internet congestion control with active queue management (aqm) september 4, 2001 seungwan ryu...
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![Page 1: Internet Congestion Control with Active Queue Management (AQM) September 4, 2001 Seungwan Ryu (sryu@eng.buffalo.edu) PhD Student of IE Department University](https://reader035.vdocuments.us/reader035/viewer/2022062714/56649d435503460f94a1ead0/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
Internet Congestion Control with Active Queue
Management (AQM)
September 4, 2001
Seungwan Ryu([email protected])
PhD Student of IE DepartmentUniversity at Buffalo
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Contents
Internet Congestion Control Mathematical Modeling and Analysis Adaptive AQM and User Response Further studies
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I. Internet Congestion Control
Internet Traffic Engineering What is Congestion ? Congestion Control and Avoidance Implicit vs. Explicit feedback TCP Congestion Control Active Queue management (AQM) Explicit Congestion Notification (ECN)
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Internet Traffic Engineering
Measurement: for reality check Experiment: for Implementation Issues Analysis:
Bring fundamental understanding of systems May loose important facts because of
simplification Simulation:
Complementary to analysis: Correctness, exploring complicate model
May share similar model to analysis
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What is congestion ? What is congestion ?
The aggregate demand for bandwidth exceeds the available capacity of a link.
What will be occur ? Performance Degradation
• Multiple packet losses• Low link utilization (low Throughput)• High queueing delay• Congestion collapse
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What is congestion ? - 2
Congestion Control
Open-loop control Mainly used in circuit switched network (GMPLS)
Closed-loop control Mainly used in packet switched network Use feedback information: global & local
Implicit feedback control End-to-end congestion control Examples:TCP Tahoe, TCP Reno, TCP Vegas, etc.
Explicit feedback control Network-assisted congestion control Examples:IBM SNA, DECbit, ATM ABR, ICMP source quench, RED, ECN
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Congestion Control and Avoidance
Two approaches of handling Congestion
Congestion Control (Reactive)• Play after the network is overloaded
Congestion Avoidance (Proactive)• Play before the network becomes
overloaded
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Implicit vs. Explicit feedback
Implicit feedback Congestion Control
Network drops packets when congestion occur
Source infers congestion implicitly• time-out, duplicated ACKs, etc.
Example: end-to-end TCP congestion Control
Simple to implement but inaccurate • implemented only at transport layer (e.g., TCP)
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Implicit vs. Explicit feedback - 2
Explicit feedback Congestion Control Network component (e.g., router) provides
congestion indication explicitly to sources• use packet marking, or RM cells (in ATM ABR
control) Examples: DECbit, ECN, ATM ABR CC, etc. Provide more accurate information to sources But is more complicate to implement
• Need to change both source and network algorithm• Need cooperation between sources and network
component
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TCP Congestion Control
Uses end-to-end congestion control uses implicit feedback
• e.g., time-out, triple duplicated ACKs, etc. uses window based flow control
• cwnd = min (pipe size, rwnd)• self-clocking• slow-start and congestion avoidance
Examples:• TCP Tahoe, TCP Reno, TCP Vegas, etc.
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TCP Congestion Control - 2
Slow-start and Congestion Avoidance
cwnd
TimeRTT
1
2
4
Slow Start
W*
W W+1
RTT
Congestion Avoidance
W*/2
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TCP Congestion Control - 3
TCP Tahoe Use slow start/congestion avoidance Fast retransmit: an enhancement
detect packet (segments) drop by three duplicate ACKs W = W/2, and enter congestion avoidance
TCP Reno (fast recovery) Upon receiving three duplicate ACKs
ssthresh = W/2, and retransmit missing packets W = ssthresh +3
Upon receiving next ACK: W = ssthresh Allow the window size grow fast to keep the pipeline
full
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TCP Congestion Control - 3
TCP SACK (Selected Acknowledgement) TCP (Thaoe) sender can only know about a single lost
per RTT SACK option provides better recovery from multiple
losses The sender can transmit all lost packets But those packets may have already been received
Operation Add SACK option into TCP header The receiver sends back SACK to sender to inform the
reception of the packet Then, the sender can retransmit only the missing packet
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Active Queue Management (AQM) - 1
Performance Degradation in current TCP Congestion Control Multiple packet loss Low link utilization Congestion collapse
The role of the router becomes important Control congestion effectively in networks Allocate bandwidth fairly
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AQM - 2
Problems with current router algorithm Use FIFO based tail-drop (TD) queue management Two drawbacks with TD: lock-out, full-queue
Lock-out: a small number of flows monopolize usage of buffer capacity Full-queue: The buffer is always full (high queueing delay)
Possible solution: AQM Definition: A group of FIFO based queue management
mechanisms to support end-to-end congestion control in the Internet
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AQM - 3 Goals of AQM
Reducing the average queue length: Decreasing end-to-end delay
Reducing packet losses: More efficient resource allocation
Methods: Drop packets before buffer becomes full Use (exponentially weighted) average queue
length as an congestion indicator Examples: RED, BLUE, ARED, SRED, FRED,
….
