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BEST CURRENT PRACTICE
Network Working Group                                       G. FairhurstRequest for Comments: 3366                        University of AberdeenBCP: 62                                                          L. WoodCategory: Best Current Practice                        Cisco Systems Ltd                                                             August 2002Advice to link designers on link Automatic Repeat reQuest (ARQ)Status of this Memo   This document specifies an Internet Best Current Practices for the   Internet Community, and requests discussion and suggestions for   improvements.  Distribution of this memo is unlimited.Copyright Notice   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2002).  All Rights Reserved.Abstract   This document provides advice to the designers of digital   communication equipment and link-layer protocols employing link-layer   Automatic Repeat reQuest (ARQ) techniques.  This document presumes   that the designers wish to support Internet protocols, but may be   unfamiliar with the architecture of the Internet and with the   implications of their design choices for the performance and   efficiency of Internet traffic carried over their links.   ARQ is described in a general way that includes its use over a wide   range of underlying physical media, including cellular wireless,   wireless LANs, RF links, and other types of channel.  This document   also describes issues relevant to supporting IP traffic over   physical-layer channels where performance varies, and where link ARQ   is likely to be used.Fairhurst & Wood         Best Current Practice                  [Page 1]

RFC 3366          Advice to Link Designers on Link ARQ       August 2002Table of Contents1.    Introduction. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .21.1   Link ARQ. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .41.2   Causes of Packet Loss on a Link . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .51.3   Why Use ARQ?. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .61.4   Commonly-used ARQ Techniques. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .71.4.1 Stop-and-wait ARQ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .71.4.2 Sliding-Window ARQ. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .71.5   Causes of Delay Across a Link . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .82.    ARQ Persistence . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .102.1   Perfectly-Persistent (Reliable) ARQ Protocols . . . . . . .102.2   High-Persistence (Highly-Reliable) ARQ Protocols. . . . . .122.3   Low-Persistence (Partially-Reliable) ARQ Protocols. . . . .132.4   Choosing Your Persistency . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .132.5   Impact of Link Outages. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .143.    Treatment of Packets and Flows. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .153.1   Packet Ordering . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .153.2   Using Link ARQ to Support Multiple Flows. . . . . . . . . .163.3   Differentiation of Link Service Classes . . . . . . . . . .174.    Conclusions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .195.    Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .216.    IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .217.    Acknowledgements. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .228.    References. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .228.1   Normative References. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .228.2   Informative References. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .239.    Authors' Addresses. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2610.   Full Copyright Statement. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .271. Introduction   IP, the Internet Protocol [RFC791], forms the core protocol of the   global Internet and defines a simple "connectionless" packet-switched   network.  Over the years, Internet traffic using IP has been carried   over a wide variety of links, of vastly different capacities, delays   and loss characteristics.  In the future, IP traffic can be expected   to continue to be carried over a very wide variety of new and   existing link designs, again of varied characteristics.   A companion document [DRAFTKARN02] describes the general issues   associated with link design.  This document should be read in   conjunction with that and with other documents produced by the   Performance Implications of Link Characteristics (PILC) IETF   workgroup [RFC3135,RFC3155].Fairhurst & Wood         Best Current Practice                  [Page 2]

RFC 3366          Advice to Link Designers on Link ARQ       August 2002   This document is intended for three distinct groups of readers:   a. Link designers wishing to configure (or tune) a link for the IP      traffic that it will carry, using standard link-layer mechanisms      such as the ISO High-level Data Link Control (HDLC) [ISO4335a] or      its derivatives.   b. Link implementers who may wish to design new link mechanisms that      perform well for IP traffic.   c. The community of people using or developing TCP, UDP and related      protocols, who may wish to be aware of the ways in which links      can operate.   The primary audiences are intended to be groups (a) and (b).  Group   (c) should not need to be aware of the exact details of an ARQ scheme   across a single link, and should not have to consider such details   for protocol implementations; much of the Internet runs across links   that do not use any form of ARQ.  However, the TCP/IP community does   need to be aware that the IP protocol operates over a diverse range   of underlying subnetworks.  This document may help to raise that   awareness.   Perfect reliability is not a requirement for IP networks, nor is it a   requirement for links [DRAFTKARN02].  IP networks may discard packets   due to a variety of reasons entirely unrelated to channel errors,   including lack of queuing space, congestion management, faults, and   route changes.  It has long been widely understood that perfect   end-to-end reliability can be ensured only at, or above, the   transport layer [SALT81].   Some familiarity with TCP, the Transmission Control Protocol [RFC793,   STE94], is presumed here.  TCP provides a reliable byte-stream   transport service, building upon the best-effort datagram delivery   service provided by the Internet Protocol.  TCP achieves this by   dividing data into TCP segments, and transporting these segments in   IP packets.  TCP guarantees that a TCP session will retransmit the   TCP segments contained in any data packets that are lost along the   Internet path between endhosts.  TCP normally performs retransmission   using its Fast Retransmit procedure, but if the loss fails to be   detected (or retransmission is unsuccessful), TCP falls back to a   Retransmission Time Out (RTO) retransmission using a timer [RFC2581,RFC2988].  (Link protocols also implement timers to verify integrity   of the link, and to assist link ARQ.)  TCP also copes with any   duplication or reordering introduced by the IP network.  There are a   number of variants of TCP, with differing levels of sophistication inFairhurst & Wood         Best Current Practice                  [Page 3]

RFC 3366          Advice to Link Designers on Link ARQ       August 2002   their procedures for handling loss recovery and congestion avoidance.   Far from being static, the TCP protocol is itself subject to ongoing   gradual refinement and evolution, e.g., [RFC2488,RFC2760].   Internet networks may reasonably be expected to carry traffic from a   wide and evolving range of applications.  Not all applications   require or benefit from using the reliable service provided by TCP.   In the Internet, these applications are carried by alternate   transport protocols, such as the User Datagram Protocol (UDP)   [RFC768].1.1 Link ARQ   At the link layer, ARQ operates on blocks of data, known as frames,   and attempts to deliver frames from the link sender to the link   receiver over a channel.  The channel provides the physical-layer   connection over which the link protocol operates.  In its simplest   form, a channel may be a direct physical-layer connection between the   two link nodes (e.g., across a length of cable or over a wireless   medium).  ARQ may also be used edge-to-edge across a subnetwork,   where the path includes more than one physical-layer medium.  Frames   often have a small fixed or maximum size for convenience of   processing by Medium-Access Control (MAC) and link protocols.  This   contrasts with the variable lengths of IP datagrams, or 'packets'.  A   link-layer frame may contain all, or part of, one or more IP packets.   A link ARQ mechanism relies on an integrity check for each frame   (e.g., strong link-layer CRC [DRAFTKARN02]) to detect channel errors,   and uses a retransmission process to retransmit lost (i.e., missing   or corrupted) frames.   Links may be full-duplex (allowing two-way communication over   separate forward and reverse channels), half-duplex (where two-way   communication uses a shared forward and reverse channel, e.g., IrDA,   IEEE 802.11) or simplex (where a single channel permits communication   in only one direction).   ARQ requires both a forward and return path, and therefore link ARQ   may be used over links that employ full- or half-duplex links.  When   a channel is shared between two or more link nodes, a link MAC   protocol is required to ensure all nodes requiring transmission can   gain access to the shared channel.  Such schemes may add to the delay   (jitter) associated with transmission of packet data and ARQ control   frames.   When using ARQ over a link where the probability of frame loss is   related to the frame size, there is an optimal frame size for any   specific target channel error rate.  To allow for efficient use of   the channel, this maximum link frame size may be considerably lowerFairhurst & Wood         Best Current Practice                  [Page 4]

