1 / 7

Testing Eyeball Happiness

Testing Eyeball Happiness. Fred Baker. The issue I bring to your attention. In dual stack networks, especially if BCP 38 is in use, opening a session can be slow: Code samples using getaddinfo () read: list = getaddrinfo (…); for each address in list Attempt to open a connection

yonah
Download Presentation

Testing Eyeball Happiness

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Testing Eyeball Happiness Fred Baker

  2. The issue I bring to your attention • In dual stack networks, especially if BCP 38 is in use, opening a session can be slow: • Code samples using getaddinfo() read: list = getaddrinfo(…); for each address in list Attempt to open a connection If success, break end for • That is equivalent to list = getaddrinfo(…); for each address in list sleep (3); end for • Common customer support recommendation: • “turn IPv6 off and you won’t have that problem”

  3. Papers of interest • TCP's Reaction to Soft Errors. • Gont. February 2009 • RFC 5461, Informational • Happy Eyeballs: Trending Towards Success with Dual-Stack Hosts • Dan Wing, Andrew Yourtchenko, October 2010 • draft-wing-v6ops-happy-eyeballs-ipv6 • Opening TCP Sessions in Complex Environments • Fred Baker, October 2010 • draft-baker-v6ops-session-start-time • Testing Eyeball Happiness • Baker, November 2010 • draft-baker-bmwg-testing-eyeball-happiness

  4. A proposed test: configuration • Each LAN is configured with one IPv4 and multiple IPv6 prefixes • Alice and Bob have A and AAAA records in DNS • Routers have appropriate routing • Two routers used to make it easy to null route Alice: Unit under Test Bob: Correspondent DNS Router 2 Router 1

  5. A proposed test: procedure • Repeatedly reconfigure Router 1 with various routing: • Only IPv4 connectivity • Only IPv6 connectivity using each of Bob’s several prefixes • Use various blockages: • Null route without ICMP (black hole) • Null route with ICMP “destination unreachable” • Filter with ICMP “administratively suppressed” Alice: Unit under Test Bob: Correspondent DNS Router 2 Router 1

  6. A proposed test: expected outcome • Alice should be able to open a session with Bob, starting from the DNS lookup, within a predictable interval, regardless of address choice • Not really testing the application – presumed to work in existing networks • Outcomes: • What is that interval? • What is the difference between those intervals Alice: Unit under Test Bob: Correspondent DNS Router 2 Router 1

  7. What I would like from BMWG • Sponsorship if bmwg is so inclined • Advice on how best to construct the test

More Related