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Service Specification and TE for the QBone

Service Specification and TE for the QBone. Ben Teitelbaum <ben@internet2.edu> January 25th, 2001 TEQUILA Workshop on Internet Design for SLS Delivery. How We Got Here (short version). Began chanting: “enable advanced applications,…” Assessed requirements Recommended DiffServ

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Service Specification and TE for the QBone

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  1. Service Specification and TE for the QBone Ben Teitelbaum <ben@internet2.edu> January 25th, 2001 TEQUILA Workshop on Internet Design for SLS Delivery

  2. How We Got Here (short version) • Began chanting: “enable advanced applications,…” • Assessed requirements • Recommended DiffServ • Selected “Premium” service to meet demands of loss/jitter sensitive apps • Charted QBone initiative • Specified QBone architecture • Now proceeding to implement it and tweak the architecture architecture deployment Service Specification and TE for the QBone—Amsterdam (January 25th, 2001)

  3. IntServ/RSVP vs DiffServ IntServ/RSVP • Per-flow service state at every hop • Scalability problems • Focus on multipoint multicast BB BB DiffServ • Abstract/manage each cloud’s resources (BBs) • Packets colored to indicate forwarding “behavior” • Focus on aggregates not individual flows • Policing at edge to get services Service Specification and TE for the QBone—Amsterdam (January 25th, 2001)

  4. DiffServ Overview • Applications contract for specific QoS profiles • Policing at network periphery • “Color” packets with a few simple, differentiated per-hop forwarding behaviors (PHBs) • Indicated in packet header • Applied to PHB traffic aggregates • PHBs + policing rules = range of services • DS domains contract with each other for aggregate QoS traffic profiles • Policing at cloud-cloud boundary • Supports simple, bilateral business agreements • Exploits edge/core distinction for scalability Service Specification and TE for the QBone—Amsterdam (January 25th, 2001)

  5. Example Service #1: Premium • Assurance: like a leased line • PHB: Expedited Forwarding (RFC 2598) • EF in separate queue configured with minimum departure rate • Example mechanisms: strict priority, MDRR, WFQ • Policing: police to a specified peak rate and drop out-of-profile packets; effectively a leaky bucket with depth 1 MTU Service Specification and TE for the QBone—Amsterdam (January 25th, 2001)

  6. Example Service #2: Controlled Load • Assurance: network looks “lightly-loaded” for conforming traffic • PHB: Assured Forwarding (RFC 2597) • 4 independent AF classes • 3 drop preference levels within each class • Example mechanisms: WRED, WFQ • Policing: police to specified rate and burst profile, remarking out-of-profile packets to have higher drop probability Service Specification and TE for the QBone—Amsterdam (January 25th, 2001)

  7. Example Service #3: CoS • Assurance: “better than Joe” • PHB: “drop the lower classes first ” (AF or class selector PHBs) • Policing: could be based on anything (e.g. higher priority for the CEO) • A.K.A.“Olympic” classes of BE service (e.g. Gold, Silver, Bronze) Service Specification and TE for the QBone—Amsterdam (January 25th, 2001)

  8. QBone Architecture • A Service: QBone Premium Service • Built on Expedited Forwarding (EF) (RFC 2598) • Assurance: near-zero loss & low, bounded jitter for marked traffic conforming to a specified peak rate • a.k.a. “virtual leased line”, “virtual wire” • Reservation Setup Protocol • Now: long-lived, manual setup • Proposed: SIBBS protocol between QBone domains; RSVP end-to-end between hosts • QBone Measurement Architecture • Uniform collection of QoS metrics • Uniform dissemination interface Service Specification and TE for the QBone—Amsterdam (January 25th, 2001)

  9. Collection metrics,EFandBE... Active metrics (paths) One-way delay-variation One-way loss Traceroutes e.g. IPPM Surveyors Passive metrics (interfaces) Load EF reservation load Discards (suggested) Link bandwidths (suggested) e.g. OCxMon, RTFM, MIBs QBone Measurement Architecture1/2 ActiveMeasurements MIB-basedstatistics Boundary Router AM node Intra-Domain Premium Path Inter-Domain Premium Path PM node PM node PassiveMeasurements PassiveMeasurements QBone Domain2 QBone Domain1 QBone Domain3 Service Specification and TE for the QBone—Amsterdam (January 25th, 2001)