RFC 3366          Advice to Link Designers on Link ARQ       August 2002   than the maximum IP datagram size specified by the IP Maximum   Transmission Unit (MTU).  Each frame will then contain only a   fraction of an IP packet, and transparent implicit fragmentation of   the IP datagram is used [DRAFTKARN02].  A smaller frame size   introduces more frame header overhead per payload byte transported.   Explicit network-layer IP fragmentation is undesirable for a variety   of reasons, and should be avoided [KEN87,DRAFTKARN02].  Its use can   be minimized with use of Path MTU discovery [RFC1191,RFC1435,RFC1981].   Another way to reduce the frame loss rate (or reduce transmit signal   power for the same rate of frame loss) is to use coding, e.g.,   Forward Error Correction (FEC) [LIN93].   FEC is commonly included in the physical-layer design of wireless   links and may be used simultaneously with link ARQ.  FEC schemes   which combine modulation and coding also exist, and may also be   adaptive.  Hybrid ARQ [LIN93] combines adaptive FEC with link ARQ   procedures to reduce the probability of loss of retransmitted frames.   Interleaving may also be used to reduce the probability of frame loss   by dispersing the occurrence of errors more widely in the channel to   improve error recovery; this adds further delay to the channel's   existing propagation delay.   The document does not consider the use of link ARQ to support a   broadcast or multicast service within a subnetwork, where a link may   send a single packet to more than one recipient using a single link   transmit operation.  Although such schemes are supported in some   subnetworks, they raise a number of additional issues not examined   here.   Links supporting stateful reservation-based quality of service (QoS)   according to the Integrated Services (intserv) model are also not   explicitly discussed.1.2 Causes of Packet Loss on a Link   Not all packets sent to a link are necessarily received successfully   by the receiver at the other end of the link.  There are a number of   possible causes of packet loss.  These may occur as frames travel   across a link, and include:   a. Loss due to channel noise, often characterised by random frame      loss.  Channel noise may also result from other traffic degrading      channel conditions.Fairhurst & Wood         Best Current Practice                  [Page 5]

RFC 3366          Advice to Link Designers on Link ARQ       August 2002   b. Frame loss due to channel interference.  This interference can      be random, structured, and in some cases even periodic.   c. A link outage, a period during which the link loses all or      virtually all frames, until the link is restored.  This is a      common characteristic of some types of link, e.g., mobile cellular      radio.   Other forms of packet loss are not related to channel conditions,   but include:   i.   Loss of a frame transmitted in a shared channel where a        contention-aware MAC protocol is used (e.g., due to collision).        Here, many protocols require that retransmission is deferred to        promote stability of the shared channel (i.e., prevent excessive        channel contention).  This is discussed further insection 1.5.   ii.  Packet discards due to congestion.  Queues will eventually        overflow as the arrival rate of new packets to send continues to        exceed the outgoing packet transmission rate over the link.   iii. Loss due to implementation errors, including hardware faults        and software errors.  This is recognised as a common cause of        packet corruption detected in the endhosts [STONE00].   The rate of loss and patterns of loss experienced are functions of   the design of the physical and link layers.  These vary significantly   across different link configurations.  The performance of a specific   implementation may also vary considerably across the same link   configuration when operated over different types of channel.1.3 Why Use ARQ?   Reasons that encourage considering the use of ARQ include:   a. ARQ across a single link has a faster control loop than TCP's      acknowledgement control loop, which takes place over the longer      end-to-end path over which TCP must operate.  It is therefore      possible for ARQ to provide more rapid retransmission of TCP      segments lost on the link, at least for a reasonable number of      retries [RFC3155,SALT81].   b. Link ARQ can operate on individual frames, using implicit      transparent link fragmentation [DRAFTKARN02].  Frames may be      much smaller than IP packets, and repetition of smaller frames      containing lost or errored parts of an IP packet may improve the      efficiency of the ARQ process and the efficiency of the link.Fairhurst & Wood         Best Current Practice                  [Page 6]

RFC 3366          Advice to Link Designers on Link ARQ       August 2002   A link ARQ procedure may be able to use local knowledge that is not   available to endhosts, to optimise delivery performance for the   current link conditions.  This information can include information   about the state of the link and channel, e.g., knowledge of the   current available transmission rate, the prevailing error   environment, or available transmit power in wireless links.1.4 Commonly-used ARQ Techniques   A link ARQ protocol uses a link protocol mechanism to allow the   sender to detect lost or corrupted frames and to schedule   retransmission.  Detection of frame loss may be via a link protocol   timer, by detecting missing positive link acknowledgement frames, by   receiving explicit negative acknowledgement frames and/or by polling   the link receiver status.   Whatever mechanisms are chosen, there are two easily-described   categories of ARQ retransmission process that are widely used:1.4.1 Stop-And-Wait ARQ   A sender using stop-and-wait ARQ (sometimes known as 'Idle ARQ'   [LIN93]) transmits a single frame and then waits for an   acknowledgement from the receiver for that frame.  The sender then   either continues transmission with the next frame, or repeats   transmission of the same frame if the acknowledgement indicates that   the original frame was lost or corrupted.   Stop-and-wait ARQ is simple, if inefficient, for protocol designers   to implement, and therefore popular, e.g., tftp [RFC1350] at the   transport layer.  However, when stop-and-wait ARQ is used in the link   layer, it is well-suited only to links with low bandwidth-delay   products.  This technique is not discussed further in this document.1.4.2 Sliding-Window ARQ   A protocol using sliding-window link ARQ [LIN93] numbers every frame   with a unique sequence number, according to a modulus.  The modulus   defines the numbering base for frame sequence numbers, and the size   of the sequence space.  The largest sequence number value is viewed   by the link protocol as contiguous with the first (0), since the   numbering space wraps around.Fairhurst & Wood         Best Current Practice                  [Page 7]

