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Computer Networks with Internet Technology William Stallings

Computer Networks with Internet Technology William Stallings. Chapter 09 Integrated and Differentiated Services. Introduction. New additions to Internet increasing traffic High volume client/server application Web Graphics Real time voice and video

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Computer Networks with Internet Technology William Stallings

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  1. Computer Networks with Internet TechnologyWilliam Stallings Chapter 09 Integrated and Differentiated Services

  2. Introduction • New additions to Internet increasing traffic • High volume client/server application • Web • Graphics • Real time voice and video • Need to manage traffic and control congestion • IEFT standards • Integrated services (IntServ) • Collective service to set of traffic demands in domain • Limit demand & reserve resources • Differentiated services (DiffServ) • Classify traffic in groups • Different group traffic handled differently

  3. Integrated Services Architecture (ISA) • IPv4 header fields for precedence and type of service usually ignored • Need to support Quality of Service (QoS) within TCP/IP • Add functionality to routers • Means of requesting QoS

  4. Internet Traffic – Elastic • Can adjust to changes in delay and throughput • E.g. common TCP and UDP application • E-Mail – insensitive to delay changes • FTP – User expect delay proportional to file size • Sensitive to changes in throughput • SNMP – delay not a problem, except when caused by congestion • Web (HTTP), TELNET – sensitive to delay • Not per packet delay – total elapsed time • E.g. web page loading time • For small items, delay across internet dominates • For large items it is throughput over connection • Need some QoS control to match to demand

  5. Internet Traffic – Inelastic • Does not easily adapt to changes in delay and throughput • Real time traffic • Requirements: • Throughput • Minimum may be required • Delay • E.g. stock trading • Jitter - Delay variation • More jitter requires a bigger buffer • E.g. teleconferencing requires reasonable upper bound • Packet loss

  6. Inelastic Traffic Problems • Difficult to meet requirements on network with variable queuing delays and congestion • Need preferential treatment • Applications need to state requirements • Ahead of time (preferably) or on the fly • Using fields in IP header • Resource reservation protocol • Must still support elastic traffic • Deny service requests that leave too few resources to handle elastic traffic demands

  7. ISA Approach • Provision of QoS over IP • Sharing available capacity when congested • Router mechanisms • Routing Algorithms • Select to minimize delay • Packet discard • Causes TCP sender to back off and reduce load

  8. Flow • IP packet can be associated with a flow • RFC 1633 defines a flow as a distinguishable stream of related IP packets that results from a single user activity and requires same QoS. • E.g. one transport connection or one video stream • Unidirectional • Can be more than one recipient • Multicast • Membership of flow identified by source and destination IP address, port numbers, protocol type • IPv6 header flow identifier can be used but is not necessarily equivalent to ISA flow

  9. ISA Functions • Admission control • For QoS, reservation required for new flow • RSVP used • Routing algorithm • Routing decision based on QoS parameters • Queuing discipline • Take account of different flow requirements • Discard policy • The choice and timing of packet discards • Manage congestion and meet QoS

  10. Figure 9.1 ISA Implemented in Router Background Forwarding

  11. http://www.cisco.com/univercd/cc/td/doc/cisintwk/ito_doc/rsvp.pdfhttp://www.cisco.com/univercd/cc/td/doc/cisintwk/ito_doc/rsvp.pdf

  12. ISA Components – Background Functions • Reservation Protocol • RSVP (Resource ReSerVation Protocol) • Admission control • Management agent • Can use agent to modify traffic control database and direct admission control • Routing protocol • Maintaining a routing database

  13. ISA Components – Forwarding • Classifier and route selection • Incoming packets mapped to classes • Single flow or set of flows with same QoS • E.g. all video flows • Based on IP header fields • Determines next hop • Packet scheduler • Manages one or more queues for each output • Order queued packets sent • Based on class, traffic control database, current and past activity on outgoing port • Policing • Determine whether the packet traffic in a flow exceeds the requested capacity. • Decide how to treat the excess packets.