  10. QBone Measurement Architecture2/2 • Dissemination • Standard URL query syntax: • whois server to learn canonical names for QBone domains, routers, sniffers, etc • label ::= <alphanum> { <alphanum> } • router ::= label"-ROUTER” • probe ::= label"-PROBE” • sniffer ::= label "-SNIFFER” • host ::= router | probe | sniffer • path ::= host "/" host • PHB ::= "BE" | "EF” • metric ::= "LOSS" | "ONEWAY" | "PING" | "IPDV" | "LOAD" | "TRACEROUTE" | "COMMITMENT" | "RESERVATION" • year ::= digitdigitdigitdigit • month ::= "01" | "02" | ... | "12” • day ::= "01" | "02" | ... | "31” • YYYYMMDD ::= yearmonthday • aggregation ::= <unsigned_integer> • prefix ::= “http” | “ftp” | <other> • query ::= prefix ”://" path "/" PHB "/" metric "/” YYYYMMDD "/" metric "/" aggregation Service Specification and TE for the QBone—Amsterdam (January 25th, 2001)

  11. QBone E2E Picture X Kbps of QPS from hither to………..yon CampusA CampusB Campus C CampusD GigaPoPA GigaPoPB Backbone Key Service Specification and TE for the QBone—Amsterdam (January 25th, 2001)

  12. SC2000 Interdomain QoS DemoNovember 6-9, 2000 • Premium service over two wide-area paths • LBNL-ESnet-Abilene-SCinet-Internet2 booth • Stanford-CalREN2-Abilene-SCinet-Internet2 booth • Congestion induced at multiple points • CD-quality interactive audio application shown with/without QoS • ESnet and Abilene QoS capabilities will form nucleus of QBone • SC2000 Network Challenge Winner: Award for "Most Captivating and Best Tuned" Demo Service Specification and TE for the QBone—Amsterdam (January 25th, 2001)

  13. Service Specification and TE for the QBone—Amsterdam (January 25th, 2001)

  14. Abilene QoS... 0 45 15 30 Service Specification and TE for the QBone—Amsterdam (January 25th, 2001)

  15. Abilene TopologyJanuary, 2001 • 47 connectors • 183 participants • 34 connections to 20 peer networks Service Specification and TE for the QBone—Amsterdam (January 25th, 2001)

  16. Developing International Peering STARTAP AbilenevBNSESnetDREN NREN NISN CA*net3SURFnetMIRnetNORDUnetREUNA IUCCAPAN CERNSINETSingarenTanet GEMNETRenater NYC (Telehouse 25 Broadway) DFNINFN DANTE CA*net3 SEATTLE AbileneESnetCA*net3AARnetCERNET NYC (60 Hudson) CERN SINET AbileneESnetvBNS JAnetSURFnetNORDUnet LA Abilene CUDIHARNETSINET Singaren Miami ArgentinaBrazilChileColumbia Brazil Courtesy: Linda Winkler, STAR TAP Service Specification and TE for the QBone—Amsterdam (January 25th, 2001)

  17. Abilene Load Snapshot Service Specification and TE for the QBone—Amsterdam (January 25th, 2001)

  18. APS Participation • Goal: • Make APS a reference implementation of the QBone architecture • Current Participants • MAGPI (U. Penn) • iCAIR • PSC (Penn State) • OARNet (Ohio State) • NASA EOS • Others in the wings • TF-NGN (through DANTE) • MIRnet • Various other international • ANL • UIUC • DOE Science GRID (peering transit network) Service Specification and TE for the QBone—Amsterdam (January 25th, 2001)

  19. Initial Engineering Plan (obsolete) Sweetwater Midland Odessa Pecos Measurement Edge Policing Manual Setup EF Core Forwarding EF Edge Forwarding (MDRR) (BB) Shaping (Surveyor + SNMP + HTTP) (“Firehose” CAR) (Whiteboard + CLI) (MDRR) Automated Setup (GTS) Service Specification and TE for the QBone—Amsterdam (January 25th, 2001)

  20. APS Measurements • Status: • Collecting EF/BE loads and CAR conform/exceed stats • Not currently monitoring IPDV, but Abilene Surveyor nodes now OC-3 connected and operational • Ohio-ITEC hosting APS measurements and QBone-wide whois server • Near Future: • IPDV along edge-to-edge QBone paths • Abilene Surveyor timing improvements • Better NTP • New CDMA timing sources (can't get GPS in Qwest POPs) • Collection of AS-level traffic matrices Service Specification and TE for the QBone—Amsterdam (January 25th, 2001)

  21. Committed Access Rate (CAR) • Classifies traffic based on certain matching criteria (interface, DSCP, or ACL) and meters it to a leaky bucket traffic profile • Depending on metering result, different actions applied (drop, transmit, set DSCP,…) • Syntax: • rate-limit {input | output} [access-group [rate-limit] acl-index] bps burst-normal burst-maxconform-actionactionexceed-actionaction Service Specification and TE for the QBone—Amsterdam (January 25th, 2001)

