Internet Engineering Task Force A. Jain INTERNET-DRAFT F5 Networks draft-amit-quick-start-04.txt S. Floyd Expires: August 2005 M. Allman ICIR P. Sarolahti Nokia / Univ. Helsinki 20 February 2005 Quick-Start for TCP and IP Status of this Memo By submitting this Internet-Draft, we certify that any applicable patent or other IPR claims of which we are aware have been disclosed, or will be disclosed, and any of which we become aware will be disclosed, in accordance with RFC 3668 (BCP 79). By submitting this Internet-Draft, we accept the provisions of Section 3 of RFC 3667 (BCP 78). Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF), its areas, and its working groups. Note that other groups may also distribute working documents as Internet- Drafts. Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any time. It is inappropriate to use Internet- Drafts as reference material or to cite them other than as "work in progress." The list of current Internet-Drafts can be accessed at http://www.ietf.org/ietf/1id-abstracts.txt The list of Internet-Draft Shadow Directories can be accessed at http://www.ietf.org/shadow.html. Abstract This draft specifies an optional Quick-Start mechanism for transport protocols, in cooperation with routers, to determine an allowed sending rate at the start and at times in the middle of a data Jain/Floyd/Allman/Sarolahti [Page 1] INTERNET-DRAFT Expires: August 2005 February 2005 transfer. While Quick-Start is designed to be used by a range of transport protocols, in this document we describe its use with TCP. By using Quick-Start, a TCP host, say, host A, would indicate its desired sending rate in bytes per second, using a Quick Start Request option in the IP header of a TCP packet. A Quick-Start request for a higher sending rate would be sent in a TCP packet. Each router along the path could, in turn, either approve the requested rate, reduce the requested rate, or indicate that the Quick-Start request is not approved. If the Quick-Start request is not approved, then the sender would use the default congestion control mechanisms. The Quick-Start mechanism can determine if there are routers along the path that do not understand the Quick- Start Request option, or have not agreed to the Quick-Start rate request. TCP host B communicates the final rate request to TCP host A in a transport-level Quick-Start Response in an answering TCP packet. Quick-Start is designed to allow connections to use higher sending rates when there is significant unused bandwidth along the path, and all of the routers along the path support the Quick-Start Request. Jain/Floyd/Allman/Sarolahti [Page 2] INTERNET-DRAFT Expires: August 2005 February 2005 TO BE DELETED BY THE RFC EDITOR UPON PUBLICATION: Changes from draft-amit-quick-start-03.txt: * Added a citation to the paper on "Evaluating Quick-Start for TCP", and added pointers to the work in that paper. This work includes: - Discussions of router algorithms. - Discussions of sizing Quick-Start requests. * Added sections on "Misbehaving Middleboxes", and on "Attacks on Quick-Start". Changes from draft-amit-quick-start-02.txt: * Added a discussion on Using Quick-Start in the Middle of a Connection. The request would be on the total rate, not on the additional rate. * Changed name "Initial Rate" to "Rate Request", and changed the units from packets per second to bytes per second. * The following sections are new: - The Quick-Start Request Option for IPv6 - Quick-Start in IP Tunnels - When to Use Quick-Start - TCP: Responding to a Loss of a Quick-Start Packet - TCP: A Quick-Start Request for a Larger Initial Window - TCP: A Quick-Start Request after an Idle Period - The Quick-Start Mechanisms in DCCP and other Transport Protocols - Quick-Start with DCCP - Implementation and Deployment Issues - Design Decisions * Added a discussion of Kunniyur's Anti-ECN proposal. * Added a section on simulations, with a brief discussion of the simulations by Srikanth Sundarrajan. Changes from draft-amit-quick-start-01.txt: * Added a discussion in the related work section about the possibility of optimistically sending a large initial window, without explicit permission of routers. * Added a discussion in the related work section about the tradeoffs of XCP vs. Quick-Start. * Added a section on "The Quick-Start Request: Packets or Bytes?" Changes from draft-amit-quick-start-00.txt: * The addition of a citation to [KHR02]. * The addition of a Related Work section. * Deleted the QS Nonce, in favor of a random initial value for the QS TTL. Jain/Floyd/Allman/Sarolahti [Page 3] INTERNET-DRAFT Expires: August 2005 February 2005 Table of Contents 1. Introduction. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 2. Assumptions and General Principles. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 2.1. Overview of Quick-Start. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 3. The Quick-Start Request in IP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 3.1. The Quick-Start Request Option for IPv4. . . . . . . . . 11 3.2. The Quick-Start Request Option for IPv6. . . . . . . . . 13 3.3. Processing the Quick-Start Request at Routers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 3.4. Deciding the Permitted Rate Request at a Router. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 3.5. Quick-Start in IP Tunnels. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 4. The Quick-Start Mechanisms in TCP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 4.1. When to Use Quick-Start. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 4.2. The Quick-Start Response Option in the TCP header. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 4.3. TCP: Sending the Quick-Start Response. . . . . . . . . . 20 4.4. TCP: Receiving and Using the Quick-Start Response Packet . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 4.5. TCP: Responding to a Loss of a Quick-Start Packet. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 4.6. TCP: A Quick-Start Request for a Larger Ini- tial Window . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 4.7. TCP: A Quick-Start Request after an Idle Period. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 4.8. An Example Quick-Start Scenario with TCP . . . . . . . . 25 5. The Quick-Start Mechanism in other Transport Pro- tocols . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26 5.1. Quick-Start with DCCP. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27 6. Evaluation of Quick-Start . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28 6.1. Benefits of Quick-Start. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29 6.2. Costs of Quick-Start . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29 6.3. Protection against Misbehaving Nodes . . . . . . . . . . 31 6.4. Quick-Start with QoS-enabled Traffic . . . . . . . . . . 33 6.5. Limitations of Quick-Start . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34 6.6. Attacks on Quick-Start . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34 6.7. Simulations with Quick-Start . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34 7. Related Work. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35 7.1. Fast Start-ups without Explicit Information from Routers. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35 7.2. Optimistic Sending without Explicit Informa- tion from Routers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36 7.3. Fast Start-ups with other Information from Routers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37 7.4. Fast Start-ups with more Fine-Grained Feed- back from Routers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38 8. Implementation and Deployment Issues. . . . . . . . . . . . . 38 Jain/Floyd/Allman/Sarolahti [Page 4] INTERNET-DRAFT Expires: August 2005 February 2005 8.1. Implementation Issues for Sending Quick- Start Requests. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39 8.2. Implementation Issues for Processing Quick- Start Requests. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39 8.3. Possible Deployment Scenarios. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40 8.4. Would QuickStart packets take the slow path in routers? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41 8.5. A Comparison with the Deployment Problems of ECN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41 9. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41 10. Conclusions. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41 11. Acknowledgements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42 A. Design Decisions. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42 A.1. Alternate Mechanisms for the Quick-Start Request: ICMP and RSVP. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42 A.1.1. ICMP. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42 A.1.2. RSVP. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43 A.2. Alternate Encoding Functions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44 A.3. The Quick-Start Request: Packets or Bytes? . . . . . . . 45 A.4. Quick-Start Semantics: Total Rate or Addi- tional Rate?. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47 A.5. Alternate Responses to the Loss of a Quick- Start Packet. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47 A.6. Why Not Include More Functionality?. . . . . . . . . . . 48 A.7. A QuickStart Nonce?. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51 Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51 Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52 IANA Considerations. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55 AUTHORS' ADDRESSES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55 Full Copyright Statement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55 Intellectual Property. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55 Jain/Floyd/Allman/Sarolahti [Page 5] INTERNET-DRAFT Expires: August 2005 February 2005 1. Introduction Each TCP connection begins with a question: "What is the appropriate sending rate for the current network path?" The question is not answered explicitly for TCP, but each TCP connection determines the sending rate by probing the network path and altering the congestion window (cwnd) based on perceived congestion. Each connection starts with a pre-configured initial congestion window (ICW). Currently, TCP allows an initial window of between one and four MSS-sized segments [RFC2581,RFC3390]. The TCP connection then probes the network for available bandwidth using the slow-start procedure [Jac88,RFC2581], doubling cwnd during each congestion-free round- trip time (RTT). The slow-start algorithm can be time-consuming --- especially over networks with large bandwidth or long delays. It may take a number of RTTs in slow-start before the TCP connection begins to fully use the available bandwidth of the network. For instance, it takes log_2(N) - 2 round-trip times to build cwnd up to N segments, assuming an initial congestion window of 4 segments. This time in slow-start is not a problem for large file transfers, where the slow-start stage is only a fraction of the total transfer time. However, in the case of moderate-sized web transfers the connection might carry out its entire transfer in the slow-start phase, taking many round-trip times, where one or two RTTs might have been sufficient. A fair amount of work has already been done to address the issue of choosing the initial congestion window for TCP, with RFC 3390 allowing an initial window of up to four segments based on the MSS used by the connection [RFC3390]. Our underlying premise is that explicit feedback from all of the routers along the path would be required, in the current architecture, for best-effort connections to use initial windows significantly larger than those allowed by [RFC3390], in the absence of other information about the path. The Congestion Manager [RFC3124] and TCP control block sharing [RFC2140] both propose sharing congestion information among multiple TCP connections with the same endpoints. With the Congestion Manager, a new TCP connection could start with a high initial cwnd if it was sharing the path and the cwnd with a pre-existing TCP connection to the same destination that had already obtained a high congestion window. RFC 2140 discusses ensemble sharing, where an established connection's congestion window could be `divided up' to be shared with a new connection to the same host. However, neither of these approaches addresses the case of a connection to a new destination, with no existing or recent connection (and therefore Jain/Floyd/Allman/Sarolahti Section 1. [Page 6] INTERNET-DRAFT Expires: August 2005 February 2005 congestion control state) to that destination. Quick-Start would not be the first mechanism for explicit communication from routers to transport protocols about sending rates. Explicit Congestion Notification (ECN) gives explicit congestion control feedback from routers to transport protocols, based on the router detecting congestion before buffer overflow [RFC3168]. In contrast, routers do not use Quick-Start to get congestion information, but instead use Quick-Start as an optional mechanism to give permission to transport protocols to use higher sending rates, based on the ability of all the routers along the path to determine if their respective output links are significantly underutilized. 2. Assumptions and General Principles This section describes the assumptions and general principles behind the design of the Quick-Start mechanism. Assumptions: * The data transfer in the two directions of a connection traverses different queues, and possibly even different routers. Thus, any mechanism for determining the allowed sending rate would have to be used independently for each direction. * The path between the two endpoints is relatively stable, such that the path used by the Quick-Start request is generally the same path used by the Quick-Start packets one round-trip time later. * Any new mechanism must be incrementally deployable, and might not be supported by all of the routers and/or end-hosts. Thus, any new mechanism must be able to accommodate non-supporting routers or end- hosts without disturbing the current Internet semantics. General Principles: * Our underlying premise is that explicit feedback from all of the routers along the path would be required, in the current architecture, for best-effort connections to use initial windows significantly larger than those allowed by [RFC3390], in the absence of other information about the path. * A router should only approve a request for a higher sending rate if the output link is underutilized. Any other approach will result in either per-flow state at the router, or the possibility of a (possibly transient) queue at the router. Jain/Floyd/Allman/Sarolahti Section 2. [Page 7] INTERNET-DRAFT Expires: August 2005 February 2005 * No per-flow state should be required at the router. There are also a number of questions regarding the Quick-Start mechanism that are discussed later in this document. Open Questions: * Would the benefits of the Quick-Start mechanism be worth the added complexity? The benefits and drawbacks of Quick-Start are discussed in more detail in Section 6 on "Evaluation of Quick-Start". * A practical consideration is that packets with known and unknown IP options are often dropped in the current Internet [MAF04]. This does not preclude using Quick-Start in Intranets. Further, [MAF04] also shows that over time the blocking of packets negotiating ECN has dropped, and therefore an incremental deployment story for Quick-Start based on IP Options is not out of the question. Appendix A.1 on "Alternate Mechanisms for the Quick-Start Request" discusses the possibility of using RSVP or ICMP instead of IP Options for carrying Quick-Start Requests to routers. * Apart from the merits and shortcomings of the Quick-Start mechanism, is there likely to be a compelling need to add explicit congestion-related feedback from routers over and above the one-bit feedback from ECN? If the answer to the question above is yes, should we be considering mechanisms that, while more complex, are also sufficiently more powerful than Quick-Start? This is discussed further in Appendix A.6 on "Why Not Include More Functionality". 