Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


[RFC Home] [TEXT|PDF|HTML] [Tracker] [IPR] [Errata] [Info page]

INFORMATIONAL
Errata Exist
Network Working Group                                          A. CharnyRequest for Comments: 3247                           Cisco Systems, Inc.Category: Informational                                   J.C.R. Bennett                                                                Motorola                                                               K. Benson                                                                 Tellabs                                                          J.Y. Le Boudec                                                                    EPFL                                                                 A. Chiu                                                         Celion Networks                                                             W. Courtney                                                                     TRW                                                               S. Davari                                                              PMC-Sierra                                                               V. Firoiu                                                         Nortel Networks                                                             C. Kalmanek                                                           AT&T Research                                                       K.K. Ramakrishnan                                                      TeraOptic Networks                                                              March 2002Supplemental Information for the New Definitionof the EF PHB (Expedited Forwarding Per-Hop Behavior)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 (2001).  All Rights Reserved.Abstract   This document was written during the process of clarification ofRFC2598 "An Expedited Forwarding PHB" that led to the publication of   revised specification of EF "An Expedited Forwarding PHB".  Its   primary motivation is providing additional explanation to the revised   EF definition and its properties.  The document also provides   additional implementation examples and gives some guidance for   computation of the numerical parameters of the new definition for   several well known schedulers and router architectures.Charny, et. al.              Informational                      [Page 1]

RFC 3247                Supplemental Information              March 2002Table of Contents1      Introduction  ...........................................22      Definition of EF PHB  ...................................32.1    The formal definition  ..................................32.2    Relation to Packet Scale Rate Guarantee  ................62.3    The need for dual characterization of EF PHB  ...........73      Per Packet delay  .......................................93.1    Single hop delay bound  .................................93.2    Multi-hop worst case delay  .............................104      Packet loss  ............................................105      Implementation considerations  ..........................11   5.1    The output buffered model with EF FIFO at the output.  ..125.1.1  Strict Non-preemptive Priority Queue  ...................125.1.2  WF2Q  ...................................................135.1.3  Deficit Round Robin (DRR)  ..............................135.1.4  Start-Time Fair Queuing and Self-Clocked Fair Queuing  ..135.2    Router with Internal Delay and EF FIFO at the output  ...136      Security Considerations  ................................147      References  .............................................14Appendix A. Difficulties with theRFC 2598 EF PHB Definition  ..16Appendix B. Alternative Characterization of Packet Scale Rate               Guarantee  .........................................20   Acknowledgements  ..............................................22   Authors' Addresses  ............................................22   Full Copyright Statement  ......................................241. Introduction   The Expedited Forwarding (EF) Per-Hop Behavior (PHB) was designed to   be used to build a low-loss, low-latency, low-jitter, assured   bandwidth service.  The potential benefits of this service, and   therefore the EF PHB, are enormous.  Because of the great value of   this PHB, it is critical that the forwarding behavior required of and   delivered by an EF-compliant node be specific, quantifiable, and   unambiguous.   Unfortunately, the definition of EF PHB in the originalRFC2598 [10]   was not sufficiently precise (seeAppendix A and [4]).  A more   precise definition is given in [6].  This document is intended to aid   in the understanding of the properties of the new definition and   provide supplemental information not included in the text of [6] for   sake of brevity.   This document is outlined as follows.  Insection 2, we briefly   restate the definition for EF PHB of [6].  We then provide some   additional discussion of this definition and describe some of its   properties.  We discuss the issues associated with per-packet delayCharny, et. al.              Informational                      [Page 2]

RFC 3247                Supplemental Information              March 2002   and loss in sections3 and4.  Insection 5 we discuss the impact of   known scheduling architectures on the critical parameters of the new   definition.  We also discuss the impact of deviation of real devices   from the ideal output-buffered model on the magnitude of the critical   parameters in the definition.2. Definition of EF PHB2.1. The formal definition   An intuitive explanation of the new EF definition is described in   [6].  Here we restate the formal definition from [6] verbatim.   A node that supports EF on an interface I at some configured rate R   MUST satisfy the following equations:      d_j <= f_j + E_a for all j>0                                (eq_1)   where f_j is defined iteratively by      f_0 = 0, d_0 = 0      f_j = max(a_j, min(d_j-1, f_j-1)) + l_j/R,  for all j > 0   (eq_2)   In this definition:      -  d_j is the time that the last bit of the j-th EF packet to         depart actually leaves the node from the interface I.      -  f_j is the target departure time for the j-th EF packet to         depart from I, the "ideal" time at or before which the last bit         of that packet should leave the node.      -  a_j is the time that the last bit of the j-th EF packet         destined to the output I actually arrives at the node.      -  l_j is the size (bits) of the j-th EF packet to depart from I.         l_j is measured on the IP datagram (IP header plus payload) and         does not include any lower layer (e.g. MAC layer) overhead.      -  R is the EF configured rate at output I (in bits/second).      -  E_a is the error term for the treatment of the EF aggregate.         Note that E_a represents the worst case deviation between         actual departure time of an EF packet and ideal departure time         of the same packet, i.e. E_a provides an upper bound on (d_j -         f_j) for all j.Charny, et. al.              Informational                      [Page 3]