  22. CAR Experience • For the most part, CAR is exactly what the DiffServ doctor ordered • However, there are some limitations… • PPS performance cost • Quirky constraints on token bucket depths • Not easy to do "virtual trunk" style classification Service Specification and TE for the QBone—Amsterdam (January 25th, 2001)

  23. CAR Limitation 1: Performance • Problem: • On E0 GSR edge cards, lack of ASIC support for CAR results in non-trivial pps hit • Solution: • Really out of our hands; must wait for E3 edge cards, which will have CAR in hardware • Load on access interfaces is still light, so performance hit not a big issue for current participants Service Specification and TE for the QBone—Amsterdam (January 25th, 2001)

  24. Problem: Cisco CAR Doc: “burst-normal Normal burst size in bytes. The minimum value is bps divided by 2000” i.e. burst-normal max (mtu, bps/2000) But, QPS demands token bucket depth of 1 MTU! Implication: bps 3Mbps (for Ethernet MTU) Solution: Again, out of our hands Have raised concern with Cisco and are hoping E3 cards will address this limitation too CAR Limitation 2: Policing Granularity Service Specification and TE for the QBone—Amsterdam (January 25th, 2001)

  25. CAR Limitation 3: Classification • Problem: we want... • Solution: with additional rope,CAR can also classify by qos-group (Cisco proprietary) • Packets assigned to QoS groups through QoS Policy Propagation via BGP (QPPB) ("virtual trunk") • But this... • …is what we have ("firehose") Service Specification and TE for the QBone—Amsterdam (January 25th, 2001)

  26. Abilene Architecture Limitation: “Porous” Edge Problem • DoQoS problem with current architecture • MDRR (EF forwarding) on interior interfaces easily subverted by unpoliced connectors Service Specification and TE for the QBone—Amsterdam (January 25th, 2001)

  27. How to “Crisp” the Edge? • Problem: EF requires that all connectors be policed • Solution: • Short term: Stochastically detect illegal EF traffic with NetFlow and/or OCxMon passive monitoring; gigaPoP would be asked to police • Longer term: Wait for E3 edge cards, deploy them aggressively, and police everywhere • Road not taken:Re-write all non-participant traffic with DSCP 000000 (using PIRC hack); need to pass some DSCP values (reason why coming up…) Service Specification and TE for the QBone—Amsterdam (January 25th, 2001)

  28. Current Engineering Plan Sweetwater Midland Odessa Pecos Manual Setup EF Core Forwarding EF Edge Forwarding (MDRR) Automated Setup (SIBBS? + DSTE?) Shaping (Surveyor + SNMP + HTTP + whois + traffic matrices) Measurement Edge Policing (CAR + QPPB) (Whiteboard + CLI) (MDRR) (GTS) Service Specification and TE for the QBone—Amsterdam (January 25th, 2001)

  29. Future Directions... 0 45 15 30 Service Specification and TE for the QBone—Amsterdam (January 25th, 2001)

  30. QBone Premium Service Outlook • Good News: • DiffServ functionality in most modern routers • Many hosts support QoS signaling • Lots of isolated testbed trials • Some partial backbone implementations • Bad News: • Deploying QPS "requires upgrading the world" • Low demand for QPS (app/net chicken/egg dynamic) • Vendor implementations don’t always live up to hype • Requires a lot of elbow grease, which is in short supply in most campus IT organizations • Bottom line: • Progress can be made towards end-to-end real-time services (QPS), but it is going to be slow Service Specification and TE for the QBone—Amsterdam (January 25th, 2001)

  31. Looking forward... • QBone Premium • Revise/complete architecture (joint work with TF-NGN) • Make measured progress on deployment • Focus on ad hoc QoS solutions where it needed, but deploy in a way consistent with QPS architecture • Big measurement push • QBone measurement architecture • Broader Internet2 measurement push • E2E Performance Initiative • Reap lower-hanging fruits of DiffServ • Internet2 Scavenger Service (I2SS) Service Specification and TE for the QBone—Amsterdam (January 25th, 2001)

  32. Internet2 Scavenger Service • Basic idea • A lower priority class of best-effort • Voluntary marking hints to network that degraded service is OK (think of a "nice" for the network) • Intended uses • Non-time-critical traffic (e.g. server-to-server NNTP, anonymous FTP, network backups) • Bulk data transfers using TCP • Non-mission applications (e.g. Napster, games, etc) • New kinds of distributed applications that attempt to use idle network capacity Service Specification and TE for the QBone—Amsterdam (January 25th, 2001)