2.1. Overview of Quick-Start In this section we give an overview of the use of Quick-Start with TCP, used to request a higher congestion window. The description in this section is non-normative; the normative description of Quick- Start with IP and TCP follows in Sections 3 and 4. Quick-Start can be used in the middle of a connection, e.g., after an idle or underutilized period, as well as for the initial sending rate; these uses of Quick-Start are discussed later in the document. Quick-Start requires end-points and routers to work together, with end-points requesting a higher sending rate in the Quick-Start Request (QSR) option in IP, and routers along the path approving, Jain/Floyd/Allman/Sarolahti Section 2.1. [Page 8] INTERNET-DRAFT Expires: August 2005 February 2005 modifying, discarding or ignoring (and therefore disallowing) the Quick-Start Request. The receiver uses reliable, transport-level mechanisms to inform the sender of the status of the Quick-Start Request. In addition, Quick-Start assumes a unicast, congestion- controlled transport protocol; we do not consider the use of Quick- Start for multicast traffic. The Quick-Start Request Option includes a request for a sending rate in bytes per second, and a Quick-Start TTL (QS TTL) to be decremented by every router along the path that understands the option and approves the request. The Quick-Start TTL is initialized by the sender to a random value. The transport receiver returns the rate and information about the TTL to the sender using transport- level mechanisms. In particular, the receiver computes the difference between the Quick-Start TTL and the TTL in the IP header of the Quick-Start request packet, and returns this in the Quick- Start response. The sender uses this information to determine if all of the routers along the path decremented the Quick-Start TTL, approving the Quick-Start Request. If the request is approved by all of the routers along the path, then the TCP sender combines this allowed rate with the measurement of the round-trip time, and ends up with an allowed TCP window. This window is sent rate-paced over the round-trip time, or until an ACK packet is received. Figure 1 shows a successful use of Quick-Start, with both routers along the path approving the Quick-Start Request. In this example, Quick-Start is used by TCP to establish the initial congestion window. Jain/Floyd/Allman/Sarolahti Section 2.1. [Page 9] INTERNET-DRAFT Expires: August 2005 February 2005 Sender Router 1 Router 2 Receiver ------ -------- -------- -------- | Quick-Start Request | in SYN or SYN/ACK --> | | Decrement | QS TTL | to approve | request --> | | Decrement | QS TTL | to approve | request --> | | Return Quick-Start | info to sender in | <-- TCP ACK packet. | | Quick-Start approved, | translate to cwnd. V Send cwnd paced over one RTT. --> Figure 1: A successful Quick-Start Request. Figure 2 shows an unsuccessful use of Quick-Start, with one of the routers along the path not approving the Quick-Start Request. If the Quick-Start Request is not approved, then the sender uses the default congestion control mechanisms for that transport protocol, including the default initial congestion window, response to idle periods, etc. Jain/Floyd/Allman/Sarolahti Section 2.1. [Page 10] INTERNET-DRAFT Expires: August 2005 February 2005 Sender Router 1 Router 2 Receiver ------ -------- -------- -------- | Quick-Start Request | in SYN or SYN/ACK --> | | Decrement | QS TTL | to approve | request --> | | Forward packet | without modifying | Quick-Start Option. --> | | Return Quick-Start | info to sender in | <-- TCP ACK packet. | | Quick-Start not approved. V Use default initial cwnd. --> Figure 2: An unsuccessful Quick-Start Request. 3. The Quick-Start Request in IP 3.1. The Quick-Start Request Option for IPv4 The Quick-Start Request for IPv4 is defined as follows: 0 1 2 3 +----------+----------+----------+----------+ | Option | Length=4 | QS TTL | Rate | | | | | Request | +----------+----------+----------+----------+ Figure 1. The Quick-Start Request Option for IPv4. The first byte contains the option field, which includes the one-bit copy flag, the 2-bit class field, and the 5-bit option number (to be assigned by IANA). The second byte contains the length field, indicating an option length of four bytes. Jain/Floyd/Allman/Sarolahti Section 3.1. [Page 11] INTERNET-DRAFT Expires: August 2005 February 2005 The third byte contains the Quick-Start TTL (QS TTL) field. The sender sets the QS TTL field to a random value. Routers that approve the Quick-Start Request decrement the QS TTL (mod 256). The QS TTL is used by the sender to detect if all of the routers along the path understood and approved the Quick-Start