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Characterization of TCP flows over Large-Fat Networks

Characterization of TCP flows over Large-Fat Networks. Antony Antony, Johan Blom, Cees de Laat, Jason Lee, Wim Sjouw University of Amsterdam 03/02/2003. SW. SW. PC. PC. OC 12, 622Mbps. OC 48, 2.5Gbps. SURFnet Amsterdam Chicacgo 96msec, 2001 - 2002. R. R. PC. PC. OC 192, 10 Gbps.

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Characterization of TCP flows over Large-Fat Networks

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  1. Characterization of TCP flows over Large-Fat Networks Antony Antony, Johan Blom, Cees de Laat, Jason Lee, Wim Sjouw University of Amsterdam 03/02/2003

  2. SW SW PC PC OC 12, 622Mbps OC 48, 2.5Gbps SURFnet Amsterdam Chicacgo 96msec, 2001 - 2002 R R PC PC OC 192, 10 Gbps SURFnet Amsterdam Chicacgo 96msec, iGrid 2002 SW R R SW PC PC 2.4 Gbps DataTag CERN Chicacgo 110 msec, 2002, till now Networks used

  3. Layer - 2 requirements from 3/4 WS L2 fast->slow L2 slow->fast WS fast slow fast high RTT TCP is bursty due to sliding window protocol and slow start algorithm. Window = BandWidth * RTT & BW == slow fast - slow Memory-at-bottleneck = ----------- * slow * RTT fast

  4. (19 of 24) 5000 1 kByte UDP packets

  5. (20 of 25) Self-clocking of TCP high RTT WS L2 fast->slow L2 slow->fast WS fast fast 14 µsec 20 µsec 20 µsec 20 µsec 20 µsec

  6. Forbidden area, solutions for s when f = 1 Gb/s, M = 0.5 Mbyte AND NOT USING FLOWCONTROL Possible BW due to lack of buffer at the bottleneck s 158 ms = RTT Amsterdam - Vancouver OC12 OC9 OC6 OC3 OC1 rtt

  7. Characterising a TCP Flow • Three different phases of TCP • Bandwidth discovery phase • Steady state • Congestion avoidance • Is it due to Implementations, Protocol or Philosophical ?

  8. Receiver can’t cope with burst

  9. TCP Flow fall off from slow start without packet a loss

  10. Modifications • Faster Host/NIC • Pacing out Packets at device level. • HSTCP, using Net100 2.1 • Q length on the Interface (Linux Specific) • IFQ manipulation using Net100 • Changing TXQ using ifconfig

  11. Adding Delay at Device level

  12. NIKHEF -> EVL 618Mbps, 3min

  13. NIKHEF -> ANL 410Mbps, ~Hour over a 622Mbps Path

  14. Throughput vs TXQ Amsterdam to Chicago (Linux) Linux Default (100)

  15. TCP performance comparison.

  16. Near GigE using vanilla TCP! Sunnyvale – Chicago – Amsterdam – CERN – Amsterdam 196 msec Path • 980Mbps Sunnyvale to Amsterdam (196 msec) Jumbo Frames, no congestion, entire path was OC192 • Throughput drops when there is congestion • With HSTCP (Net100) flow recovers from congestion events

  17. Ideal Flow (196 msec, 980Mbps)(Jumbo Frames)

  18. Conclusion • Throughput of a TCP flow depend on Slow Start Behavior • If you get early congestion, your flow will probably not recover before you finish • TCP is not robust. • Is this an Implementation , Protocol or Philosophical problem ?

  19. Future Work • Higher speed single TCP flows in the WAN • Using 10Gig NICs on the end hosts • Use traces captured from wire to examine behavior of TCP. • Closer look at TCP behavior over Lambdas vs. routed networks.

  20. Thanks! URL http://www.science.uva.nl/research/air/

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