RFC 3247                Supplemental Information              March 2002      -  d_0 and f_0 do not refer to a real packet departure but are         used purely for the purposes of the recursion.  The time origin         should be chosen such that no EF packets are in the system at         time 0.      -  for the definitions of a_j and d_j, the "last bit" of the         packet includes the layer 2 trailer if present, because a         packet cannot generally be considered available for forwarding         until such a trailer has been received.   An EF-compliant node MUST be able to be characterized by the range of   possible R values that it can support on each of its interfaces while   conforming to these equations, and the value of E_a that can be met   on each interface.  R may be line rate or less.  E_a MAY be specified   as a worst-case value for all possible R values or MAY be expressed   as a function of R.   Note also that, since a node may have multiple inputs and complex   internal scheduling, the j-th EF packet to arrive at the node   destined for a certain interface may not be the j-th EF packet to   depart from that interface.  It is in this sense that eq_1 and eq_2   are unaware of packet identity.   In addition, a node that supports EF on an interface I at some   configured rate R MUST satisfy the following equations:      D_j <= F_j + E_p for all j>0                                (eq_3)   where F_j is defined iteratively by      F_0 = 0, D_0 = 0      F_j = max(A_j, min(D_j-1, F_j-1)) + L_j/R,  for all j > 0   (eq_4)   In this definition:      -  D_j is the actual departure time of the individual EF packet         that arrived at the node destined for interface I at time A_j,         i.e., given a packet which was the j-th EF packet destined for         I to arrive at the node via any input, D_j is the time at which         the last bit of that individual packet actually leaves the node         from the interface I.      -  F_j is the target departure time for the individual EF packet         that arrived at the node destined for interface I at time A_j.Charny, et. al.              Informational                      [Page 4]

RFC 3247                Supplemental Information              March 2002      -  A_j is the time that the last bit of the j-th EF packet         destined to the output I to arrive actually arrives at the         node.      -  L_j is the size (bits) of the j-th EF packet to arrive at the         node that is destined to output I. L_j is measured on the IP         datagram (IP header plus payload) and does not include any         lower layer (e.g. MAC layer) overhead.      -  R is the EF configured rate at output I (in bits/second).      -  E_p is the error term for the treatment of individual EF         packets.  Note that E_p represents the worst case deviation         between the actual departure time of an EF packet and the ideal         departure time of the same packet, i.e. E_p provides an upper         bound on (D_j - F_j) for all j.      -  D_0 and F_0 do not refer to a real packet departure but are         used purely for the purposes of the recursion.  The time origin         should be chosen such that no EF packets are in the system at         time 0.      -  for the definitions of A_j and D_j, the "last bit" of the         packet includes the layer 2 trailer if present, because a         packet cannot generally be considered available for forwarding         until such a trailer has been received.   It is the fact that D_j and F_j refer to departure times for the j-th   packet to arrive that makes eq_3 and eq_4 aware of packet identity.   This is the critical distinction between the last two equations and   the first two.   An EF-compliant node SHOULD be able to be characterized by the range   of possible R values that it can support on each of its interfaces   while conforming to these equations, and the value of E_p that can be   met on each interface.  E_p MAY be specified as a worst-case value   for all possible R values or MAY be expressed as a function of R. An   E_p value of "undefined" MAY be specified.   Finally, there is an additional recommendation in [6] that an EF   compliant node SHOULD NOT reorder packets within a micorflow.   The definitions described in this section are referred to as   aggregate and packet-identity-aware packet scale rate guarantee   [4],[2].  An alternative mathematical characterization of packet   scale rate guarantee is given inAppendix B.Charny, et. al.              Informational                      [Page 5]

RFC 3247                Supplemental Information              March 20022.2. Relation to Packet Scale Rate Guarantee   Consider the case of an ideal output-buffered device with an EF FIFO   at the output.  For such a device, the i-th packet to arrive to the   device is also the i-th packet to depart from the device.  Therefore,   in this ideal model the aggregate behavior and packet-identity-aware   characteristics are identical, and E_a = E_p.  In this section we   therefore omit the subscript and refer to the latency term simply as   E.   It could be shown that for such an ideal device the definition ofsection 2.1 is stronger than the well-known rate-latency curve [2] in   the sense that if a scheduler satisfies the EF definition it also   satisfies the rate-latency curve.  As a result, all the properties   known for the rate-latency curve also apply to the modified EF   definition.  However, we argue below that the definition ofsection2.1 is more suitable to reflect the intent of EF PHB than the rate-   latency curve.   It is shown in [2] that the rate-latency curve is equivalent to the   following definition:   Definition of Rate Latency Curve (RLC):      D(j) <= F'(j) + E                                           (eq_5)   where      F'(0)=0, F'(j)=max(a(j), F'(j-1))+ L(j)/R for all j>0       (eq_6)   It can be easily verified that the EF definition ofsection 2.1 is   stronger than RLC by noticing that for all j, F'(j) >= F(j).   It is easy to see that F'(j) in the definition of RLC corresponds to   the time the j-th departure should have occurred should the EF   aggregate be constantly served exactly at its configured rate R.   Following the common convention, we refer to F'(j) as the "fluid   finish time" of the j-th packet to depart.   The intuitive meaning of the rate-latency curve of RLC is that any   packet is served at most time E later than this packet would finish   service in the fluid model.   For RLC (and hence for the stronger EF definition) it holds that in   any interval (0,t) the EF aggregate gets close to the desired service   rate R (as long as there is enough traffic to sustain this rate).   The discrepancy between the ideal and the actual service in this   interval depends on the latency term E, which in turn depends on theCharny, et. al.              Informational                      [Page 6]