option. The transport sender also calculates and remembers the TTL Diff, the difference between the IP TTL value and the QS TTL value in the Quick-Start request packet, as follows: TTL Diff = ( IP TTL - QS TTL ) mod 256. (1) The fourth byte is the Rate Request field. The sender initializes the Rate Request to the desired sending rate, including an estimate of the transport and IP header overhead. Our current proposal for an encoding function uses only the first four bits of the fourth byte, leaving the other four bits reserved for future use. The encoding function sets the request rate to K*2^N bps, for N the value in the Rate Request field, and for K set to 40,000. For N=0, the rate request would be set to zero, regardless of the encoding function. This is illustrated in the table below. For a four-bit Rate Request field, the request range would be from 80 Kbps to 1.3 Gbps. Alternate encodings for the Rate Request are given in Appendix A.2. N Rate Request (in Kbps) --- ------------------- 0 0 1 80 2 160 3 320 4 640 5 1,280 6 2,560 7 5,120 8 10,240 9 20,480 10 40,960 11 81,920 12 163,840 13 327,680 14 655,360 15 1,310,720 Mapping from the Rate Request field to the rate request in Kbps. Jain/Floyd/Allman/Sarolahti Section 3.1. [Page 12] INTERNET-DRAFT Expires: August 2005 February 2005 Routers can approve the Quick-Start Request for a lower rate by decreasing the Rate Request in the Quick-Start Request. We note that unlike a Quick-Start Request sent at the beginning of a connection, when a Quick-Start Request is sent in the middle of a connection, the connection could already have an established congestion window or sending rate. The Rate Request is the requested total rate for the connection, including the current rate of the connection; the Rate Request is *not* a request for an additional sending rate over and above the current sending rate. If the Rate Request is denied, or lowered to a value below the connection's current sending rate, then the sender can ignore the request, and revert to the default congestion control mechanisms of the transport protocol. In IPv4, a change in IP options at routers requires recalculating the IP header checksum. 3.2. The Quick-Start Request Option for IPv6 The Quick-Start Request Option for IPv6 is placed in the Hop-by-Hop Options extension header that is processed at every network node along the communication path [RFC 2460]. The option format following the generic Hop-by-Hop Options header is similar to the IPv4 format with the exception that the Length field should exclude the common type and length fields in the option format and be set to 2. 0 1 2 3 +----------+----------+----------+----------+ | Option | Length=2 | QS TTL | Rate | | | | | Request | +----------+----------+----------+----------+ Figure 2. The Quick-Start Request Option for IPv6. The transport receiver compares the Quick-Start TTL with the IPv6 Hop Limit field in order to calculate the TTL Diff. (The Hop Limit in IPv6 is the equivalent of the TTL in IPv6.) That is, TTL Diff is calculated as follows: TTL Diff = ( IPv6 Hop Limit - QS TTL ) mod 256. (1) Unlike IPv4, modifying or deleting the Quick-Start Request IPv6 Option does not require checksum re-calculation, because the IPv6 header does not have a checksum field, and modifying the Quick-Start Request in the IPv6 Hop-by-Hop options header does not affect the Jain/Floyd/Allman/Sarolahti Section 3.2. [Page 13] INTERNET-DRAFT Expires: August 2005 February 2005 IPv6 pseudo-header checksum used in upper-layer checksum calculations. Note that [RFC2460] specifies that when a specific flow label has been assigned to packets, the contents of the Hop-by-Hop options, excluding the next header field, must originate with the same contents throughout the IP flow lifetime. This requirement would have to be modified to implement Quick-Start on an IPv6 implementation that uses flow labels, because the Quick-Start Request option would be included in only a small fraction of the packets during a flow lifetime. 3.3. Processing the Quick-Start Request at Routers Each participating router can either terminate or forward the Quick- Start Request. The router terminates the Quick-Start Request if the router is not underutilized, and therefore has decided not to grant the Quick-Start Request. The preferable method for a router to terminate the Quick-Start Request is to delete the Quick-Start Request from the IP header. A less preferable but possibly more efficient method is to simply forward the packet with the Quick-Start Request unchanged, or with the Rate Request set to zero. If the participating router has decided to approve the Quick-Start Request, it does the following: * It decrements the QS TTL by one. * If the router is only willing to approve an Rate Request less than that in the Quick-Start Request, then the router puts the smaller Rate Request in that field of the Quick-Start Request. The router MUST NOT increase the Rate Request in the Quick-Start Request. * In IPv4, it updates the IP header checksum. A non-participating router forwards the Quick-Start Request unchanged, without decrementing the QS TTL. Of course, the non- participating router still decrements the TTL field in the IP header, as is required for all routers [RFC1812]. As a result, the TCP sender will be able to detect that the Quick-Start Request had not been understood or approved by all of the routers along the path. A router that modifies or deletes the Quick-Start Request in the IPv4 header also has to update the IPv4 Header checksum. For IPv6, Jain/Floyd/Allman/Sarolahti Section 3.3. [Page 14] INTERNET-DRAFT Expires: August 2005 February 2005 no checksum updates are needed. 