RFC 3366          Advice to Link Designers on Link ARQ       August 2002   TCP is itself a sliding-window protocol at the transport layer   [STE94], so similarities between a link-interface-to-link-interface   protocol and end-to-end TCP may be recognisable.  A sliding-window   link protocol is much more complex in implementation than the simpler   stop-and-wait protocol described in the previous section,   particularly if per-flow ordering is preserved.   At any time the link sender may have a number of frames outstanding   and awaiting acknowledgement, up to the space available in its   transmission window.  A sufficiently-large link sender window   (equivalent to or greater than the number of frames sent, or larger   than the bandwidth*delay product capacity of the link) permits   continuous transmission of new frames.  A smaller link sender window   causes the sender to pause transmission of new frames until a timeout   or a control frame, such as an acknowledgement, is received.  When   frames are lost, a larger window, i.e., more than the link's   bandwidth*delay product, is needed to allow continuous operation   while frame retransmission takes place.   The modulus numbering space determines the size of the frame header   sequence number field.  This sequence space needs to be larger than   the link window size and, if using selective repeat ARQ, larger than   twice the link window size.  For continuous operation, the sequence   space should be larger than the product of the link capacity and the   link ARQ persistence (discussed insection 2), so that in-flight   frames can be identified uniquely.   As with TCP, which provides sliding-window delivery across an entire   end-to-end path rather than across a single link, there are a large   number of variations on the basic sliding-window implementation, with   increased complexity and sophistication to make them suitable for   various conditions.  Selective Repeat (SR), also known as Selective   Reject (SREJ), and Go-Back-N, also known as Reject (REJ), are   examples of ARQ techniques using protocols implementing sliding   window ARQ.1.5 Causes of Delay Across a Link   Links and link protocols contribute to the total path delay   experienced between communicating applications on endhosts.  Delay   has a number of causes, including:   a. Input packet queuing and frame buffering at the link head before      transmission over the channel.   b. Retransmission back-off, an additional delay introduced for      retransmissions by some MAC schemes when operating over a shared      channel to prevent excessive contention.  A high level ofFairhurst & Wood         Best Current Practice                  [Page 8]

RFC 3366          Advice to Link Designers on Link ARQ       August 2002      contention may otherwise arise, if, for example, a set of link      receivers all retransmitted immediately after a collision on a      busy shared channel.  Link ARQ protocols designed for shared      channels may select a backoff delay, which increases with the      number of attempts taken to retransmit a frame; analogies can be      drawn with end-to-end TCP congestion avoidance at the transport      layer [RFC2581].  In contrast, a link over a dedicated channel      (which has capacity pre-allocated to the link) may send a      retransmission at the earliest possible time.   c. Waiting for access to the allocated channel when the channel is      shared.  There may be processing or protocol-induced delay      before transmission takes place [FER99,PAR00].   d. Frame serialisation and transmission processing.  These are      functions of frame size and the transmission speed of the link.   e. Physical-layer propagation time, limited by the speed of      transmission of the signal in the physical medium of the      channel.   f. Per-frame processing, including the cost of QoS scheduling,      encryption, FEC and interleaving.  FEC and interleaving also add      substantial delay and, in some cases, additional jitter.  Hybrid      link ARQ schemes [LIN93], in particular, may incur significant      receiver processing delay.   g. Packet processing, including buffering frame contents at the      link receiver for packet reassembly, before onward transmission      of the packet.   When link ARQ is used, steps (b), (c), (d), (e), and (f) may be   repeated a number of times, every time that retransmission of a frame   occurs, increasing overall delay for the packet carried in part by   the frame.  Adaptive ARQ schemes (e.g., hybrid ARQ using adaptive FEC   codes) may also incur extra per-frame processing for retransmitted   frames.   It is important to understand that applications and transport   protocols at the endhosts are unaware of the individual delays   contributed by each link in the path, and only see the overall path   delay.  Application performance is therefore determined by the   cumulative delay of the entire end-to-end Internet path.  This path   may include an arbitrary or even a widely-fluctuating number of   links, where any link may or may not use ARQ.  As a result, it is not   possible to state fixed limits on the acceptable delay that a link   can add to a path; other links in the path will add an unknown delay.Fairhurst & Wood         Best Current Practice                  [Page 9]

RFC 3366          Advice to Link Designers on Link ARQ       August 20022. ARQ Persistence   ARQ protocols may be characterised by their persistency.  Persistence   is the willingness of the protocol to retransmit lost frames to   ensure reliable delivery of traffic across the link.   A link's retransmission persistency defines how long the link is   allowed to delay a packet, in an attempt to transmit all the frames   carrying the packet and its content over the link, before giving up   and discarding the packet.  This persistency can normally be measured   in milliseconds, but may, if the link propagation delay is specified,   be expressed in terms of the maximum number of link retransmission   attempts permitted.  The latter does not always map onto an exact   time limit, for the reasons discussed insection 1.5.   An example of a reliable link protocol that is perfectly persistent   is the ISO HDLC protocol in the Asynchronous Balanced Mode (ABM)   [ISO4335a].   A protocol that only retransmits a number of times before giving up   is less persistent, e.g., Ethernet [FER99], IEEE 802.11, or GSM RLP   [RFC2757].  Here, lower persistence also ensures stability and fair   sharing of a shared channel, even when many senders are attempting   retransmissions.   TCP, STCP [RFC2960] and a number of applications using UDP (e.g.,   tftp) implement their own end-to-end reliable delivery mechanisms.   Many TCP and UDP applications, e.g., streaming multimedia, benefit   from timely delivery from lower layers with sufficient reliability,   rather than perfect reliability with increased link delays.2.1 Perfectly-Persistent (Reliable) ARQ Protocols   A perfectly-persistent ARQ protocol is one that attempts to provide a   reliable service, i.e., in-order delivery of packets to the other end   of the link, with no missing packets and no duplicate packets.  The   perfectly-persistent ARQ protocol will repeat a lost or corrupted   frame an indefinite (and potentially infinite) number of times until   the frame is successfully received.   If traffic is going no further than across one link, and losses do   not occur within the endhosts, perfect persistence ensures   reliability between the two link ends without requiring any   higher-layer protocols.  This reliability can become   counterproductive for traffic traversing multiple links, as it   duplicates and interacts with functionality in protocol mechanisms at   higher layers [SALT81].Fairhurst & Wood         Best Current Practice                 [Page 10]