RFC 3247                Supplemental Information              March 2002   scheduling implementation.  The smaller E, the smaller the difference   between the configured rate and the actual rate achieved by the   scheduler.   While RLC guarantees the desired rate to the EF aggregate in all   intervals (0,t) to within a specified error, it may nevertheless   result in large gaps in service.  For example, suppose that (a large   number) N of identical EF packets of length L arrived from different   interfaces to the EF queue in the absence of any non-EF traffic.   Then any work-conserving scheduler will serve all N packets at link   speed.  When the last packet is sent at time NL/C, where C is the   capacity of output link, F'(N) will be equal to NL/R.  That is, the   scheduler is running ahead of ideal, since NL/C < NL/R for R < C.   Suppose now that at time NL/C a large number of non-EF packets   arrive, followed by a single EF packet.  Then the scheduler can   legitimately delay starting to send the EF packet until time   F'(N+1)=(N+1)L/R + E - L/C.  This means that the EF aggregate will   have no service at all in the interval (NL/C, (N+1)L/R + E - L/C).   This interval can be quite large if R is substantially smaller than   C.  In essence, the EF aggregate can be "punished" by a gap in   service for receiving faster service than its configured rate at the   beginning.   The new EF definition alleviates this problem by introducing the term   min(D(j-1), F(j-1)) in the recursion.  Essentially, this means that   the fluid finishing time is "reset" if that packet is sent before its   "ideal" departure time.  As a consequence of that, for the case where   the EF aggregate is served in the FIFO order, suppose a packet   arrives at time t to a server satisfying the EF definition.  The   packet will be transmitted no later than time t + Q(t)/R + E, where   Q(t) is the EF queue size at time t (including the packet under   discussion)[4].2.3. The need for dual characterization of EF PHB   In a more general case, where either the output scheduler does not   serve the EF packets in a FIFO order, or the variable internal delay   in the device reorders packets while delivering them to the output   (or both), the i-th packet destined to a given output interface to   arrive to the device may no longer be the i-th packet to depart from   that interface.  In that case the packet-identity-aware and the   aggregate definitions are no longer identical.   The aggregate behavior definition can be viewed as a truly aggregate   characteristic of the service provided to EF packets.  For an   analogy, consider a dark reservoir to which all arriving packets are   placed.  A scheduler is allowed to pick a packet from the reservoir   in a random order, without any knowledge of the order of packetCharny, et. al.              Informational                      [Page 7]

RFC 3247                Supplemental Information              March 2002   arrivals.  The aggregate part of the definition measures the accuracy   of the output rate provided to the EF aggregate as a whole.  The   smaller E_a, the more accurate is the assurance that the reservoir is   drained at least at the configured rate.   Note that in this reservoir analogy packets of EF aggregate may be   arbitrarily reordered.  However, the definition of EF PHB given in   [6] explicitly requires that no packet reordering occur within a   microflow.  This requirement restricts the scheduling   implementations, or, in the reservoir analogy, the order of pulling   packets out of the reservoir to make sure that packets within a   microflow are not reordered, but it still allows reordering at the   aggregate level.   Note that reordering within the aggregate, as long as there is no   flow-level reordering, does not necessarily reflect a "bad" service.   Consider for example a scheduler that arbitrates among 10 different   EF "flows" with diverse rates.  A scheduler that is aware of the rate   requirements may choose to send a packet of the faster flow before a   packet of the slower flow to maintain lower jitter at the flow level.   In particular, an ideal "flow"-aware WFQ scheduler will cause   reordering within the aggregate, while maintaining packet ordering   and small jitter at the flow level.   It is intuitively clear that for such a scheduler, as well as for a   simpler FIFO scheduler, the "accuracy" of the service rate is crucial   for minimizing "flow"-level jitter.  The packet-identity-aware   definition quantifies this accuracy of the service rate.   However, the small value of E_a does not give any assurances about   the absolute value of per-packet delay.  In fact, if the input rate   exceeds the configured rate, the aggregate behavior definition may   result in arbitrarily large delay of a subset of packets.  This is   the primary motivation for the packet-identity-aware definition.   The primary goal of the packet-aware characterization of the EF   implementation is that, unlike the aggregate behavior   characterization, it provides a way to find a per-packet delay bound   as a function of input traffic parameters.   While the aggregate behavior definition characterizes the accuracy of   the service rate of the entire EF aggregate, the packet-identity-   aware part of the definition characterizes the deviation of the   device from an ideal server that serves the EF aggregate in FIFO   order at least at the configured rate.   The value of E_p in the packet-identity-aware definition is therefore   affected by two factors: the accuracy of the aggregate rate serviceCharny, et. al.              Informational                      [Page 8]