3.4. Deciding the Permitted Rate Request at a Router In this section we briefly outline how a router might decide whether or not to approve a Quick-Start Request. As an example, the router could ask the following questions: * Has the router's output link been underutilized for some time (e.g., several seconds). * Would the output link remain underutilized if the arrival rate was to increase by the aggregate rate requests that the router has approved over the last fraction of a second? Answering this question requires that the router have some knowledge of the available bandwidth on the output link for that output queue. It also requires that the router keep two counters, one indicating the total aggregate Rate Requests that have been approved over the recent interval of time, and one for the total aggregate Rate Requests approved over the previous interval of time. Thus, if an underutilized router experiences a SYN flood, then the router would begin to deny Rate Request requests, even if the router remains underutilized. * If the router's output link has been underutilized and the aggregate Quick Start Request Rate options granted is low enough to prevent a near-term bandwidth shortage, then the router could approve the Quick-Start Request. Section 8.2 discusses some of the implementation issues in processing Quick-Start requests at routers. [SAF05] discusses the range of possible Quick-Start algorithms at the router for deciding whether to approve a Quick-Start request. In order to explore the limits of the possible functionality at routers, [SAF05] also discusses Extreme Quick-Start mechanisms at routers, where the router would keep per-flow state concerning approved Quick-Start requests. 3.5. Quick-Start in IP Tunnels In this section we consider the effect of IP tunnels on Quick-Start. In the discussion, we use TTL Diff, defined earlier as the difference between the IP TTL and the Quick-Start TTL, mod 256. Recall that the sender considers the Quick-Start request approved if the value of TTL Diff for the packet entering the network is the Jain/Floyd/Allman/Sarolahti Section 3.5. [Page 15] INTERNET-DRAFT Expires: August 2005 February 2005 same as the value of TTL Diff for the packet exiting the network. There are two legitimate ways for handling the Quick-Start Request with IP tunnels: (1) The tunnel ingress node does not support Quick-Start, or does not approve the Quick-Start request. The node could strip the Quick- Start Request option from the IP header before encapsulation. Alternately, the ingress node can decrement the IP TTL before encapsulation, while leaving the Quick-Start TTL unchanged, changing TTL Diff. This is the assumed behavior of current IP tunnels that are not aware of Quick-Start. For a tunnel ingress node that does not support Quick-Start, problems with a Quick-Start Request could still occur if a tunnel discards the outer header at egress and does not decrement the inner IP TTL at the ingress. In this case, if both the inner IP TTL and the Quick-Start TTL are decremented after decapsulation at a Quick- Start aware egress, or if neither is decremented at the egress, then TTL Diff would be the same after egress as it was before ingress, so that it would wrongly appear that all the routers in the tunnel had approved the Quick-Start request. Fortunately, we are not aware of tunnel technologies that operate this way; to the best of our knowledge, all tunnels decrement the IP TTL either at the ingress before encapsulation, or at the egress router after decapsulation, thus changing TTL Diff. Even the extreme case when the tunnel ingress is at the TCP sender and the tunnel egress is at the TCP receiver, our assumption is that the IP TTL will be decremented either at the tunnel ingress or at the tunnel egress, changing TTL Diff and preventing the end-nodes from wrongly inferring that the Quick-Start Request was approved by all of the routers along the path. If there are tunnels where the IP TTL in not decremented, perhaps for PPP over SSH, then additional attention will have to be paid to the robustness of Quick-Start in these environments. A Quick-Start aware egress must also make sure that the Quick-Start Request is not approved if for some reason the inner header includes the Quick-Start Request option, but the outer header does not. In this case the egress node should remove the Quick-Start Request option from the inner header after decapsulation. Alternately, the egress node could decrement the Rate Request in the Quick-Start Request option to zero. (2) The tunnel ingress node may choose to support Quick-Start, and locally approve the Quick-Start Request. In this case the IP TTL and Quick-Start option must be copied from the inner IP header to Jain/Floyd/Allman/Sarolahti Section 3.5. [Page 16] INTERNET-DRAFT Expires: August 2005 