RFC 3366          Advice to Link Designers on Link ARQ       August 2002   Arguments against the use of perfect persistence for IP traffic   include:   a. Variable link delay; the impact of ARQ introduces a degree of      jitter, a function of the physical-layer delay and frame      serialisation and transmission times (discussed insection 1.5),      to all flows sharing a link performing frame retransmission.   b. Perfect persistence does not provide a clear upper bound on the      maximum retransmission delay for the link.  Significant changes      in path delay caused by excessive link retransmissions may lead      to timeouts of TCP retransmission timers, although a high      variance in link delay and the resulting overall path delay may      also cause a large TCP RTO value to be selected [LUD99b,PAR00].      This will alter TCP throughput, decreasing overall performance,      but, in mitigation, it can also decrease the occurrence of      timeouts due to continued packet loss.   c. Applications needing perfectly-reliable delivery can implement a      form of perfectly-persistent ARQ themselves, or use a reliable      transport protocol within the endhosts.  Implementing perfect      persistence at each link along the path between the endhosts is      redundant, but cannot ensure the same reliability as end-to-end      transport [SALT81].   d. Link ARQ should not adversely delay the flow of end-to-end      control information.  As an example, the ARQ retransmission of      data for one or more flows should not excessively extend the      protocol control loops.  Excessive delay of duplicate TCP      acknowledgements (dupacks [STE94,BAL97]), SACK, or Explicit      Congestion Notification (ECN) indicators will reduce the      responsiveness of TCP flows to congestion events.  Similar      issues exist for TCP-Friendly Rate Control (TFRC), where      equation-based congestion control is used with UDP [DRAFTHAN01].   Perfectly-persistent link protocols that perform unlimited ARQ, i.e.,   that continue to retransmit frames indefinitely until the frames are   successfully received, are seldom found in real implementations.   Most practical link protocols give up retransmission at some point,   but do not necessarily do so with the intention of bounding the ARQ   retransmission persistence.  A protocol may, for instance, terminate   retransmission after a link connection failure, e.g., after no frames   have been successfully received within a pre-configured timer period.   The number of times a protocol retransmits a specific frame (or the   maximum number of retransmissions) therefore becomes a function of   many different parameters (ARQ procedure, link timer values, and   procedure for link monitoring), rather than being pre-configured.Fairhurst & Wood         Best Current Practice                 [Page 11]

RFC 3366          Advice to Link Designers on Link ARQ       August 2002   Another common feature of this type of behaviour is that some   protocol implementers presume that, after a link failure, packets   queued to be sent over the link are no longer significant and can be   discarded when giving up ARQ retransmission.   Examples of ARQ protocols that are perfectly persistent include   ISO/ITU-T LAP-B [ISO7776] and ISO HDLC in the Asynchronously Balanced   Mode (ABM) [ISO4335a], e.g., using Multiple Selective Reject (MSREJ   [ISO4335b]).  These protocols will retransmit a frame an unlimited   number of times until receipt of the frame is acknowledged.2.2 High-Persistence (Highly-Reliable) ARQ Protocols   High-persistence ARQ protocols limit the number of times (or number   of attempts) that ARQ may retransmit a particular frame before the   sender gives up on retransmission of the missing frame and moves on   to forwarding subsequent buffered in-sequence frames.  Ceasing   retransmission of a frame does not imply a lack of link connectivity   and does not cause a link protocol state change.   It has been recommended that a single IP packet should never be   delayed by the network for more than the Maximum Segment Lifetime   (MSL) of 120 seconds defined for TCP [RFC1122].  It is, however,   difficult in practice to bound the maximum path delay of an Internet   path.  One case where segment (packet) lifetime may be significant is   where alternate paths of different delays exist between endhosts and   route flapping or flow-unaware traffic engineering is used.  Some TCP   packets may follow a short path, while others follow a much longer   path, e.g., using persistent ARQ over a link outage.   Failure to limit the maximum packet lifetime can result in TCP   sequence numbers wrapping at high transmission rates, where old data   segments may be confused with newer segments if the sequence number   space has been exhausted and reused in the interim.  Some TCP   implementations use the Round Trip Timestamp Measurement (RTTM)   option in TCP packets to remove this ambiguity, using the Protection   Against Wrapped Sequence number (PAWS) algorithm [RFC1323].   In practice, the MSL is usually very large compared to the typical   TCP RTO.  The calculation of TCP RTO is based on estimated round-trip   path delay [RFC2988].  If the number of link retransmissions causes a   path delay larger than the value of RTO, the TCP retransmission timer   can expire, leading to a timeout and retransmission of a segment   (packet) by the TCP sender.Fairhurst & Wood         Best Current Practice                 [Page 12]

RFC 3366          Advice to Link Designers on Link ARQ       August 2002   Although high persistency may benefit bulk flows, the additional   delay (and variations in delay) that it introduces may be highly   undesirable for other types of flows.  Being able to treat flows   separately, with different classes of link service, is useful, and is   discussed insection 3.   Examples of high-persistence ARQ protocols include [BHA97, ECK98,   LUD99a, MEY99].2.3 Low-Persistence (Partially-Reliable) ARQ Protocols   The characteristics of a link using a low-persistence ARQ protocol   may be summarised as:   a. The link is not perfectly reliable and does not provide an      absolute guarantee of delivery, i.e., the transmitter will      discard some frames as it 'gives up' before receiving an      acknowledgement of successful transmission across the link.   b. There is a lowered limit on the maximum added delay that IP      packets will experience when travelling across the link      (typically lower than the TCP path RTO).  This reduces      interaction with TCP timers or with UDP-based error-control      schemes.   c. The link offers a low bound for the time that retransmission for      any one frame can block completed transmission and assembly of      other correctly and completely-received IP packets whose      transmission was begun before the missing frame was sent.      Limiting delay avoids aggravating contention or interaction      between different packet flows (see alsosection 3.2).   Examples of low-persistence ARQ protocols include [SAM96, WARD95,   CHE00].2.4 Choosing Your Persistency   The TCP Maximum RTO is an upper limit on the maximum time that TCP   will wait until it performs a retransmission.  Most TCP   implementations will generally have a TCP RTO of at least several   times the path delay.   Setting a lower link persistency (e.g., of the order 2-5   retransmission attempts) reduces potential interaction with the TCP   RTO timer, and may therefore reduce the probability of duplicate   copies of the same packet being present in the link transmit buffer   under some patterns of loss.Fairhurst & Wood         Best Current Practice                 [Page 13]