RFC 3247                Supplemental Information              March 2002   and the degree of packet reordering within the EF aggregate (under   the constraint that packets within the same microflow are not   reordered).  Therefore, a sub-aggregate aware device that provides an   ideal service rate to the aggregate, and also provides an ideal rate   service for each of the sub-aggregates, may nevertheless have a very   large value of E_p (in this case E_p must be at least equal to the   ratio of the maximum packet size divided by the smallest rate of any   sub aggregate).  As a result, a large value of E_p does not   necessarily mean that the service provided to EF aggregate is bad -   rather it may be an indication that the service is good, but non-   FIFO.  On the other hand, a large value of E_p may also mean that the   aggregate service is very inaccurate (bursty), and hence in this case   the large value of E_p reflects a poor quality of implementation.   As a result, a large number of E_p does not necessarily provide any   guidance on the quality of the EF implementation.  However, a small   value of E_p does indicate a high quality FIFO implementation.   Since E_p and E_a relate to different aspects of the EF   implementation, they should be considered together to determine the   quality of the implementation.3. Per Packet delay   The primary motivation for the packet-identity-aware definition is   that it allows quantification of the per-packet delay bound.  This   section discusses the issues with computing per-packet delay.3.1. Single hop delay bound   If the total traffic arriving to an output port I from all inputs is   constrained by a leaky bucket with parameters (R, B), where R is the   configured rate at I, and B is the bucket depth (burst), then the   delay of any packet departing from I is bounded by D_p, given by      D_p = B/R + E_p                                             (eq_7)   (seeappendix B).   Because the delay bound depends on the configured rate R and the   input burstiness B, it is desirable for both of these parameters to   be visible to a user of the device.  A PDB desiring a particular   delay bound may need to limit the range of configured rates and   allowed burstiness that it can support in order to deliver such   bound.  Equation (eq_7) provides a means for determining an   acceptable operating region for the device with a given E_p.  It may   also be useful to limit the total offered load to a given output to   some rate R_1 < R (e.g. to obtain end-to-end delay bounds [5]).  ItCharny, et. al.              Informational                      [Page 9]

RFC 3247                Supplemental Information              March 2002   is important to realize that, while R_1 may also be a configurable   parameter of the device, the delay bound in (eq_7) does not depend on   it.  It may be possible to get better bounds explicitly using the   bound on the input rate, but the bound (eq_7) does not take advantage   of this information.3.2. Multi-hop worst case delay   Although the PHB defines inherently local behavior, in this section   we briefly discuss the issue of per-packet delay as the packet   traverses several hops implementing EF PHB.  Given a delay bound   (eq_7) at a single hop, it is tempting to conclude that per-packet   bound across h hops is simply h times the bound (eq_7).  However,   this is not necessarily the case, unless B represents the worst case   input burstiness across all nodes in the network.   Unfortunately, obtaining such a worst case value of B is not trivial.   If EF PHB is implemented using aggregate class-based scheduling where   all EF packets share a single FIFO, the effect of jitter accumulation   may result in an increase in burstiness from hop to hop.  In   particular, it can be shown that unless severe restrictions on EF   utilization are imposed, even if all EF flows are ideally shaped at   the ingress, then for any value of delay D it is possible to   construct a network where EF utilization on any link is bounded not   to exceed a given factor, no flow traverses more than a specified   number of hops, but there exists a packet that experiences a delay   more than D [5].  This result implies that the ability to limit the   worst case burstiness and the resulting end-to-end delay across   several hops may require not only limiting EF utilization on all   links, but also constraining the global network topology.  Such   topology constraints would need to be specified in the definition of   any PDB built on top of EF PHB, if such PDB requires a strict worst   case delay bound.4. Packet loss   Any device with finite buffering may need to drop packets if the   input burstiness becomes sufficiently high.  To meet the low loss   objective of EF, a node may be characterized by the operating region   in which loss of EF due to  congestion will not occur.  This may be   specified as a token bucket of  rate r <= R and burst size B that can   be offered from all inputs to a  given output interface without loss.   However, as discussed in the previous section, the phenomenon of   jitter accumulation makes it generally difficult to guarantee that   the input burstiness never exceeds the specified operating region for   nodes internal to the DiffServ domain.  A no-loss guarantee across   multiple hops may require specification of constraints on networkCharny, et. al.              Informational                     [Page 10]

RFC 3247                Supplemental Information              March 2002   topology which are outside the scope of inherently local definition   of a PHB.  Thus, it must be possible to establish whether a device   conforms to the EF definition even when some packets are lost.   This can be done by performing an "off-line" test of conformance to   equations (eq_1)- (eq_4).  After observing a sequence of packets   entering and leaving the node, the packets which did not leave are   assumed lost and are notionally removed from the input stream.  The   remaining packets now constitute the arrival stream and the packets   which left the node constitute the departure stream.  Conformance to   the equations can thus be verified by considering only those packets   that successfully passed through the node.   Note that specification of which packets are lost in the case when   loss does occur is beyond the scope of the definition of EF PHB.   However, those packets that were not lost must conform to the   equations definition of EF PHB insection 2.1.5. Implementation considerations   A packet passing through a router will experience delay for a number   of reasons.  Two familiar components of this delay are the time the   packet spends in a buffer at an outgoing link waiting for the   scheduler to select it and the time it takes to actually transmit the   packet on the outgoing line.   There may be other components of a packet's delay through a router,   however.  A router might have to do some amount of header processing   before the packet can be given to the correct output scheduler, for   example.  In another case a router may have a FIFO buffer (called a   transmission queue in [7]) where the packet sits after being selected   by the output scheduler but before it is transmitted.  In cases such   as these, the extra delay a packet may experience can be accounted   for by absorbing it into the latency terms E_a and E_p.   Implementing EF on a router with a multi-stage switch fabric requires   special attention.  A packet may experience additional delays due to   the fact that it must compete with other traffic for forwarding   resources at multiple contention points in the switch core.  The   delay an EF packet may experience before it even reaches the output-   link scheduler should be included in the latency term.  Input-   buffered and input/output-buffered routers based on crossbar design   may also require modification of their latency terms.  The factors   such as the speedup factor and the choice of crossbar arbitration   algorithms may affect the latency terms substantially.Charny, et. al.              Informational                     [Page 11]