February 2005 the outer header at the tunnel ingress. Upon decapsulation, the IP TTL and the Quick-Start option in the outer IP header must be copied back to the inner header. If the ingress router decrements the IP TTL in the inner header before encapsulation, or in the outer header after encapsulation, then if the ingress router wishes to approve the Quick-Start request, it must decrement the Quick-Start TTL at the same time, so as not to change TTL Diff. Similarly, if the egress router wishes to approve the Quick-Start request, then when it decrements the IP TTL in the outer header before decapsulation, or in the inner header after decapsulation, it must decrement the Quick-Start TTL at the same time. A tunnel ingress node can support a Quick-Start request without explicitly verifying that the tunnel egress also supports Quick- Start. All that the ingress node has to do is to decrement the IP TTL, but not the Quick-Start TTL, in the inner header after encapsulation. In this case, if the egress node simply discards the outer header at the egress point, TTL Diff will be different after the tunnel egress than it was at the tunnel ingress, and the Quick- Start will not be considered by the end-nodes as having been approved in the network. Thus, the tunnel ingress node on its own can provide protection against egress nodes that might discard the outer header at the egress point. 4. The Quick-Start Mechanisms in TCP This section describes how the Quick-Start mechanism would be used in TCP. We first sketch the procedure and then tightly define it in the subsequent subsections. If a TCP sender, say host A, would like to use Quick-Start, the TCP sender puts the requested sending rate in bytes per second, appropriately formatted, in the Quick-Start Request option in the IP header of the TCP packet, called the Quick-Start request packet. (We will be somewhat loose in our use of "packet" vs. "segment" in this section.) For initial start-up, the Quick-Start request packet can be either the SYN or SYN/ACK packet, as described above. The requested rate includes an estimate for the transport and IP header overhead. The TCP receiver, say host B, returns the Quick-Start Response option in the TCP header in the responding SYN/ACK packet or ACK packet, called the Quick-Start response packet, informing host A of the results of their request. If the acknowledging packet does not contain a Quick-Start Response, or contains a Quick-Start Response with the wrong value for the TTL Diff, then host A MUST assume that its Quick-Start request failed. In this case, host A uses TCP's default congestion control Jain/Floyd/Allman/Sarolahti Section 4. [Page 17] INTERNET-DRAFT Expires: August 2005 February 2005 procedure. For initial start-up, host A uses the default initial congestion window. If the returning packet contains a valid Quick-Start Response, then host A uses the information in the response, along with its measurement of the round-trip time, to determine the Quick-Start congestion window (QS-cwnd). Quick-Start packets are defined as packets sent as the result of a successful Quick-Start request, up to the time when the first Quick-Start packet is acknowledged. In order to use Quick-Start, the TCP host is also required to use rate- based pacing to pace out Quick-Start packets at the rate indicated in the Quick-Start Response. The two TCP end-hosts can independently decide whether to request Quick-Start. For example, host A could sent a Quick-Start Request in the SYN packet, and host B could also send a Quick-Start Request in the SYN/ACK packet. 4.1. When to Use Quick-Start In addition to the use of Quick-Start when a connection is established, there are several additional points in a connection when a transport protocol may want to issue a Rate Request. We first re-iterate the notion that Quick-Start is a coarse-grained mechanism. That is, Quick-Start's Rate Requests are not meant to be used for fine-grained control of the transport's sending rate. Rather, the transport can issue a Rate Request when no information about the appropriate sending rate is available, and the default congestion control mechanisms might be significantly underestimating the appropriate sending rate. The following are the potential points where Quick-Start may be useful: (1) At connection initiation when the transport has no idea of the capacity of the network, as discussed above. (A transport that uses TCP Control Block sharing, the Congestion Manager, or the like may not need Quick-Start to determine an appropriate rate.) (2) After a lengthy idle period when the transport no longer has a validated estimate of the available bandwidth for this flow. Jain/Floyd/Allman/Sarolahti Section 4.1. [Page 18] INTERNET-DRAFT Expires: August 2005 February 2005 (3) After a host has been explicitly informed that a link in the path has gone down and has come back up. In this case, the network has changed in unknown ways and the sender has lost its validated assessment of the appropriate sending rate. (4) After a host has received explicit indications that one of the endpoints has moved its point of network attachment. This can happen due to some underlying mobility mechanism like Mobile IP [RFC3344,RFC3775]. Some transports, such as