  14. ISA Services • ISA service for a flow is defined on two levels. • General categories of service • Guaranteed • Controlled load • Best effort (default) • The service for a particular is specified by values of certain parameters.  Tspec  Rspec

  15. Token Bucket Traffic Specification • A way of characterizing traffic • Three advantages: • Many traffic sources can be defined by token bucket scheme • Provides concise description of load imposed by flow. Easy to determine resource requirements • Provides input parameters to policing function • Consists of two parameters • R: token replenishment rate • B: bucket size  During any time period T, the amount of data sent cannot exceed RT + B

  16. Figure 9.2 Token Bucket Scheme

  17. ISA Services –Guaranteed Service • Key elements of guaranteed service • Assured capacity level or data rate • Specific upper bound on queuing delay through network • Must be added to propagation delay to get total delay • No queuing losses • I.e. no packets are lost due to buffer overflow • E.g. Real time play back of incoming signal can use delay buffer for incoming signal but will not tolerate packet loss

  18. ISA Services – Controlled Load • Key elements of controlled load service • Tightly approximates to best efforts under unloaded conditions • No upper bound on queuing delay. High percentage of packets do not experience delay over minimum transit delay • Very high percentage delivered. Almost no queuing loss • Useful for adaptive real time applications • Receiver measures jitter and sets playback point • Video can drop a frame or delay output slightly • Voice can adjust silence periods

  19. Differentiated Services (DS) • ISA and RSVP complex to deploy • May not scale well for large volumes of traffic • Amount of control signals required • Maintenance of state information at routers • DS architecture (RFC 2475) is designed to provide simple, easy to implement, low overhead tool • Support range of network services differentiated on basis of performance

  20. Characteristics of DS • Use IPv4 header Type of Service or IPv6 Traffic Class field • No change to IP • Service level agreement (SLA) established between provider (internet domain) and customer prior to use. • DS mechanisms not needed in applications • Build-in aggregation • All traffic with same DS field treated same • E.g. multiple voice connections • DS implemented in individual routers by queuing and forwarding based on DS field • State information on flows not saved by routers

  21. Behavior Aggregate A set of packets with the same DS codepoint crossing a link in a particular direction. Classifier Selects packets based on the DS field (BA classifier) or on multiple fields within the packet header (MF classifier). DS Boundary Node A DS node that connects one DS domain to a node in another domain DS Codepoint A specified value of the 6-bit DSCP portion of the 8-bit DS field in the IP header. DS Domain A contiguous (connected) set of nodes, capable of implementing differentiated services, that operate with a common set of service provisioning policies and per-hop behavior definitions. DS Interior Node A DS node that is not a DS boundary node. DS Node A node that supports differentiated services. Typically, a DS node is a router. A host system that provides differentiated services for applications in the host is also a DS node. Dropping The process of discarding packets based on specified rules; also called policing. DS Terminology (1) Page 329

  22. Marking The process of setting the DS codepoint in a packet. Packets may be marked on initiation and may be re-marked by an en route DS node. Metering The process of measuring the temporal properties (e.g., rate) of a packet stream selected by a classifier. The instantaneous state of that process may affect marking, shaping, and dropping functions. Per-Hop Behavior (PHB) The externally observable forwarding behavior applied at a node to a behavior aggregate. Service Level Agreement (SLA) A service contract between a customer and a service provider that specifies the forwarding service a customer should receive. Shaping The process of delaying packets within a packet stream to cause it to conform to some defined traffic profile. Traffic Conditioning Control functions performed to enforce rules specified in a TCA, including metering, marking, shaping, and dropping. Traffic Conditioning Agreement (TCA) An agreement specifying classifying rules and traffic conditioning rules that are to apply to packets selected by the classifier. Table 9.1 DS Terminology (2)

  23. Services • Provided within DS domain • Contiguous portion of Internet over which consistent set of DS policies administered. • Typically under control of one administrative entity • Defined in SLA (Service Level Agreement) • SLA: Service contract between customer and service provider • Specify packet classes, marked in DS field • Service provider configures forwarding policies at routers • Must measure performance provided for each class • DS domain is expected to provide agreed service. • If destination in another domain, DS domain attempts to forward packets through other domains, requesting appropriate service to match the requested service.