RFC 3247                Supplemental Information              March 2002   Delay in the switch core comes from two sources, both of which must   be considered.  The first part of this delay is the fixed delay a   packet experiences regardless of the other traffic.  This component   of the delay includes the time it takes for things such as packet   segmentation and reassembly in cell based cores, enqueueing and   dequeuing at each stage, and transmission between stages.  The second   part of the switch core delay is variable and depends on the type and   amount of other traffic traversing the core.  This delay comes about   if the stages in the core mix traffic flowing between different   input/output port pairs.  Thus, EF packets must compete against other   traffic for forwarding resources in the core.  Some of this   competing traffic may even be traffic from other, non-EF aggregates.   This introduces extra delay, that can also be absorbed by the latency   term in the definition.   To capture these considerations, in this section we will consider two   simplified implementation examples.  The first is an ideal output   buffered node where packets entering the device from an input   interface are immediately delivered to the output scheduler.  In this   model the properties of the output scheduler fully define the values   of the parameters E_a and E_p.  We will consider the case where the   output scheduler implements aggregate class-based queuing, so that   all EF packets share a single queue.  We will discuss the values of   E_a and E_p for a variety of class-based schedulers widely   considered.   The second example will consider a router modeled as a black box with   a known bound on the variable delay a packet can experience from the   time it arrives to an input to the time it is delivered to its   destination output.  The output scheduler in isolation is assumed to   be an aggregate scheduler where all EF packets share a single FIFO   queue, with a known value of E_a(S)=E_p(S)=E(S).  This model provides   a reasonable abstraction to a large class of router implementations.5.1. The output buffered model with EF FIFO at the output.   As has been mentioned earlier, in this model E_a = E_p, so we shall   omit the subscript and refer to both terms as latency E.  The   remainder of this subsection discusses E for a number of scheduling   implementations.5.1.1. Strict Non-preemptive Priority Queue   A Strict Priority scheduler in which all EF packets share a single   FIFO queue which is served at strict non-preemptive priority over   other queues satisfies the EF definition with the latency term E =   MTU/C where MTU is the maximum packet size and C is the speed of the   output link.Charny, et. al.              Informational                     [Page 12]

RFC 3247                Supplemental Information              March 20025.1.2. WF2Q   Another scheduler that satisfies the EF definition with a small   latency term is WF2Q described in [1].  A class-based WF2Q scheduler,   in which all EF traffic shares a single queue with the weight   corresponding to the configured rate of the EF aggregate satisfies   the EF definition with the latency term E = MTU/C+MTU/R.5.1.3. Deficit Round Robin (DRR)   For DRR [12], E can be shown to grow linearly with   N*(r_max/r_min)*MTU, where r_min and r_max denote the smallest and   the largest rate among the rate assignments of all queues in the   scheduler, and N is the number of queues in the scheduler.5.1.4. Start-Time Fair Queuing and Self-Clocked Fair Queuing   For Start-Time Fair Queuing (SFQ) [9] and Self-Clocked Fair Queuing   (SCFQ) [8] E can be shown to grow linearly with the number of queues   in the scheduler.5.2. Router with Internal Delay and EF FIFO at the output   In this section we consider a router which is modeled as follows.  A   packet entering the router may experience a variable delay D_v with a   known upper bound D. That is, 0<=D_v<=D.  At the output all EF   packets share a single class queue.  Class queues are scheduled by a   scheduler with a known value E_p(S)=E(S) (where E(S) corresponds to   the model where this scheduler is implemented in an ideal output   buffered device).   The computation of E_p is more complicated in this case.  For such   device, it can be shown that E_p = E(S)+2D+2B/R (see [13]).   Recall from the discussion ofsection 3 that bounding input   burstiness B may not be easy in a general topology.  In the absence   of the knowledge of a bound on B one can bound E_p as E_p = E(S) +   D*C_inp/R (see [13]).   Note also that the bounds in this section are derived using only the   bound on the variable portion of the interval delay and the error   bound of the output scheduler.  If more details about the   architecture of a device are available, it may be possible to compute   better bounds.Charny, et. al.              Informational                     [Page 13]