RFC 3366          Advice to Link Designers on Link ARQ       August 2002   A link using a physical layer with a low propagation delay may allow   tens of retransmission attempts to deliver a single frame, and still   satisfy a bound for (b) insection 2.3.  In this case, a low delay is   defined as being where the total packet transmission time across the   link is much less than 100 ms (a common value for the granularity of   the internal TCP system timer).   A packet may traverse a number of successive links on its total end-   to-end path.  This is therefore an argument for much lower   persistency on any individual link, as delay due to persistency is   accumulated along the path taken by each packet.   Some implementers have chosen a lower persistence, falling back on   the judgement of TCP or of a UDP application to retransmit any   packets that are not recovered by the link ARQ protocol.2.5 Impact of Link Outages   Links experiencing persistent loss, where many consecutive frames are   corrupted over an extended time, may also need to be considered.   Examples of channel behaviour leading to link outages include fading,   roaming, and some forms of interference.  During the loss event,   there is an increased probability that a retransmission request may   be corrupted, and/or an increased probability that a retransmitted   frame will also be lost.  This type of loss event is often known as a   "transient outage".   If the transient outage extends for longer than the TCP RTO, the TCP   sender will also perform transport-layer retransmission.  At the same   time, the TCP sender will reduce its congestion window (cwnd) to 1   segment (packet), recalculate its RTO, and wait for an ACK packet.   If no acknowledgement is received, TCP will retransmit again, up to a   retry limit.  TCP only determines that the outage is over (i.e., that   path capacity is restored) by receipt of an ACK.  If link ARQ   protocol persistency causes a link in the path to discard the ACK,   the TCP sender must wait for the next RTO retransmission and its ACK   to learn that the link is restored.  This can be many seconds after   the end of the transient outage.   When a link layer is able to differentiate a set of link service   classes (seesection 3.3), a link ARQ persistency longer than the   largest link loss event may benefit a TCP session.  This would allow   TCP to rapidly restore transmission without the need to wait for a   retransmission time out, generally improving TCP performance in the   face of transient outages.  Implementation of such schemes remains a   research issue.Fairhurst & Wood         Best Current Practice                 [Page 14]

RFC 3366          Advice to Link Designers on Link ARQ       August 2002   When an outage occurs for a sender sharing a common channel with   other nodes, uncontrolled high persistence can continue to consume   transmission resources for the duration of the outage.  This may be   undesirable, since it reduces the capacity available for other nodes   sharing the channel, which do not necessarily experience the same   outage.  These nodes could otherwise use the channel for more   productive transfers.  The persistence is often limited by another   controlling mechanism in such cases.  To counter such contention   effects, ARQ protocols may delay retransmission requests, or defer   the retransmission of requested frames until the outage ends for the   sender.   An alternate suggested approach for a link layer that is able to   identify separate flows is to use low link persistency (section 2.3)   along with a higher-layer mechanism, for example one that attempts to   deliver one packet (or whole TCP segment) per TCP flow after a loss   event [DRAFTKARN02].  This is intended to ensure that TCP   transmission is restored rapidly.  Algorithms to implement this   remain an area of research.3. Treatment of Packets and Flows3.1 Packet Ordering   A common debate is whether a link should be allowed to forward   packets in an order different from that in which they were originally   received at its transmit interface.   IP networks are not required to deliver all IP packets in order,   although in most cases networks do deliver IP packets in their   original transmission order.  Routers supporting class-based queuing   do reorder received packets, by reordering packets in different   flows, but these usually retain per-flow ordering.   Policy-based queuing, allowing fairer access to the link, may also   reorder packets.  There is still much debate on optimal algorithms,   and on optimal queue sizes for particular link speeds.  This,   however, is not related to the use of link ARQ and applies to any   (potential) bottleneck router.   Although small amounts of reordering are common in IP networks   [BEN00], significant reordering within a flow is undesirable as it   can have a number of effects:   a. Reordering will increase packet jitter for real-time      applications.  This may lead to application data loss if a small      play-out buffer is used by the receiving application.Fairhurst & Wood         Best Current Practice                 [Page 15]

RFC 3366          Advice to Link Designers on Link ARQ       August 2002   b. Reordering will interleave arrival of TCP segments, leading to      generation of duplicate ACKs (dupacks), leading to assumptions      of loss.  Reception of an ACK followed by a sequence of three      identical dupacks causes the TCP sender to trigger fast      retransmission and recovery, a form of congestion avoidance,      since TCP always presumes that packet loss is due to congestion      [RFC2581,STE94].  This reduces TCP throughput efficiency as far      as the application is concerned, although it should not impact      data integrity.   In addition, reordering may negatively impact processing by some   existing poorly-implemented TCP/IP stacks, by leading to unwanted   side-effects in poorly-implemented IP fragment reassembly code,   poorly-implemented IP demultiplexing (filter) code, or in   poorly-implemented UDP applications.   Ordering effects must also be considered when breaking the end-to-end   paradigm and evaluating transport-layer relays such as split-TCP   implementations or Protocol Enhancing Proxies [RFC3135].   As with total path delay, TCP and UDP flows are impacted by the   cumulative effect of reordering along the entire path.  Link protocol   designers must not assume that their link is the only link   undertaking packet reordering, as some level of reordering may be   introduced by other links along the same path, or by router   processing within the network [BEN00].  Ideally, the link protocol   should not contribute to reordering within a flow, or at least ensure   that it does not significantly increase the level of reordering   within the flow.  To achieve this, buffering is required at the link   receiver.  The total amount of buffering required is a function of   the link's bandwidth*delay product and the level of ARQ persistency,   and is bounded by the link window size.   A number of experimental ARQ protocols have allowed out-of-order   delivery [BAL95,SAM96,WARD95].3.2 Using Link ARQ to Support Multiple Flows   Most links can be expected to carry more than one IP flow at a time.   Some high-capacity links are expected to carry a very large number of   simultaneous flows, often from and to a large number of different   endhosts.  With use of multiple applications at an endhost, multiple   flows can be considered the norm rather than the exception, even for   last-hop links.Fairhurst & Wood         Best Current Practice                 [Page 16]

