because an unreliable   transport does not need streams support, applications should not have   to pay the penalties in terms of increased header size that accompany   the use of streams in SCTP.   The basic underlying structure of the SCTP packet, of a common SCTP   header followed by chunks for data, SACK information, and so on, is   motivated by SCTP's goal of accommodating multiple streams.  However,   this use of chunks comes at the cost of an increased header size for   packets, as each chunk must be aligned on 32-bit boundaries, and   therefore requires a fixed-size 4-byte chunk header.  For example,   for a connection using ECN, SCTP includes separate control chunks for   the Explicit Congestion Notification Echo (ECNE) and Congestion   Window Reduced (CWR) functions, with the ECNE and CWR chunks each   requiring 8 bytes.  As another example, the common header includes a   4-byte verification tag to validate the sender.   As a second concern, SCTP as currently specified uses TCP-like   congestion control, and does not provide support for alternative   congestion control algorithms such as TFRC that would be more   attractive to some of the applications currently using UDP flows.   Thus, the current version of SCTP would not meet the requirements for   a choice between forms of end-to-end congestion control.   Finally, the SCTP Partial Reliability extension [RFC3758] allows a   sender to selectively abandon outstanding messages, which ceases   retransmissions and allows the receiver to deliver any queued   messages on the affected streams.  This service model, although   well-suited for some applications, differs from, and provides the   application somewhat less flexibility than, UDP's fully unreliable   service.   One could suggest adding support for alternative congestion control   mechanisms as an option to SCTP, and adding a fully-unreliable   variant that does not include the mechanisms for multiple streams.   We would argue against this.  SCTP is well-suited for applications   that desire limited retransmission with multistream or multihoming   support.  Adding support for fully-unreliable variants, multiple   congestion control profiles, and reduced single-stream headers would   risk introducing unforeseen interactions and make furtherFloyd, et al.                Informational                     [Page 13]

RFC 4336               Problem Statement for DCCP             March 2006   modifications ever more difficult.  We have chosen instead to   implement a minimal protocol, designed for fully-unreliable datagram   service, that provides only end-to-end congestion control and any   other mechanisms that cannot be provided in a higher layer.3.3.3.  Modifying RTP?   Several of our target applications currently use RTP layered above   UDP to transfer their data.  Why not modify RTP to provide end-to-end   congestion control?   When RTP lives above UDP, modifying it to support congestion control   might create some of the problems described inSection 3.1.  In   particular, user-level RTP implementations would want access to ECN   bits in UDP datagrams.  It might be difficult or undesirable to allow   that access for RTP, but not for other user-level programs.   Kernel implementations of RTP would not suffer from this problem.  In   the end, the argument against modifying RTP is the same as that   against modifying SCTP: Some applications, such as the export of flow   information from routers, need congestion control but don't need much   of RTP's functionality.  From these applications' point of view, RTP   would induce unnecessary overhead.  Again, we would argue for a clean   and minimal protocol focused on end-to-end congestion control.   RTP would commonly be used as a layer above any new transport   protocol, however.  The design of that new transport protocol should   take this into account, either by avoiding undue duplication of   information available in the RTP header, or by suggesting   modifications to RTP, such as a reduced RTP header that removes any   fields redundant with the new protocol's headers.3.3.4.  Designing a New Transport Protocol   In the first half of this document, we have argued for providing   congestion control at the transport layer as an alternative to UDP,   instead of relying on congestion control supplied only above or below   UDP.  In this section, we have examined the possibilities of   modifying SCTP, modifying TCP, and designing a new transport   protocol.  In large part because of the requirement for unreliable   transport, and for accommodating TFRC as well as TCP-like congestion   control, we have concluded that modifications of SCTP or TCP are not   the best answer and that a new transport protocol is needed.  Thus,   we have argued for the need for a new transport protocol that offers   unreliable delivery, accommodates TFRC as well as TCP-like congestion   control, accommodates the use of ECN, and requires minimal overhead   in packet size and in the state and CPU processing required at the   data receiver.Floyd, et al.                Informational                     [Page 14]