RFC 3247                Supplemental Information              March 20026. Security Considerations   This informational document provides additional information to aid in   understanding of the EF PHB described in [6].  It adds no new   functions to it.  As a result, it adds no security issues to those   described in that specification.7. References   [1]   J.C.R. Bennett and H. Zhang, "WF2Q: Worst-case Fair Weighted         Fair Queuing", INFOCOM'96, March 1996.   [2]   J.-Y. Le Boudec, P. Thiran, "Network Calculus", Springer Verlag         Lecture Notes in Computer Science volume 2050, June 2001         (available online athttp://lcawww.epfl.ch).   [3]   Bradner, S., "Key Words for Use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement         Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119, March 1997.   [4]   J.C.R. Bennett, K. Benson, A. Charny, W. Courtney, J.Y. Le         Boudec, "Delay Jitter Bounds and Packet Scale Rate Guarantee         for Expedited Forwarding", Proc. Infocom 2001, April 2001.   [5]   A. Charny, J.-Y. Le Boudec "Delay Bounds in a Network with         Aggregate Scheduling".  Proc. of QoFIS'2000, September 25-26,         2000, Berlin, Germany.   [6]   Davie, B., Charny, A., Baker, F., Bennett, J.C.R., Benson, K.,         Boudec, J., Chiu, A., Courtney, W., Davari, S., Firoiu, V.,         Kalmanek, C., Ramakrishnan, K.K. and D. Stiliadis, "An         Expedited Forwarding PHB (Per-Hop Behavior)",RFC 3246, March         2002.   [7]   T. Ferrari and P. F. Chimento, "A Measurement-Based Analysis of         Expedited Forwarding PHB Mechanisms," Eighth International         Workshop on Quality of Service, Pittsburgh, PA, June 2000.   [8]   S.J. Golestani. "A Self-clocked Fair Queuing Scheme for Broad-         band Applications".  In Proceedings of IEEE INFOCOM'94, pages         636-646, Toronto, CA, April 1994.   [9]   P. Goyal, H.M. Vin, and H. Chen. "Start-time Fair Queuing: A         Scheduling Algorithm for Integrated Services".  In Proceedings         of the ACM-SIGCOMM 96, pages 157-168, Palo Alto, CA, August         1996.   [10]  Jacobson, V., Nichols, K. and K. Poduri, "An Expedited         Forwarding PHB",RFC 2598, June 1999.Charny, et. al.              Informational                     [Page 14]

RFC 3247                Supplemental Information              March 2002   [11]  Jacobson, V., Nichols, K. and K. Poduri, "The 'Virtual Wire'         Behavior Aggregate", Work in Progress.   [12]  M. Shreedhar and G. Varghese. "Efficient Fair Queuing Using         Deficit Round Robin".  In Proceedings of SIGCOMM'95, pages         231-243, Boston, MA, September 1995.   [13]  Le Boudec, J.-Y., Charny, A. "Packet Scale Rate Guarantee for         non-FIFO Nodes", Infocom 2002, New York, June 2002.Charny, et. al.              Informational                     [Page 15]

RFC 3247                Supplemental Information              March 2002Appendix A. Difficulties with theRFC 2598 EF PHB Definition   The definition of the EF PHB as given in [10] states:   "The EF PHB is defined as a forwarding treatment for a particular   diffserv aggregate where the departure rate of the aggregate's   packets from any diffserv node must equal or exceed a configurable   rate.  The EF traffic SHOULD receive this rate independent of the   intensity of any other traffic attempting to transit the node.  It   [the EF PHB departure rate] SHOULD average at least the configured   rate when measured over any time interval equal to or longer than the   time it takes to send an output link MTU sized packet at the   configured rate."   A literal interpretation of the definition would consider the   behaviors given in the next two subsections as non-compliant.  The   definition also unnecessarily constrains the maximum configurable   rate of an EF aggregate.A.1 Perfectly-Clocked Forwarding   Consider the following stream forwarded from a router with EF-   configured rate R=C/2, where C is the output line rate.  In the   illustration, E is an MTU-sized EF packet while x is a non-EF packet   or unused capacity, also of size MTU.      E x E x E x E x E x E x...       |-----|   The interval between the vertical bars is 3*MTU/C, which is greater   than MTU/(C/2), and so is subject to the EF PHB definition.  During   this interval, 3*MTU/2 bits of the EF aggregate should be forwarded,   but only MTU bits are forwarded.  Therefore, while this forwarding   pattern should be considered compliant under any reasonable   interpretation of the EF PHB, it actually does not formally comply   with the definition ofRFC 2598.   Note that this forwarding pattern can occur in any work-conserving   scheduler in an ideal output-buffered architecture where EF packets   arrive in a perfectly clocked manner according to the above pattern   and are forwarded according to exactly the same pattern in the   absence of any non-EF traffic.   Trivial as this example may be, it reveals the lack of mathematical   precision in the formal definition.  The fact that no work-conserving   scheduler can formally comply with the definition is unfortunate, and   appears to warrant some changes to the definition that would correct   this problem.Charny, et. al.              Informational                     [Page 16]