RFC 3366          Advice to Link Designers on Link ARQ       August 2002   When packets from several flows are simultaneously in transit within   a link ARQ protocol, ARQ may cause a number of additional effects:   a. ARQ introduces variable delay (jitter) to a TCP flow sharing a      link with another flow experiencing loss.  This additional      delay, introduced by the need for a link to provide in-sequence      delivery of packets, may adversely impact other applications      sharing the link, and can increase the duration of the initial      slow-start period for TCP flows for these applications.  This is      significant for short-lived TCP flows (e.g., those used by      HTTP/1.0 and earlier), which spend most of their lives in      slow-start.   b. ARQ introduces jitter to UDP flows that share a link with      another flow experiencing loss.  An end-to-end protocol may not      require reliable delivery for its flows, particularly if it is      supporting a delay-sensitive application.   c. High-persistence ARQ may delay packets long enough to cause the      premature timeout of another TCP flow's RTO timer, although      modern TCP implementations should not experience this since      their computed RTO values should leave a sufficient margin over      path RTTs to cope with reasonable amounts of jitter.   Reordering of packets belonging to different flows may be desirable   [LUD99b,CHE00] to achieve fair sharing of the link between   established bulk-data transfer sessions and sessions that transmit   less data, but would benefit from lower link transit delay.   Preserving ordering within each individual flow, to avoid the effects   of reordering described earlier insection 3.1, is worthwhile.3.3 Differentiation of Link Service Classes   High ARQ persistency is generally considered unsuitable for many   applications using UDP, where reliable delivery is not always   required and where it may introduce unacceptable jitter, but may   benefit bulk data transfers under certain link conditions.  A scheme   that differentiates packet flows into two or more classes, to provide   a different service to each class, is therefore desirable.   Observation of flow behaviour can tell you which flows are controlled   and congestion-sensitive, or uncontrolled and not, so that you can   treat them differently and ensure fairness.  However, this cannot   tell you whether a flow is intended as reliable or unreliable by its   application, or what the application requires for best operation.Fairhurst & Wood         Best Current Practice                 [Page 17]

RFC 3366          Advice to Link Designers on Link ARQ       August 2002   Supporting different link services for different classes of flows   therefore requires that the link is able to distinguish the different   flows from each other.  This generally needs an explicit indication   of the class associated with each flow.   Some potential schemes for indicating the class of a packet include:   a. Using the Type of Service (ToS) bits in the IP header [RFC791].      The IETF has replaced these globally-defined bits, which were      not widely used, with the differentiated services model      (diffserv [RFC2475,RFC3260]).  In diffserv, each packet carries a      Differentiated Service Code Point (DSCP), which indicates which      one of a set of diffserv classes the flow belongs to.  Each      router maps the DSCP value of a received IP packet to one of a      set of Per Hop Behaviours (PHBs) as the packet is processed      within the network.  Diffserv uses include policy-based routing,      class-based queuing, and support for other QoS metrics,      including IP packet priority, delay, reliability, and cost.   b. Inspecting the network packet header and viewing the IP protocol      type [RFC791] to gain an idea of the transport protocol used and      thus guess its needs.  This is not possible when carrying an      encrypted payload, e.g., using the IP security extensions (IPSec)      with Encapsulation Security Payload (ESP) [RFC2406] payload      encryption.   c. By inspecting the transport packet header information to view      the TCP or UDP headers and port numbers (e.g., [PAR00,BAL95]).      This is not possible when using payload encryption, e.g., IPSec      with ESP payload encryption [RFC2406], and incurs processing      overhead for each packet sent over the link.   There are, however, some drawbacks to these schemes:   i.   The ToS/Differentiated Services Code Point (DSCP) values        [RFC2475] may not be set reliably, and may be overwritten by        intermediate routers along the packet's path.  These values may        be set by an ISP, and do not necessarily indicate the level of        reliability required by the end application.  The link must be        configured with knowledge of the local meaning of the values.   ii.  Tunnelling of traffic (e.g., GRE, MPLS, L2TP, IP-in-IP        encapsulation) can aggregate flows of different transport        classes, complicating individual flow classification with        schemes (b) and (c) and incurring further header processing if        tunnel contents are inspected.Fairhurst & Wood         Best Current Practice                 [Page 18]

RFC 3366          Advice to Link Designers on Link ARQ       August 2002   iii. Use of the TCP/UDP port number makes assumptions about        application behaviour and requirements.  New applications or        protocols can invalidate these assumptions, as can the use of        e.g., Network Address Port Translation, where port numbers are        remapped [RFC3022].   iv.  In IPv6, the entire IPv6 header must be parsed to locate the        transport layer protocol, adding complexity to header        inspection.  Again, this assumes that IPSec payload encryption        is not used.   Despite the difficulties in providing a framework for accurate flow   identification, approach (a) may be beneficial, and is preferable to   adding optimisations that are triggered by inspecting the contents of   specific IP packets.  Some such optimisations are discussed in detail   in [LUD99b].   Flow management is desirable; clear flow identification increases the   number of tools available for the link designer, and permits more   complex ARQ strategies that may otherwise make misassumptions about   traffic requirements and behaviour when flow identification is not   done.   Links that are unable to distinguish clearly and safely between   delay-sensitive flows, e.g., real-time multimedia, DNS queries or   telnet, and delay-insensitive flows, e.g., bulk ftp transfers or   reliable multicast file transfer, cannot separate link service   classes safely.  All flows should therefore experience the same link   behaviour.   In general, if separation of flows according to class is not   practicable, a low persistency is best for link ARQ.4. Conclusions   A number of techniques may be used by link protocol designers to   counter the effects of channel errors or loss. One of these   techniques is Automatic Repeat ReQuest, ARQ, which has been and   continues to be used on links that carry IP traffic.  An ARQ protocol   retransmits link frames that have been corrupted during transmission   across a channel.  Link ARQ may significantly improve the probability   of successful transmission of IP packets over links prone to   occasional frame loss.   A lower rate of packet loss generally benefits transport protocols   and endhost applications.  Applications using TCP generally benefit   from Internet paths with little or no loss and low round trip path   delay.  This reduces impact on applications, allows more rapid growthFairhurst & Wood         Best Current Practice                 [Page 19]

RFC 3366          Advice to Link Designers on Link ARQ       August 2002   of TCP's congestion window during slow start, and ensures prompt   reaction to end-to-end protocol exchanges (e.g., retransmission,   congestion indications).  Applications using other transport   protocols, e.g., UDP or SCTP, also benefit from low loss and timely   delivery.   A side-effect of link ARQ is that link transit delay is increased   when frames are retransmitted.  At low error rates, many of the   details of ARQ, such as degree of persistence or any resulting   out-of-order delivery, become unimportant.  Most frame losses will be   resolved in one or two retransmission attempts, and this is generally   unlikely to cause significant impact to e.g., TCP.  However, on   shared high-delay links, the impact of ARQ on other UDP or TCP flows   may lead to unwanted jitter.   Where error rates are highly variable, high link ARQ persistence may   provide good performance for a single TCP flow.  However,   interactions between flows can arise when many flows share capacity   on the same link.  A link ARQ procedure that provides flow management   will be beneficial.  Lower ARQ persistence may also have merit, and   is preferable for applications using UDP.  The reasoning here is that   the link can perform useful work forwarding some complete packets,   and that blocking all flows by retransmitting the frames of a single   packet with high persistence is undesirable.   During a link outage, interactions between ARQ and multiple flows are   less significant; the ARQ protocol is likely to be equally   unsuccessful in retransmitting frames for all flows.  High   persistence may benefit TCP flows, by enabling prompt recovery once   the channel is restored.   Low ARQ persistence is particularly useful where it is difficult or   impossible to classify traffic flows, and hence treat each flow   independently, and where the link capacity can accommodate a large   number of simultaneous flows.   Link ARQ designers should consider the implications of their design   on the wider Internet.  Effects such as increased transit delay,   jitter, and re-ordering are cumulative when performed on multiple   links along an Internet path.  It is therefore very hard to say how   many ARQ links may exist in series along an arbitrary Internet path   between endhosts, especially as the path taken and its links may   change over time.   In summary, when links cannot classify traffic flows and treat them   separately, low persistence is generally desirable; preserving packet   ordering is generally desirable.  Extremely high persistence and   perfect persistence are generally undesirable; highly-persistent ARQFairhurst & Wood         Best Current Practice                 [Page 20]

RFC 3366          Advice to Link Designers on Link ARQ       August 2002   is a bad idea unless flow classification and detailed and accurate   knowledge of flow requirements make it possible to deploy high   persistency where it will be beneficial.   There is currently insufficient experience to recommend a specific   ARQ scheme for any class of link.  It is also important to realize   that link ARQ is just one method of error recovery, and that other   complementary physical-layer techniques may be used instead of, or   together with, ARQ to improve overall link throughput for IP traffic.   The choice of potential schemes includes adapting the data rate,   adapting the signal bandwidth, adapting the transmission power,   adaptive modulation, adaptive information redundancy / forward error   control, and interleaving.  All of these schemes can be used to   improve the received signal energy per bit, and hence reduce error,   frame loss and resulting packet loss rates given specific channel   conditions.   There is a need for more research to more clearly identify the   importance of and trade-offs between the above issues over various   types of link and over various types of channels.  It would be useful   if researchers and implementers clearly indicated the loss model,   link capacity and characteristics, link and end-to-end path delays,   details of TCP, and the number (and details) of flows sharing a link   when describing their experiences.  In each case, it is recommended   that specific details of the link characteristics and mechanisms also   be considered; solutions vary with conditions.5. Security Considerations   No security implications have been identified as directly impacting   IP traffic.  However, an unreliable link service may adversely impact   some existing link-layer key management distribution protocols if   link encryption is also used over the link.   Denial-of-service attacks exploiting the behaviour of the link   protocol, e.g., using knowledge of its retransmission behaviour and   propagation delay to cause a particular form of jamming, may be   specific to an individual link scenario.6. IANA Considerations   No assignments from the IANA are required.Fairhurst & Wood         Best Current Practice                 [Page 21]

RFC 3366          Advice to Link Designers on Link ARQ       August 20027. Acknowledgements   Much of what is described here has been developed from a summary of a   subset of the discussions on the archived IETF PILC mailing list.  We   thank the contributors to PILC for vigorous debate.   In particular, the authors would like to thank Spencer Dawkins, Aaron   Falk, Dan Grossman, Merkourios Karaliopoulos, Gary Kenward, Reiner   Ludwig and Jean Tourrilhes for their detailed comments.8. References   References of the form RFCnnnn are Internet Request for Comments   (RFC) documents available online athttp://www.rfc-editor.org/.8.1 Normative References   [RFC768]      Postel, J., "User Datagram Protocol", STD 6,RFC 768,                 August 1980.   [RFC791]      Postel, J., "Internet Protocol", STD 5,RFC 791,                 September 1981.   [RFC793]      Postel, J., "Transmission Control Protocol",RFC 793,                 September 1981.   [RFC1122]     Braden, R., Ed., "Requirements for Internet Hosts --                 Communication Layers", STD 3,RFC 1122, October 1989.   [RFC2406]     Kent, S. and R. Atkinson, "IP Encapsulating Security                 Payload (ESP)",RFC 2406, November 1998.   [RFC2475]     Blake, S., Black, D., Carlson, M., Davies, E., Wang, Z.                 and W. Weiss, "An Architecture for Differentiated                 Services",RFC 2475, December 1998.   [RFC2581]     Allman, M., Paxson, V. and W. Stevens, "TCP Congestion                 Control",RFC 2581, April 1999.   [RFC2988]     Paxson, V. and M. Allman, "Computing TCP's                 Retransmission Timer",RFC 2988, November 2000.   [RFC3135]     Border, J., Kojo, M., Griner, J., Montenegro, G. and Z.                 Shelby, "Performance Enhancing Proxies Intended to                 Mitigate Link-Related Degradations",RFC 3135, June                 2001.Fairhurst & Wood         Best Current Practice                 [Page 22]

RFC 3366          Advice to Link Designers on Link ARQ       August 2002   [RFC3260]     Grossman, D., "New Terminology and Clarifications for                 Diffserv",RFC 3260, April 2002.8.2 Informative References   [BAL95]       Balakrishnan, H., Seshan, S. and R. H. Katz,                 "Improving Reliable Transport and Handoff Performance                 in Cellular Wireless Networks", ACM MOBICOM, Berkeley,                 1995.   [BAL97]       Balakrishnan, H., Padmanabhan, V. N., Seshan, S. and                 R. H. Katz, "A Comparison of Mechanisms for Improving                 TCP Performance over Wireless Links", IEEE/ACM                 Transactions on Networking, 5(6), pp. 756-759, 1997.   [BEN00]       Bennett, J. C., Partridge, C. and N. Schectman, "Packet                 Reordering is Not Pathological Network Behaviour",                 IEEE/ACM Transactions on Networking, 7(6), pp. 789-798,                 2000.   [BHA97]       Bhagwat, P., Bhattacharya, P., Krishna A. and S. K.                 Tripathi, "Using channel state dependent packet                 scheduling to improve TCP throughput over wireless                 LANs", ACM/Baltzer Wireless Networks Journal, (3)1,                 1997.   [CHE00]       Cheng, H. S., G. Fairhurst et al., "An Efficient                 Partial Retransmission ARQ Strategy with Error Codes                 by Feedback Channel", IEE Proceedings - Communications,                 (147)5, pp. 263-268, 2000.   [DRAFTKARN02] Karn, P., Ed., "Advice for Internet Subnetwork                 Designers", Work in Progress.   [DRAFTHAN01]  Handley, M., Floyd, S. and J. Widmer, "TCP Friendly                 Rate Control (TFRC): Protocol Specification", Work in                 Progress.   [ECK98]       Eckhardt, D. A. and P. Steenkiste, "Improving Wireless                 LAN Performance via Adaptive Local Error Control",                 IEEE ICNP, 1998.   [FER99]       Ferrero, A., "The Eternal Ethernet", Addison-Wesley,                 1999.   [ISO4335a]    HDLC Procedures: Specification for Consolidation of                 Elements of Procedures, ISO 4335 and AD/1,                 International Standardization Organization, 1985.Fairhurst & Wood         Best Current Practice                 [Page 23]

RFC 3366          Advice to Link Designers on Link ARQ       August 2002   [ISO4335b]    HDLC Procedures: Elements of Procedures, Amendment 4:                 Multi-Selective Reject Option, ISO 4335/4,                 International Standards Organization, 1991.   [ISO7776]     Specification for X.25 LAPB-Compatible DTE Data Link                 Procedures, ISO 4335/4, International Standards                 Organization, 1985.   [KEN87]       Kent, C. A. and J. C. Mogul, "Fragmentation                 Considered Harmful", Proceedings of ACM SIGCOMM 1987,                 ACM Computer Communications Review, 17(5), pp. 390-401,                 1987.   [LIN93]       Lin, S. and D. Costello, "Error Control Coding:                 Fundamentals and Applications", Prentice Hall, 1993.   [LUD99a]      Ludwig, R., Rathonyi, B., Konrad, A., Oden, K., and A.                 Joseph, "Multi-Layer Tracing of TCP over a Reliable                 Wireless Link", ACM SIGMETRICS, pp. 144-154, 1999.   [LUD99b]      Ludwig, R., Konrad, A., Joseph, A. and R. H. Katz,                 "Optimizing the End-to-End Performance of Reliable                 Flows over Wireless Links", ACM MobiCOM, 1999.   [MEY99]       Meyer, M., "TCP Performance over GPRS", IEEE Wireless                 Communications and Networking Conference, 1999.   [PAR00]       Parsa, C. and J. J. Garcia-Luna-Aceves, "Improving TCP                 Performance over Wireless Networks at the Link Layer",                 ACM Mobile Networks and Applications Journal, (5)1,                 pp. 57-71, 2000.   [RFC1191]     Mogul, J. and S. Deering, "Path MTU Discovery",RFC1191, November 1990.   [RFC1323]     Jacobson, V., Braden, R. and D. Borman, "TCP Extensions                 for High Performance",RFC 1323, May 1992.   [RFC1350]     Sollins, K., "The TFTP Protocol (Revision 2)", STD 33,RFC 1350, July 1992.   [RFC1435]     Knowles, S., "IESG Advice from Experience with Path MTU                 Discovery",RFC 1435, March 1993.   [RFC1981]     McCann, J., Deering, S. and J. Mogul, "Path MTU                 Discovery for IP version 6",RFC 1981, August 1996.Fairhurst & Wood         Best Current Practice                 [Page 24]

RFC 3366          Advice to Link Designers on Link ARQ       August 2002   [RFC2488]     Allman, M., Glover, D. and L. Sanchez, "Enhancing TCP                 Over Satellite Channels using Standard Mechanisms",BCP 28,RFC 2488, January 1999.   [RFC2757]     Montenegro, G., Dawkins, S., Kojo, M., Magret V. and                 N. Vaidya, "Long Thin Networks",RFC 2757, January                 2000.   [RFC2760]     Allman, M., Dawkins, S., Glover, D., Griner, J.,                 Tran, D., Henderson, T., Heidemann, J., Touch, J.,                 Kruse, H., Ostermann, S., Scott K. and J. Semke                 "Ongoing TCP Research Related to Satellites",RFC 2760, February 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.   [RFC3022]     Srisuresh, P. and K. Egevang, "Traditional IP Network                 Address Translator (Traditional NAT)",RFC 3022,                 January 2001.   [RFC3155]     Dawkins, S., Montenegro, G., Kojo, M., Magret, V. and                 N. Vaidya, "End-to-end Performance Implications of                 Links with Errors",BCP 50,RFC 3155, August 2001.   [SALT81]      Saltzer, J. H., Reed, D. P. and D. Clark, "End-to-End                 Arguments in System Design", Second International                 Conference on Distributed Computing Systems, pp.                 509-512, 1981.  Published with minor changes in ACM                 Transactions in Computer Systems (2)4, pp. 277-288,                 1984.   [SAM96]       Samaraweera, N. and G. Fairhurst, "Robust Data Link                 Protocols for Connection-less Service over Satellite                 Links", International Journal of Satellite                 Communications, 14(5), pp. 427-437, 1996.   [SAM98]       Samaraweera, N. and G. Fairhurst, "Reinforcement of                 TCP/IP Error Recovery for Wireless Communications",                 ACM Computer Communications Review, 28(2), pp. 30-38,                 1998.   [STE94]       Stevens, W. R., "TCP/IP Illustrated, Volume 1",                 Addison-Wesley, 1994.Fairhurst & Wood         Best Current Practice                 [Page 25]

RFC 3366          Advice to Link Designers on Link ARQ       August 2002   [STONE00]     Stone, J. and C. Partridge, "When the CRC and TCP                 Checksum Disagree", Proceedings of SIGCOMM 2000, ACM                 Computer Communications Review 30(4), pp. 309-321,                 September 2000.   [WARD95]      Ward, C., et al., "A Data Link Control Protocol for LEO                 Satellite Networks Providing a Reliable Datagram                 Service", IEEE/ACM Transactions on Networking, 3(1),                 1995.Authors' Addresses   Godred Fairhurst   Department of Engineering   University of Aberdeen   Aberdeen AB24 3UE   United Kingdom   EMail: gorry@erg.abdn.ac.ukhttp://www.erg.abdn.ac.uk/users/gorry/   Lloyd Wood   Cisco Systems Ltd   4 The Square   Stockley Park   Uxbridge UB11 1BY   United Kingdom   EMail: lwood@cisco.comhttp://www.ee.surrey.ac.uk/Personal/L.Wood/Fairhurst & Wood         Best Current Practice                 [Page 26]

RFC 3366          Advice to Link Designers on Link ARQ       August 2002Full Copyright Statement   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2002).  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.Fairhurst & Wood         Best Current Practice                 [Page 27]

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