RFC 4336               Problem Statement for DCCP             March 20064.  Selling Congestion Control to Reluctant Applications   The goal of this work is to provide general congestion control   mechanisms that will actually be used by many of the applications   that currently use UDP.  This may include applications that are   perfectly happy without end-to-end congestion control.  Several of   our design requirements follow from a desire to design and deploy a   congestion-controlled protocol that is actually attractive to these   "reluctant" applications.  These design requirements include a choice   between different forms of congestion control, moderate overhead in   the size of the packet header, and the use of Explicit Congestion   Notification (ECN) and the ECN nonce [RFC3540], which provide   positive benefit to the application itself.   There will always be a few flows that are resistant to the use of   end-to-end congestion control, preferring an environment where end-   to-end congestion control is used by everyone else, but not by   themselves.  There has been substantial agreement [RFC2309,FF99]   that in order to maintain the continued use of end-to-end congestion   control, router mechanisms are needed to detect and penalize   uncontrolled high-bandwidth flows in times of high congestion; these   router mechanisms are colloquially known as "penalty boxes".   However, before undertaking a concerted effort toward the deployment   of penalty boxes in the Internet, it seems reasonable, and more   effective, to first make a concerted effort to make end-to-end   congestion control easily available to applications currently using   UDP.5.  Additional Design Considerations   This section mentions some additional design considerations that   should be considered in designing a new transport protocol.   o  Mobility: Mechanisms for multihoming and mobility are one area of      additional functionality that cannot necessarily be layered      cleanly and effectively on top of a transport protocol.  Thus, one      outstanding design decision with any new transport protocol      concerns whether to incorporate mechanisms for multihoming and      mobility into the protocol itself.  The current version of DCCP      [RFC4340] includes no multihoming or mobility support.   o  Defense against DoS attacks and spoofing: A reliable handshake for      connection setup and teardown offers protection against DoS and      spoofing attacks.  Mechanisms allowing a server to avoid holding      any state for unacknowledged connection attempts or already-      finished connections offer additional protection against DoS      attacks.  Thus, in designing a new transport protocol, even one      designed to provide minimal functionality, the requirements forFloyd, et al.                Informational                     [Page 15]

RFC 4336               Problem Statement for DCCP             March 2006      providing defense against DoS attacks and spoofing need to be      considered.   o  Interoperation with RTP: AsSection 3.3.3 describes, attention      should be paid to any necessary or desirable changes in RTP when      it is used over the new protocol, such as reduced RTP headers.   o  API: Some functionality required by the protocol, or useful for      applications using the protocol, may require the definition of new      API mechanisms.  Examples include allowing applications to decide      what information to put in a packet at transmission time, and      providing applications with some information about packet sequence      numbers.   o  Interactions with NATs and firewalls: NATs and firewalls don't      interact well with UDP, with its lack of explicit flow setup and      teardown and, in practice, the lack of well-known ports for many      UDP applications.  Some of these issues are application specific;      others should be addressed by the transport protocol itself.   o  Consider general experiences with unicast transport: A      Requirements for Unicast Transport/Sessions (RUTS) BOF was held at      the IETF meeting in December 1998, with the goal of understanding      the requirements of applications whose needs were not met by TCP      [RUTS].  Not all of those unmet needs are relevant to or      appropriate for a unicast, congestion-controlled, unreliable flow      of datagrams designed for long-lived transfers.  Some are,      however, and any new protocol should address those needs and other      requirements derived from the community's experience.  We believe      that this document addresses the requirements relevant to our      problem area that were brought up at the RUTS BOF.6.  Transport Requirements of Request/Response Applications   Up until now, this document has discussed the transport and   congestion control requirements of applications that generate long-   lived, large flows of unreliable datagrams.  This section discusses   briefly the transport needs of another class of applications, those   of request/response transfers where the response might be a small   number of packets, with preferences that include both reliable   delivery and a minimum of state maintained at the ends.  The reliable   delivery could be accomplished, for example, by having the receiver   re-query when one or more of the packets in the response is lost.   This is a class of applications whose needs are not well-met by   either UDP or by TCP.Floyd, et al.                Informational                     [Page 16]

RFC 4336               Problem Statement for DCCP             March 2006   Although there is a legitimate need for a transport protocol for such   short-lived reliable flows of such request/response applications, we   believe that the overlap with the requirements of DCCP is almost   non-existent and that DCCP should not be designed to meet the needs   of these request/response applications.  Areas of non-compatible   requirements include the following:   o  Reliability: DCCP applications don't need reliability (and long-      lived applications that do require reliability are well-suited to      TCP or SCTP).  In contrast, these short-lived request/response      applications do require reliability (possibly client-driven      reliability in the form of requesting missing segments of a      response).   o  Connection setup and teardown: Because DCCP is aimed at flows      whose duration is often unknown in advance, it addresses      interactions with NATs and firewalls by having explicit handshakes      for setup and teardown.  In contrast, the short-lived      request/response applications know the transfer length in advance,      but cannot tolerate the additional delay of a handshake for flow      setup.  Thus, mechanisms for interacting with NATs and firewalls      are likely to be completely different for the two sets of      applications.   o  Congestion control mechanisms: The styles of congestion control      mechanisms and negotiations of congestion control features are      heavily dependent on the flow duration.  In addition, the      preference of the request/response applications for a stateless      server strongly impacts the congestion control choices.  Thus,      DCCP and the short-lived request/response applications have rather      different requirements both for congestion control mechanisms and      for negotiation procedures.7.  Summary of Recommendations   Our problem statement has discussed the need for implementing   congestion control for unreliable flows.  Additional problems concern   the need for low overhead, the problems of firewall traversal, and   the need for reliable parameter negotiation.  Our consideration of   the problem statement has resulted in the following general   recommendations:   o  A unicast transport protocol for unreliable datagrams should be      developed, including mandatory, built-in congestion control,      explicit connection setup and teardown, reliable feature      negotiation, and reliable congestion feedback.Floyd, et al.                Informational                     [Page 17]

RFC 4336               Problem Statement for DCCP             March 2006   o  The protocol must provide a set of congestion control mechanisms      from which the application may choose.  These mechanisms should      include, at minimum, TCP-like congestion control and a more      slowly-responding congestion control such as TFRC.   o  Important features of the connection, such as the congestion      control mechanism in use, should be reliably negotiated by both      endpoints.   o  Support for ECN should be included.  (Applications could still      make the decision not to use ECN for a particular session.)   o  The overhead must be low, in terms of both packet size and      protocol complexity.   o  Some DoS protection for servers must be included.  In particular,      servers can make themselves resistant to spoofed connection      attacks ("SYN floods").   o  Connection setup and teardown must use explicit handshakes,      facilitating transmission through stateful firewalls.   In 2002, there was judged to be a consensus about the need for a new   unicast transport protocol for unreliable datagrams, and the next   step was then the consideration of more detailed architectural   issues.8.  Security Considerations   There are no security considerations for this document.  It does   discuss a number of security issues in the course of problem   analysis, such as DoS resistance and firewall traversal.  The   security considerations for DCCP are discussed separately in   [RFC4340].9.  Acknowledgements   We would like to thank Spencer Dawkins, Jiten Goel, Jeff Hammond,   Lars-Erik Jonsson, John Loughney, Michael Mealling, and Rik Wade for   feedback on earlier versions of this document.  We would also like to   thank members of the Transport Area Working Group and of the DCCP   Working Group for discussions of these issues.Floyd, et al.                Informational                     [Page 18]

RFC 4336               Problem Statement for DCCP             March 2006Informative References   [BRS99]        Balakrishnan, H., Rahul, H., and S. Seshan, "An                  Integrated Congestion Management Architecture for                  Internet Hosts", SIGCOMM, Sept. 1999.   [FF99]         Floyd, S. and K. Fall, "Promoting the Use of End-to-                  End Congestion Control in the Internet", IEEE/ACM                  Transactions on Networking, August 1999.   [PF01]         Padhye, J. and S. Floyd, "Identifying the TCP Behavior                  of Web Servers", SIGCOMM 2001.   [RFC2309]      Braden, B., Clark, D., Crowcroft, J., Davie, B.,                  Deering, S., Estrin, D., Floyd, S., Jacobson, V.,                  Minshall, G., Partridge, C., Peterson, L.,                  Ramakrishnan, K., Shenker, S., Wroclawski, J., and L.                  Zhang, "Recommendations on Queue Management and                  Congestion Avoidance in the Internet",RFC 2309, April                  1998.   [RFC2326]      Schulzrinne, H., Rao, A., and R. Lanphier, "Real Time                  Streaming Protocol (RTSP)",RFC 2326, April 1998.   [RFC2525]      Paxson, V., Allman, M., Dawson, S., Fenner, W.,                  Griner, J., Heavens, I., Lahey, K., Semke, J., and B.                  Volz, "Known TCP Implementation Problems",RFC 2525,                  March 1999.   [RFC2914]      Floyd, S., "Congestion Control Principles",BCP 41,RFC 2914, September 2000.   [RFC2960]      Stewart, R., Xie, Q., Morneault, K., Sharp, C.,                  Schwarzbauer, H., Taylor, T., Rytina, I., Kalla, M.,                  Zhang, L., and V. Paxson, "Stream Control Transmission                  Protocol",RFC 2960, October 2000.   [RFC3124]      Balakrishnan, H. and S. Seshan, "The Congestion                  Manager",RFC 3124, June 2001.   [RFC3168]      Ramakrishnan, K., Floyd, S., and D. Black, "The                  Addition of Explicit Congestion Notification (ECN) to                  IP",RFC 3168, September 2001.   [RFC3261]      Rosenberg, J., Schulzrinne, H., Camarillo, G.,                  Johnston, A., Peterson, J., Sparks, R., Handley, M.,                  and E. Schooler, "SIP: Session Initiation Protocol",RFC 3261, June 2002.Floyd, et al.                Informational                     [Page 19]

RFC 4336               Problem Statement for DCCP             March 2006   [RFC3448]      Handley, M., Floyd, S., Padhye, J., and J. Widmer,                  "TCP Friendly Rate Control (TFRC): Protocol                  Specification",RFC 3448, January 2003.   [RFC3540]      Spring, N., Wetherall, D., and D. Ely, "Robust                  Explicit Congestion Notification (ECN) Signaling with                  Nonces",RFC 3540, June 2003.   [RFC3714]      Floyd, S. and J. Kempf, "IAB Concerns Regarding                  Congestion Control for Voice Traffic in the Internet",RFC 3714, March 2004.   [RFC3758]      Stewart, R., Ramalho, M., Xie, Q., Tuexen, M., and P.                  Conrad, "Stream Control Transmission Protocol (SCTP)                  Partial Reliability Extension",RFC 3758, May 2004.   [RFC4340]      Kohler, E., Handley, M., and S. Floyd, "Datagram                  Congestion Control Protocol (DCCP)",RFC 4340, March                  2006.   [RUTS]         Requirements for Unicast Transport/Sessions (RUTS)                  BOF, Dec. 7, 1998.  URL                  "http://www.ietf.org/proceedings/98dec/43rd-ietf-98dec-142.html".Floyd, et al.                Informational                     [Page 20]

RFC 4336               Problem Statement for DCCP             March 2006Authors' Addresses   Sally Floyd   ICSI Center for Internet Research (ICIR),   International Computer Science Institute,   1947 Center Street, Suite 600   Berkeley, CA 94704   USA   EMail: floyd@icir.org   Mark Handley   Department of Computer Science   University College London   Gower Street   London WC1E 6BT   UK   EMail: M.Handley@cs.ucl.ac.uk   Eddie Kohler   4531C Boelter Hall   UCLA Computer Science Department   Los Angeles, CA 90095   USA   EMail: kohler@cs.ucla.eduFloyd, et al.                Informational                     [Page 21]

RFC 4336               Problem Statement for DCCP             March 2006Full Copyright Statement   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2006).   This document is subject to the rights, licenses and restrictions   contained inBCP 78, and except as set forth therein, the authors   retain all their rights.   This document and the information contained herein are provided on an   "AS IS" basis and THE CONTRIBUTOR, THE ORGANIZATION HE/SHE REPRESENTS   OR IS SPONSORED BY (IF ANY), THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET   ENGINEERING TASK FORCE DISCLAIM ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED,   INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE   INFORMATION HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED   WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.Intellectual Property   The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any   Intellectual Property Rights or other rights that might be claimed to   pertain to the implementation or use of the technology described in   this document or the extent to which any license under such rights   might or might not be available; nor does it represent that it has   made any independent effort to identify any such rights.  Information   on the procedures with respect to rights in RFC documents can be   found inBCP 78 andBCP 79.   Copies of IPR disclosures made to the IETF Secretariat and any   assurances of licenses to be made available, or the result of an   attempt made to obtain a general license or permission for the use of   such proprietary rights by implementers or users of this   specification can be obtained from the IETF on-line IPR repository athttp://www.ietf.org/ipr.   The IETF invites any interested party to bring to its attention any   copyrights, patents or patent applications, or other proprietary   rights that may cover technology that may be required to implement   this standard.  Please address the information to the IETF at ietf-   ipr@ietf.org.Acknowledgement   Funding for the RFC Editor function is provided by the IETF   Administrative Support Activity (IASA).Floyd, et al.                Informational                     [Page 22]

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