RFC 3247                Supplemental Information              March 2002   The underlying reason for the problem described here is quite simple   - one can only expect that the EF aggregate is served at configured   rate in some interval where there is enough backlog of EF packets to   sustain that rate.  In the example above the packets come in exactly   at the rate at which they are served, and so there is no persistent   backlog.  Certainly, if the input rate is even smaller than the   configured rate of the EF aggregate, there will be no backlog as   well, and a similar formal difficulty will occur.   A seemingly simple solution to this difficulty might be to require   that the EF aggregate is served at its configured rate only when the   queue is backlogged.  However, as we show in the remainder of this   section, this solution does not suffice.A.2 Router Internal Delay   We now argue that the example considered in the previous section is   not as trivial as it may seem at first glance.   Consider a router with EF configured rate R = C/2 as in the previous   example, but with an internal delay of 3T (where T = MTU/C) between   the time that a packet arrives at the router and the time that it is   first eligible for forwarding at the output link.  Such things as   header processing, route look-up, and delay in switching through a   multi-layer fabric could cause this delay.  Now suppose that EF   traffic arrives regularly at a rate of (2/3)R = C/3.  The router will   perform as shown below.      EF Packet Number 1 2 3 4 5 6 ...      Arrival (at router) 0 3T 6T 9T 12T 15T ...      Arrival (at scheduler) 3T 6T 9T 12T 15T 18T ...      Departure 4T 7T 10T 13T 16T 19T ...   Again, the output does not satisfy theRFC 2598 definition of EF PHB.   As in the previous example, the underlying reason for this problem is   that the scheduler cannot forward EF traffic faster than it arrives.   However, it can be easily seen that the existence of internal delay   causes one packet to be inside the router at all times.  An external   observer will rightfully conclude that the number of EF packets that   arrived to the router is always at least one greater than the number   of EF packets that left the router, and therefore the EF aggregate is   constantly backlogged.  However, while the EF aggregate is   continuously backlogged, the observed output rate is nevertheless   strictly less that the configured rate.Charny, et. al.              Informational                     [Page 17]

RFC 3247                Supplemental Information              March 2002   This example indicates that the simple addition of the condition that   EF aggregate must receive its configured rate only when the EF   aggregate is backlogged does not suffice in this case.   Yet, the problem described here is of fundamental importance in   practice.  Most routers have a certain amount of internal delay.  A   vendor declaring EF compliance is not expected to simultaneously   declare the details of the internals of the router.  Therefore, the   existence of internal delay may cause a perfectly reasonable EF   implementation to display seemingly non-conformant behavior, which is   clearly undesirable.A.3 Maximum Configurable Rate and Provisioning Efficiency   It is well understood that with any non-preemptive scheduler, theRFC-2598-compliant configurable rate for an EF aggregate cannot   exceed C/2 [11].  This is because an MTU-sized EF packet may arrive   to an empty queue at time t just as an MTU-sized non-EF packet begins   service.  The maximum number of EF bits that could be forwarded   during the interval [t, t + 2*MTU/C] is MTU.  But if configured rate   R > C/2, then this interval would be of length greater than MTU/R,   and more than MTU EF bits would have to be served during this   interval for the router to be compliant.  Thus, R must be no greater   than C/2.   It can be shown that for schedulers other than PQ, such as various   implementations of WFQ, the maximum compliant configured rate may be   much smaller than 50%.  For example, for SCFQ [8] the maximum   configured rate cannot exceed C/N, where N is the number of queues in   the scheduler.  For WRR, mentioned as compliant in section 2.2 ofRFC2598, this limitation is even more severe.  This is because in these   schedulers a packet arriving to an empty EF queue may be forced to   wait until one packet from each other queue (in the case of SCFQ) or   until several packets from each other queue (in the case of WRR) are   served before it will finally be forwarded.   While it is frequently assumed that the configured rate of EF traffic   will be substantially smaller than the link bandwidth, the   requirement that this rate should never exceed 50% of the link   bandwidth appears unnecessarily limiting.  For example, in a fully   connected mesh network, where any flow traverses a single link on its   way from source to its destination there seems no compelling reason   to limit the amount of EF traffic to 50% (or an even smaller   percentage for some schedulers) of the link bandwidth.   Another, perhaps even more striking example is the fact that even a   TDM circuit with dedicated slots cannot be configured to forward EF   packets at more than 50% of the link speed without violatingRFC 2598Charny, et. al.              Informational                     [Page 18]

RFC 3247                Supplemental Information              March 2002   (unless the entire link is configured for EF).  If the configured   rate of EF traffic is greater than 50% (but less than the link   speed), there will always exist an interval longer than MTU/R in   which less than the configured rate is achieved.  For example,   suppose the configured rate of the EF aggregate is 2C/3.  Then the   forwarding pattern of the TDM circuit might be   E E x E E x E E x ...      |---|   where only one packet is served in the marked interval of length 2T =   2MTU/C.  But at least 4/3 MTU would have to be served during this   interval by a router in compliance with the definition inRFC 2598.   The fact that even a TDM line cannot be booked over 50% by EF traffic   indicates that the restriction is artificial and unnecessary.A.4 The Non-trivial Nature of the Difficulties   One possibility to correct the problems discussed in the previous   sections might be to attempt to clarify the definition of the   intervals to which the definition applied or by averaging over   multiple intervals.  However, an attempt to do so meets with   considerable analytical and implementation difficulties.  For   example, attempting to align interval start times with some epochs of   the forwarded stream appears to require a certain degree of global   clock synchronization and is fraught with the risk of   misinterpretation and mistake in practice.   Another approach might be to allow averaging of the rates over some   larger time scale.  However, it is unclear exactly what finite time   scale would suffice in all reasonable cases.  Furthermore, this   approach would compromise the notion of very short-term time scale   guarantees that are the essence of EF PHB.   We also explored a combination of two simple fixes.  The first is the   addition of the condition that the only intervals subject to the   definition are those that fall inside a period during which the EF   aggregate is continuously backlogged in the router (i.e., when an EF   packet is in the router).  The second is the addition of an error   (latency) term that could serve as a figure-of-merit in the   advertising of EF services.   With the addition of these two changes the candidate definition   becomes as follows:Charny, et. al.              Informational                     [Page 19]