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AQM - 4 Random Early Detection (RED)
use network algorithm to detect incipient congestion
Design goals:• minimize packet loss and queueing delay• avoid global synchronization• maintain high link utilization• removing bias against bursty source
Achieve goals by• randomized packet drop• queue length averaging
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RED
P
1
maxp
mint
h
maxth K
QWavgWavg QQQQ )1(
Qth
thQththth
thQ
thQ
d
avg
avgavg
p
avg
P
max1
maxminminmax
minmin0
max
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AQM - 5 : BLUE Concept
To avoid drawbacks of RED Parameter tuning problem Actual queue length fluctuation
Decouple congestion control from queue length
Use only loss and idle event as an indicator
Maintains a single drop prob., pm
Drawback Can not avoid some degree of
multiple packet loss and/or low utilization
Algorithm
Upon packet loss if (now - last_update
>freeze_t) Pm = pm + d1 last_update = now
upon link idle if (now - last_update
>freeze_t) Pm = pm - d2 last_update = now
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AQM - 6 : SRED Concept
stabilize queue occupancy use actual queue length Penalize misbehaving flows
Drawbacks P(i)-1 is not a good estimator
for heterogeneous traffic Parameter tuning problem:
Psred, Pzap, etc. Stabilize queue occupancy
when traffic load is high. (When load is low ?)
Algorithm ith arriving packet is compared with
a randomly selected one from Zombie list
Hit = 1, if they are from same flow = 0, if NOT p(i)=hit frequency=(1-)p(i-
1)+Hit p(i)-1: estimator of # of active flows Packet drop probability
Bq
BqBp
BqBp
psred
)6/1(0
)3/1()6/1()4/1(
)3/1(
max
max
)))(256(
1,1min(*
2iPPP sredzap
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AQM - 7 : ARED
Adapt aggresiveness of RED according to the traffic load change adapt maxp based on queue behavior
Operation Increase maxp when avgQ crosses above maxth
Decrease maxp when avgQ crosses below minth
freeze maxp after changing to prevent oscillation
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AQM - 8
Problems with existing AQM Proposals Mismatch between macroscopic and
microscopic behavior of queue length Insensitivity to the change of input traffic
load Configuration (parameter setting) problem
Reasons: Queue length averaging use inappropriate congestion indicator Use inappropriate control function
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Explicit Congestion Notification (ECN)
Current congestion indication Use packet drop to indicate congestion source infer congestion implicitly
ECN to give less packet drop and better performance use packet marking rather than drop need cooperation between sources and network need two bits in IP header: ECT-bit, CE-bit
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ECN - 2
1
TCP Header
ECT CE
1 0IP Header
CWR
0
ECT CE
CWR
2
1 1
0
3
ACK TCPHeader
ECN-Echo
1
4
TCP Header
CWR
1
Source Router Destination
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Contents
Internet Congestion Control Mathematical Modeling and
Analysis Adaptive AQM and User Response Further Studies
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II. Mathematical Modeling and Analysis An Overview
Mathematical Modeling of AQM Window based packet switching and the Internet Mathematical modeling and analysis of AQM
Problems with existing AQMs Problems with existing AQMs Adaptive congestion indicator and control
function
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Overview - 1 Goal of mathematical modeling
See steady state system dynamics Capture main factors influence to performance Provide recommendations for design and operation
Two approaches for TCP Congestion Control Modeling steady state TCP behaviors
• the square root law*, PFTK [Padhye et al., 1998]• assume TD queue management at the router
Mathematical modeling and analysis of AQM (RED)
*: , T: Throughput, p: constant drop rate
pRTT
cT
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Overview - 2
AQM modeling and analysis Analytic modeling and analysis Control Theoretic Analysis Window based modeling and Analysis
Assumptions Poisson assumption for input traffic Fixed number of persistent TCP traffics Steady state window size saturation
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Mathematical Modeling of AQM - 1
Window based packet switching Model (Yang 99) Determine the steady state window size, Ws, of
each flow sS If link j is not congested
If link j is congested
jCs sj
jjSsQn jsj ),(0,0
jCs sj
jjSsQn jsj ),(0,0
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Mathematical Modeling of AQM - 2 Window equation for an individual flow
Since
Limitation of this model Assume infinite buffer size
• No buffer overflow• No packet drop• No queue management algorithm at routers
)()(
jSsRC
QnRW sj
j
jssJj sjsss
)1(0 jj
s
j
sj QCQ
n
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Mathematical Modeling of AQM - 3
s1
S2
SS
AQM Router Destination
Sources
BottleneckLink
1
C
2
S
Min_thK
A simple AQM model
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Mathematical Modeling of AQM - 4
Extend Yang’s Model to AQM model Finite buffer capacity K The router use AQM to control congestion When congested
• Yang’s Model:
• Our Model: )1(, dsss s pC
sss s C ,
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Mathematical Modeling of AQM - 5
Case 1: Tail drop
Packet drop probability Pd:
.w.o0
KQandCif1pd
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Mathematical Modeling of AQM - 6
Case 2: AQM Let Then since
Packet drop prob. Pd:
s sth nQQ min
))(1(C
QRpW d
..0
min,)(
1
wO
QCif
CQR
W
pth
d
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Mathematical Modeling of AQM - 7
Congestion Indicator Input traffic load should be the congestion
Indicator Current AQMs
• Use queue length Q as an alternative• Assume that the input traffic load is fixed in
equilibrium Reason
• can not measure(or estimate) exactly for on line implementation of packet drop function
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Mathematical Modeling of AQM - 8
Packet drop function
Reason• The traffic load fluctuate, NOT stay in
equilibrium• queue length is a function of input traffic
Alternatively:
)(fpd
),( Qfpd
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Problems with existing AQMs
Mismatch between macroscopic and microscopic behavior of queue length
Insensitivity to the input traffic load variation
parameter configuration problem
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Problems with existing AQMs - 2
Mismatch problemInternet Traffic Generation
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
1 4 7 10 13 16 19 22 25 28 31
time
Win
do
w s
ize
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Problems with existing AQMs - 3 Mismatch between macroscopic and
microscopic behavior of queue length
0
5
10
15
20
25
1 6 11 16 21 26 31
Time
Qu
eue
Len
gth
Rho Actual Wq=0.02 Wq=0.1
2.0
1.5
1.0
0.5
0
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Problems with existing AQMs - 4 Insensitivity to the input traffic load
variation
Schemes: I:RED, II:GRED, III:
0.00
0.20
0.40
0.60
0.80
1.00
Traffic Intensities (loads)
Pa
ck
et
dro
p r
ate
0.3
0.5
0.7
0.9
1.1
1.3
: u=0.7 : u=0.45 : u=0.25 : RED : GRED : Scheme III
),( Qfpd
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Problems with existing AQMs - 5
Parameter configuration problem Has been a main design issue since 1993 Many modified AQMs has been proposed
• Verified with simple simulation or simple experiment• good for particular traffic conditions• Real traffic is totally different.
Need adaptive congestion indicator and control function
• Adaptive to input traffic load variation• Avoid congestion NOT based on current state (i,e,. Q)
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Contents
Internet Congestion Control Mathematical Modeling and Analysis Adaptive AQM and User Response Further Studies
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III. Adaptive AQM and User Response
Input traffic load Prediction Adaptive AQM algorithms Adaptive parameter configuration Adaptive User response algorithm
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Input traffic load Prediction
Consider time-slotted model Time is divided into unit time slots, t, t=0,1,… calculate parameters at the end of each slot estimate Qt+1 to detect congestion proactively
• Predict from measured input traffic t-1, t of past two time slots
• Then, predict of next time slot t
ttt QCQ )( 11
1tˆ
1tQ̂
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Adaptive AQM algorithms
Algorithm I: E-RED and E-GRED Enhanced-RED
E-GRED: similar to E-RED
1tth
th1tththth
th1tp
th1t
Q̂max1
maxQ̂minminmax
minQ̂max
minQ̂,0
p
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Adaptive AQM algorithms - 2 Algorithm II:
Use both predicted traffic intensity and current buffer utilization t=Qt/K
represents imminent traffic changes in near future t represents current status of traffic
Possible algorithms:
1tˆ
tˆ
3t21t2t1t1
1t2,ˆ,ˆ
1tˆ
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Adaptive AQM algorithms - 3 Example:
maintain Qindex to impose appropriate drop rate adaptively to traffic load change
Then,
• If t is low and is high: more penalty to incoming packets
• If t is high and is low: more penalty on existing packets
• Only High penalty for both packets when t and are high
1tˆ
1tˆ
1tˆ
1ˆ
,,*
),1(*
tt
tindex
indexd
indexdd
QQwhere
packetsexistingQp
packetsarrivingQpP
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Adaptive AQM algorithms - 4
Algorithm III: E-BLUE
BLUE Algorithm• uses packet drops and link idle for adjusting packet
drop probability• Can not avoid some degree of performance
degradation
Enhancement• Use Virtual lower/upper bound (VL, VU)• Combine predicted queue length with BLUE
1tQ̂
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Adaptive parameter configuration
Adaptive queue length sampling interval t Previous recommendations
• In [Firoiu et al.], minimum RTT was recommended• In [Hollot et al.], static and link speed independent
value was recommended• However, above recommendations were obtained from
assumptions of persistent and fixed N TCP traffics Our recommendation
• The amount of incoming traffic fluctuate with time• Adjust t according to the varying traffic situation (i.e., adjust t according to the amount of input traffic)
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Adaptive parameter configuration - 2
(i+2)(i+1)i(i-1) Time
Q
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Adaptive parameter configuration - 3
Adaptive filtering weight wq
In RED, wq was recommended with 0.002 for long-term (macroscopic) performance goal
Fixed small value of wq shows problems• Parameter setting problem• Insensitivity of control function to the change of traffic• Fairness problem: impose penalty to innocent packets
Need to have adaptive wq to the change of traffic load One possible method:
• Set wq as a function of current queue utilization,
e.g., wq = Qt/C , 0 < < 1
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Adaptive User response algorithm
AQM need work with intelligent source response for better performance
Enhanced-ECN If receive ECN feedback in (t-1)
• If No ECN feedback in t If received ACK > 0 , W= W+M/W + M Else , W= W+M/W
• Else, Continue usual response to ECN feedback
Else, Continue TCP Congestion Avoidance
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Contents
Internet Congestion Control Mathematical Modeling and Analysis Adaptive AQM and User Response Further Studies
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IV. Further Studies
Mathematical Modeling and Analysis Stability and Control Dynamics Alternative Modeling Control Theoretic Consideration
Simulation studies Traffics Performance Metrics
Other approaches of congestion control More about AQM
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(*,p*)
p
Mathematical Modeling and Analysis
Since p=f(,q) ,
Then find equilibrium point (*,p*)
pR
)p1(C)p1()q,(T
P=f()=g(p)
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Mathematical Modeling and Analysis - 2
Alternative Modeling: State dependent service M/M/1/K queueing
model
L=minth, K’=K-minth
(C+pK’-1)CC (C+p1)C
10
LL-1
L-1
KK-1
C+
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Mathematical Modeling and Analysis - 3
Service rates
Steady state probabilities
0i,)C
()pC(
)C
(
Kimin)C
()pC(
mini)C
(
1K
1mini
minmini1j
i
min
1i
i
th,0minmini
1ji
th,0i
i
th
ththth
thth
i
ithi
thi
QK,C
KQmin,pC
minQ,C
S
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Mathematical Modeling and Analysis - 3
Control Theoretic Consideration
ACK (or NACK)
t(1-p)t
Control Functio
n
Queue dynamic
s
RouterBufferS D
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Simulation study
Goal of simulation study See dynamics and performance of our AQM Compare results with other AQM such as RED
Use realistic traffic previous studies has been done with simple
and unreal traffic (fixed number of persistent TCPs)
Generate realistic Internet traffic• Long-lived (FTP) and short-lived (web-like) TCP traffic• UDP traffic: CBR and/or ON/OFF
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Performance Metrics
TCP traffics Network-centric: for aggregate traffic
• Throughput (or goodput)• Packet dropping (marking) probability• Link utilization (or queueing delay)
User-centric: for Individual traffic• goodput (or throughput)• mean response time (RTT)
UDP traffic• individual packet drop probability and its
distribution
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Other approaches of CC - 1: Pricing
Smart-market [Mackie-Mason 1995] A price is set for each packet depends on the level of
demand for mandwidth Admit packets with bid prices that exceed the cut-off
value The cut-off is determined by the marginal cost
Paris metro pricing (PMP) [Odlyzko] To provide differentiated services The network is partitioned into several logical separate
channels with different prices With less traffic in channel with high price, better QoS
would be provided.
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Other approaches - 2: Optimization
Concept Network resource
allocation problem: User problems Network problems
User problem sends bandwidth request with pricie
Network problem allocate bandwidth to each users by solving NLP
User problem Users can be distinguished
by a utility function A user wants to maximize its
benefit (utility - cost)
Network problem maximize aggregate utilities
subject to the link capacity constraints
Then, it can be formulated to a Non-linear programming (NLP) problem
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Other approaches - 3: Fairness Two fairness issues
Fair bandwidth sharing: network-centric Fair packet drop (mark): user-centric
Fair bandwidth sharing Max-min fair [Bertsekas, 1992]:
No rate can be increased without simultaneous decreasing other rate which is already small
provides equal treatment to all flows Proportional fair [Kelly 1998]
A feasible set of rates are non-negative and the aggregate rate is not greater than link capacity and the aggregate of proportional change is zero or negative
provides different treatment of each flow according to their rates
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More about AQM
Responsive (TCP) vs. unresponsive flows (UDP) RED fail to regulate unresponsive flows
UDP do not adjust sending rate upon receiving congestion signal UDP flows consumes more bandwidth than fair share
FRED [Lin & Morris, 1997] Tracks the # of packets in the queue from each flow
maintain logical queues for each active flows in a FIFO queue Fair share for a flow is calculated dynamically unresponsive flows are identified and penalized
Drop packets proportional to bandwidth usage See TCP-friendly website
(http://www.psc.edu/networking/tcp_friendly.html)
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More about AQM - 2
Providing QoS and DiffServ with AQM Try to support a multitude of transport protocol
(TCP, UDP, etc.) Classify several types of services rather than
one best-effort service. Then, apply different AQM control to each
services classes. Examples:
RIO (RED In and Out) [Clark98] CBT (Class based Thresholds) [Floyd1995]
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More about AQM - 3
RIO (RED in and out) [Clark 1998] Separate flows into two classes: IN and OUT service
profile router maintains two different statistics for each service
profiles. Different parameters and average queue lengths Avgs: for IN packet: avgIN, for OUT profile: avgTOTAL
When congested, apply different control to each classes
Pmax_IN
1p
avg
Pmax_OUT
Minth_OUT Maxth_OUT
= Minth_IN
Maxth_IN
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More about AQM - 4 CBT [Floyd 1995]
packets are classified into several classes
maintain a single queue but allocate fraction of capacity to each class
Apply AQM (RED) based control to each class
Once a class occupies its capacity, discard all arriving packets
Drawbacks Fairness problem in case of
changing traffic mix static threshold setting
Total utilization can be fluctuated
Dynamic-CBT [Chung2000] Track the number of active flows
of each class dynamically adjust threshold
values of each class
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More about AQM - 5
Other Issues AQM vs. Tail Drop(TD) Congestion Indicator:
Average queue length vs. Instantaneous queue length Parameter tuning problem:
wq, maxp, static or dynamic sampling
Alternative ways: virtual queue approach EX: [Gibbens 1998], [Kuniyur2000]
Performance with/without ECN mechanism Control objective” Router-centric vs. user-centric
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References S. Floyd et al. “Random early detection gateways for
congestion avoidance control.” IEEE/ACM TON, 1993. RED web page, http://www.aciri.org/floyd/red.html RED for dummies, http://www.magma.ca/~terrim/RedLit.
htm S. Ryu et al. “Advances in Internet congestion control.”
submitted to IEEE comm. Survey & Tutorial, 2001 B. Braden et al. “Recommendations on queue
management and congestion avoidance in the Internet.” IETF RFC2309, 1998.
K. Ramakrishinan et al. “A proposal to add explicit congestion notification (ECN) to IP.” IETF RFC2481, 1999.