  33. I2SS Service Specification • Rigorously defining the E2E I2SS is difficult! • Hoping to define relative to best effort • I2SS traffic indicated by DSCP 001000 • Modification of class selector PHB • Note that the I2SS codepoint has global significance • I2SS domain requirements • Traffic leaving must be marked I2SS, if it entered so • Router requirements (all SHOULDs) • Forward I2SS independently giving it a lower probability of timely forwarding OR forward in same manner as BE • Offer I2SS a very small minimum departure rate • Offer I2SS all used bandwidth Service Specification and TE for the QBone—Amsterdam (January 25th, 2001)

  34. Any Questions? 0 45 15 30 Service Specification and TE for the QBone—Amsterdam (January 25th, 2001)

  35. For more information... • Internet2 Home: • http://www.internet2.edu/ • Internet2 QoS Working Group Home: • http://www.internet2.edu/wg/qos/ • QBone Home: • http://qbone.internet2.edu/ • Abilene Premium Service Home: • http://www.internet2.edu/abilene/qos/ Service Specification and TE for the QBone—Amsterdam (January 25th, 2001)

  36. Service Specification and TE for the QBone—Amsterdam (January 25th, 2001)

  37. What is ''QBone"? • Internet2 effort to build an interdomaindiff-serv testbed • Service objective: Premium/VLL • Other objectives: thorough instrumentation and open dissemination of measurements • Implementation status: embryonic • Abilene: PSC (Penn State), UIUC, iCAIR, OARNet (Ohio State), ANL, MAGPI (U. Penn), NASA (Ames and Goddard) • ESnet: ANL, LBNL • We hope to be a place where experience with QoS SLSs is gained and shared! Service Specification and TE for the QBone—Amsterdam (January 25th, 2001)

  38. SLS Basics SLA SLS Contractual Goop • An SLS is the technical component of an SLA • SLSs are bilateral and private • An SLS is not a reservation • SLSs can be arbitrarily weird; for example... • Per {sourceContinent, destContinent} RTT bounds • All VLL requests under 1 Mbps will be rejected • 100 Mbps VLL to MIT OK with 7 days notice Service Specification and TE for the QBone—Amsterdam (January 25th, 2001)

  39. Our Solution • Define services and reservations; punt on SLSs • Services • Globally well-known and defined • Include many parameters from draft-tequila-sls-00.txt (scope, traffic envelope, performance guarantees, etc) • Reservations • Identify a service ID • Specify service parameters • Treat SLS as black box: can this reservation be extended across the peering; yes or no? Service Specification and TE for the QBone—Amsterdam (January 25th, 2001)

  40. Simple Interdomain Bandwidth Broker Signalling (SIBBS) BB BB BB Control S LS1-2 S LS2-3 H H Data R R R R DS Domain1 DS Domain2 DS Domain3 Service Specification and TE for the QBone—Amsterdam (January 25th, 2001)

  41. SIBBS - Simple Interdomain Bandwidth Broker Signaling • Basic Idea • Simple protocol for one QBone domain to request of another QBone domain an increase or decrease in an aggregate reservation of a globally well-known service • Design Goals • Simple & extensible • New protocol for now; looking at mapping to COPS • Status • Protocol draft nearing completion (see: http://qbone.ctit.utwente.nl/BBroker/bboutline2.html) Service Specification and TE for the QBone—Amsterdam (January 25th, 2001)

  42. BB Conceptual Model • Major Blocks • Intra-domain protocol • Inter-domain protocol • User interface • Network Management Interface • Routing interface • Policy functions • Local resource and configuration data Service Specification and TE for the QBone—Amsterdam (January 25th, 2001)

  43. SIBBS: Basic Reservation Setup Web interface RSVP DIAMETER COPS RYO CLI SNMP COPS Service Specification and TE for the QBone—Amsterdam (January 25th, 2001)

  44. DRAFT SIBBS RAR Service Specification and TE for the QBone—Amsterdam (January 25th, 2001)

  45. Core Tunnels &Virtual Peerings BB BB BB SIBBS SIBBS BB Virtual Peering BB BB Src Aggregate Resevation RTR RTR Dest Service Specification and TE for the QBone—Amsterdam (January 25th, 2001)

  46. Conclusions • Limited diff-serv implementation experiences • Even less experience with diff-serv peering • Need to specify a few internet-wide services • TEQUILA draft could be recast as a framework for specifying services • Formal specification language for SLSs is probably premature • Automated negotiation of SLSs is premature Service Specification and TE for the QBone—Amsterdam (January 25th, 2001)

  47. For More Info... • http://qbone.internet2.edu/architecture.shtml Service Specification and TE for the QBone—Amsterdam (January 25th, 2001)

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