RFC 3247                Supplemental Information              March 2002   In any interval of time (t1, t2) in which EF traffic is continuously   backlogged, at least R(t2 - t1 - E) bits of EF traffic must be   served, where R is the configured rate for the EF aggregate and E is   an implementation-specific latency term.   The "continuously backlogged" condition eliminates the insufficient-   packets-to-forward difficulty while the addition of the latency term   of size MTU/C resolves the perfectly-clocked forwarding example   (section A.1), and also removes the limitation on EF configured rate.   However, neither fix (nor the two of them together) resolves the   example of section A.2. To see this, recall that in the example of   section A.2 the EF aggregate is continuously backlogged, but the   service rate of the EF aggregate is consistently smaller than the   configured rate, and therefore no finite latency term will suffice to   bring the example into conformance.Appendix B. Alternative Characterization of Packet Scale Rate Guarantee   The proofs of several bounds in this document can be found in [13].   These proofs use an algebraic characterization of the aggregate   definition given by (eq_1), (eq_2), and packet identity aware   definition given by (eq_3), (eq_4).  Since this characterization is   of interest on its own, we present it in this section.Theorem B1.  Characterization of the aggregate definition without             f_n.   Consider a system where packets are numbered 1, 2, ... in order of   arrival.  As in the aggregate definition, call a_n the n-th arrival   time, d_n - the n-th departure time, and l_n the size of the n-th   packet to depart.  Define by convention d_0=0.  The aggregate   definition with rate R and latency E_a is equivalent to saying that   for all n and all 0<=j<= n-1:      d_n <= E_a + d_j + (l_(j+1) + ... + l_n)/R                 (eq_b1)   or   there exists some j+1 <= k <= n  such that      d_n  <= E_a + a_k + (l_k + ... + l_n)/R                    (eq_b2)Charny, et. al.              Informational                     [Page 20]

RFC 3247                Supplemental Information              March 2002Theorem B2.  Characterization of packet-identity-aware definition             without F_n.   Consider a system where packets are numbered 1, 2, ... in order of   arrival.  As in the packet-identity-aware definition, call A_n, D_n   the arrival and departure times for the n-th packet, and L_n the size   of this packet.  Define by convention D_0=0.  The packet identity   aware definition with rate R and latency E_p is equivalent to saying   that for all n and all 0<=j<= n-1:      D_n <= E_p + D_j + (L_{j+1} + ... + L_n)/R                 (eq_b3)   or   there exists some j+1 <= k <= n  such that      D_n  <= E_p + A_k + (L_k + ... + L_n)/R                    (eq_b4)   For the proofs of both Theorems, see [13].Charny, et. al.              Informational                     [Page 21]

RFC 3247                Supplemental Information              March 2002Acknowledgements   This document could not have been written without Fred Baker, Bruce   Davie and Dimitrios Stiliadis.  Their time, support and insightful   comments were invaluable.Authors' Addresses   Anna Charny   Cisco Systems   300 Apollo Drive   Chelmsford, MA 01824   EMail: acharny@cisco.com   Jon Bennett   Motorola   3 Highwood Drive East   Tewksbury, MA 01876   EMail: jcrb@motorola.com   Kent Benson   Tellabs Research Center   3740 Edison Lake Parkway #101   Mishawaka, IN  46545   EMail: Kent.Benson@tellabs.com   Jean-Yves Le Boudec   ICA-EPFL, INN   Ecublens, CH-1015   Lausanne-EPFL, Switzerland   EMail: jean-yves.leboudec@epfl.ch   Angela Chiu   Celion Networks   1 Sheila Drive, Suite 2   Tinton Falls, NJ 07724   EMail: angela.chiu@celion.comCharny, et. al.              Informational                     [Page 22]

RFC 3247                Supplemental Information              March 2002   Bill Courtney   TRW   Bldg. 201/3702   One Space Park   Redondo Beach, CA 90278   EMail: bill.courtney@trw.com   Shahram Davari   PMC-Sierra Inc   411 Legget Drive   Ottawa, ON K2K 3C9, Canada   EMail: shahram_davari@pmc-sierra.com   Victor Firoiu   Nortel Networks   600 Tech Park   Billerica, MA 01821   EMail: vfiroiu@nortelnetworks.com   Charles Kalmanek   AT&T Labs-Research   180 Park Avenue, Room A113,   Florham Park NJ   EMail: crk@research.att.com   K.K. Ramakrishnan   TeraOptic Networks, Inc.   686 W. Maude Ave   Sunnyvale, CA 94086   EMail: kk@teraoptic.comCharny, et. al.              Informational                     [Page 23]

RFC 3247                Supplemental Information              March 2002Full Copyright Statement   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2001).  All Rights Reserved.   This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to   others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it   or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published   and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any   kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are   included on all such copies and derivative works.  However, this   document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing   the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other   Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of   developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for   copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be   followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than   English.   The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be   revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assigns.   This document and the information contained herein is provided on an   "AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING   TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING   BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION   HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF   MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.Acknowledgement   Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the   Internet Society.Charny, et. al.              Informational                     [Page 24]

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp