RFC 3448/4340/4342 state in their introductory sections that these request "discussion and suggestions for improvements" I would like to raise the following suggestion for improvements: currently the RFCs are elusive and ambiguous with regard to whether `s' in the TCP throughput equation is fixed or not. Presently, reading these documents admits three entirely different interpretations: (1) `s' is fixed (i.e. bona fide constant) (2) `s' is an average which MAY be calculated over four RTT or longer (cf. below) (3) `s' equals the MSS These ambiguities do cause implementers a lot of unnecessary trouble and confusion; and contribute to an ongoing non-existence of a consistent DCCP stack. The problem with (1) is: what kind of application will send fixed size packets all the time? It is a constraint which is helpful for numerical simulation, but becomes a hinderance in dealing with actual applications. Secondly, there is substantial evidence that using (3), while allowing the application to choose its `s' freely, is detrimental: The problem in assuming that `s' may vary and in allowing it to be set to some other (but fixed) value, such as the path MTU minus header/option lengths, lies in required changes to the loss rate estimation algorithm. References which explicitly warn against this are given below; in both [Wid00, p. 21] and [FHP+00, 3.1.2] it is pointed out that this part has taken much discussion and testing; for good reasons, since any changes endanger both efficiency and fairness wrt competing TCP flows. Theorems and numerical examples that attest that inaccuracies in parameter estimation lead to either non-TCP-friendly or suboptimal application behaviour can be found in [RR99]; to be later confirmed later by the much more comprehensive analysis in [VLB05]. These findings were validated and corroborated by Widmer et al in [WBLB04]. This article, as well as the earlier technical report [Vas00], warn against using the MTU as `fixed' packet size parameter of the throughput equation, in such scenarios where the application is allowed to send variable-sized packets. To solve the problem of a non-`fixed' s, Widmer et al introduce a number of changes to the loss estimation algorithm in [WBLB04]. In summary: there are several publications which explicitly warn against clamping `s' to the path MTU / MSS [Vas00, WBLB04,VLB05,RR99] and thereby allowing applications to be liberal with (the length of) what they send. Suggestion for improvement: until resolved by further research, suggest use of EWMA for computing `s' in the througput equation, but not setting `s' equal to MSS. | > One reason for including the packet size s is discussed in | > Section 5.3 of RFC 4342: | > | > "The packet size s is used in the TCP throughput equation. A CCID 3 | > implementation MAY calculate s as the segment size averaged over | > multiple round trip times -- for example, over the most recent four | > loss intervals, for loss intervals as defined in Section 6.1. | > Alternately, a CCID 3 implementation MAY use the Maximum Packet Size | > to derive s. In this case, s is set to the Maximum Segment Size | > (MSS), the maximum size in bytes for the data segment, not including | > the default DCCP and IP packet headers. Each packet transmitted then | > counts as one MSS, regardless of the actual segment size, and the TCP | > throughput equation can be interpreted as specifying the sending rate | > in packets per second." | > | > Thus, an implementation MAY calculate the allowed sending rate | > in bytes per second, using for s the average segment size. | > Or an implementation may use the MSS for s, and in fact calculate | > the allowed sending rate simply in packets per second. This would be | > a purely local implementation decision. Unfortunately the latter choice is not backed up by current research (cf. above) and thus does not appear to be sound. | Why do we have to assume s = MSS? If we actually track the number of | packets this makes the situation far worse and we can't send at a fair | rate. For example if MSS is 1500 bytes and we are actually using 50 | byte packets then we can only send 1/30 th of what we are permitted | under the TCP throughput equation. | | Using MSS is fair if we are using a byte rate per second | implementation but if we do a packet per second implementation (given | X and s act to cancel out) this seems patently wrong. See comments above. References -------------- [RR99] Ramesh, Sridhar and Injong Rhee. Issues in TCP Model-Based Flow Control. Technical report, TR-99-15, NCSU, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, 1999. [VLB05] Vojnovic, Milan and Jean-Yves Le Boudec. On the long-run behavior of equation-based rate control. IEEE/ACM Transactions on Networking (TON), 13(3):568--581, 6/2005. [WBLB04] Widmer, Jörg, Catherine Boutremans and Jean-Yves Le Boudec. End-to-End Congestion Control for TCP-Friendly Flows with Variable Packet Size. ACM SIGCOMM Computer Communication Review, 34(2):137--151, 4/2004. [Vas00] Vasallo, Pedro Reviriego. Variable Packet Size Equation Based Congestion Control. Technical Report, tr-00-008, ICSI, 4/2000. [FK06] Floyd, Sally and Eddie Kohler. TCP Friendly Rate Control (TFRC): the Small-Packet (SP) Variant. draft-ietf-dccp-tfrc-voip-05.txt, 1/3/2006. [HFPW06] draft-floyd-rfc3448bis-00.txt [Wid00] Widmer, Jörg. Equation-Based Congestion Control. Diploma Thesis, Department of Mathematics and Computer Science, University of Mannheim, Germany, 2/2000. [FHP+00] Floyd, Sally, Mark Handley, Jitendra Padhye and Jörg Widmer. Equation-Based Congestion Control for Unicast Applications. ACM SIGCOMM Computer Communication Review, 30(4):43--56, 10/2000.