  24. SLA Parameters • Detailed service performance parameters • Throughput, drop probability, latency • Constraints on ingress and egress points • Indicate scope of service • Traffic profiles to be adhered to • Token bucket • Disposition of traffic in excess of profile

  25. Example Services • Qualitative • Service Level A: Low latency • Service Level B: Low loss • Quantitative • C: 90% in-profile traffic delivered with no more than 50ms latency • D: 95% in-profile traffic delivered • Mixed • E: Twice bandwidth of F • F: Traffic with drop precedence X has higher delivery probability than that with drop precedence Y

  26. Figure 9.11DS Field – DS Codepoint

  27. DS/ECN

  28. DS Field Detail • Leftmost 6 bits are DS codepoint • 64 different classes available • 3 pools • xxxxx0 : reserved for standards • 000000 : default packet class • xxx000 : reserved for backwards compatibility with IPv4 TOS • xxxx11 : reserved for experimental or local use • xxxx01 : reserved for experimental or local use but may be allocated for future standards if needed • Rightmost 2 bits unused

  29. Precedence Field xxx000 • Indicates degree of urgency or priority • If router supports precedence, three approaches: • Route selection • Particular route may be selected if smaller queue or next hop on supports network precedence or priority • e.g. token ring supports priority • Network service • Network on next hop supports precedence, service is invoked • Queuing discipline • Use precedence to affect how queues handled • E.g. preferential treatment in queues to datagrams with higher precedence

  30. Type of Service

  31. Router Queuing Disciplines – 1. Queue Service • RFC 1812 • Queue service • SHOULD implement precedence-ordered queue service (strict ordering) • Highest precedence packet queued for link is sent • MAY implement policy-based throughput management procedures other than strict ordering • MUST be configurable to suppress them

  32. Router Queuing Disciplines – 2. Congestion Control Router receives packet beyond storage capacity • Discard it or other packet(s) • MAY discard packet just received • Simplest but not best policy • Should select packet from session most heavily abusing link, given that QoS permits this. • FIFO queues: discard packet randomly selected • Fair queues: discard from longest queue • If precedence-ordered implemented and enabled • MUST NOT discard packet with precedence higher than packet not discarded • MAY protect packets that request maximize reliability TOS • MAY protect fragmented IP packets • MAY protect packets used for control or management

  33. DS Configuration and Operation

  34. Configuration – Interior Routers • Domain consists of set of contiguous routers • Interpretation of DS codepoints within domain is consistent • Interior nodes (routers) have simple mechanisms to handle packets based on codepoints • Queuing discipline • Gives preferential treatment depending on codepoint, i.e. Per Hop behaviour (PHB) in DS specification. • PHB must be available to all routers • Typically the only part implemented in interior routers • Packet dropping rule • Dictate which to drop when buffer saturated

  35. Configuration – Boundary Routers • Include PHB and traffic conditioning • Five elements of traffic conditioning function: • Classifier (BA or MF) • Behavior aggregate classifier (DS codepoint), Multi-field classifier • Separate packets into different classes • Meter • Measure traffic for conformance to profile (within or exceed) • Marker • Policing by remarking codepoints if required • E.g. Remark packets that exceed the profile • Shaper • Delay packets so that packet stream does not exceed traffic rate specified in the profile • Dropper • Drop packets when packet rate exceeds the profile

  36. DS Functions (Fig. 9.13, page 334)

  37. Per-Hop Behavior1.Expedited Forwarding (EF) RFC 3246 • EF PHB is to provide premium service • Low loss, delay, jitter; assured bandwidth end-to-end service through domains • Looks like point to point or leased line • Difficult to achieve • Configure nodes so traffic aggregate has well defined minimum departure rate • EF PHB • Condition aggregate so arrival rate at any node is always less that minimum departure rate • Boundary conditioners Expedited: 加速

  38. Per Hop Behaviour –Explicit Allocation • Superior to best efforts • Does not require reservation of resources • Does not require detailed discrimination among flows • Key elements of explicit allocation scheme: • Users are offered choice of a number of classes • User traffic is monitored at boundary node • Marked in or out, depending on matching profile or not • Inside network all traffic treated as single pool of packets, distinguished only as in or out • When congestion occurs, drop out packets before in packets if necessary • Different levels of service because different number of in packets for each user

  39. PHB – 2. Assured Forwarding (AF) • Four classes defined • A user may select one or more to meet requirements • Within class, packets marked by customer or provider with one of three drop precedence values • Used to determine relative importance when dropping packets as result of congestion

  40. Codepoints for AF PHB Figure 9.11(b)

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