SCTP [RFC2960], may associate with multiple IP addresses and can switch addresses (and, therefore network paths) in mid-connection. If the transport has concrete knowledge of a changing network path then the current sending rate may not be appropriate and the transport sender may use Quick-Start to probe the network for the appropriate rate at which to send. (Alternatively, traditional slow start should be used in this case when Quick- Start is not available.) (5) After an application-limited period when the sender has been using only a small amount of its appropriate share of the network capacity, and has no valid estimate for its fair share. In this case, Quick-Start may be an appropriate mechanism to assess the available capacity on the network path. Of the above, this document recommends that a TCP MAY attempt to use Quick-Start in cases (1) and (2). Cases (3) and (4) require external notifications not presently defined for TCP or other transport protocols. Case (5) requires further thought and investigation with regard to how the transport protocol could detect it was in a situation that would warrant transmitting a Quick-Start Rate Request. Section 4.6 discusses some of the issues of using Quick-Start at connection initiation, and Section 4.7 discusses issues that arise when Quick-Start is used to request a larger sending rate after an idle period. 4.2. The Quick-Start Response Option in the TCP header TCP's Quick-Start Response option is defined as follows: Jain/Floyd/Allman/Sarolahti Section 4.2. [Page 19] INTERNET-DRAFT Expires: August 2005 February 2005 0 1 2 3 +----------+----------+----------+----------+ | Kind | Length=4 | Rate | TTL | | | | Request | Diff | +----------+----------+----------+----------+ Figure 2. The Quick-Start Response option in the TCP header. The first byte of the Quick-Start Response option contains the option kind, identifying the TCP option (to be assigned by IANA). The second byte of the Quick-Start Response option contains the option length in bytes. The length field is set to four bytes. The third byte of the Quick-Start Response option contains the allowed Rate Request, formatted as in the Quick-Start Request option. The fourth byte of the TCP option contains the TTL Diff. The TTL Diff contains the difference between the IP TTL and QS TTL fields in the received Quick-Start request packet, as calculated in equation (1). 4.3. TCP: Sending the Quick-Start Response An end host, say host B, that receives a TCP packet containing a Quick-Start Request passes the Quick-Start Request, along with the value in the IP TTL field, to the receiving TCP layer. If the TCP host is willing to permit the Quick-Start Request, then a Quick-Start Response option is included in the TCP header of the corresponding acknowledgement packet. The Rate Request in the Quick-Start Response option is set to the received value of the Rate Request in the Quick-Start Request option, or to a lower value if the TCP receiver is only willing to allow a lower Rate Request. The TTL Diff in the Quick-Start Response is set to the difference between the IP TTL value and the QS TTL value as given in equation (1). When the Quick-Start Response is being sent on the SYN/ACK, in response to a Quick-Start Request on the SYN, then the Quick-Start Response will be resent if the SYN/ACK is retransmitted. When the Quick-Start Response is being sent on an ACK, for example in response to the Quick-Start Request on the SYN/ACK, then the Quick- Start Response MUST be resent on data packets until that TCP host receives an acknowledgement from the other endpoint. Jain/Floyd/Allman/Sarolahti Section 4.3. [Page 20] INTERNET-DRAFT Expires: August 2005 February 2005 4.4. TCP: Receiving and Using the Quick-Start Response Packet A TCP host, say TCP host A, that sent a Quick-Start Request and receives an answering Quick-Start Response in the acknowledgement first checks that the Quick-Start Response is valid. The Quick- Start Response is valid if it contains the correct value for the TTL Diff, and an equal or lesser value for the Rate Request than that transmitted in the Quick-Start Request. If this check is not successful, then the Quick-Start request failed, and the TCP host MUST use the default TCP congestion window that it would have used without Quick-Start. If the checks of the TTL Diff and the Rate Request are successful, then the TCP host sets its Quick-Start congestion window (in terms of MSS-sized segments), QS-cwnd, as follows: QS-cwnd = (R * T) / (MSS + H) (2) where R the Rate Request in bytes per second, T the measured round- trip time in seconds, and H the estimated header size in bytes (e.g., 40 bytes). [Derivation: the sender gets R bytes per second including packet headers, but only R*MSS/(MSS+H) bytes per second, or equivalently R*T*MSS/(MSS+H) bytes per round-trip time, of application data.] The TCP host sets its congestion window cwnd to QS-cwnd only if QS-cwnd is greater than cwnd; otherwise QS-cwnd is ignored. If QS-cwnd is used, the TCP host sets a flag that it is in Quick-Start mode, and while in Quick-Start mode the TCP sender uses rate-based pacing, pacing out Quick-Start packets at the specified Rate Request. Quick-Start mode ends when the TCP host receives an ACK for one of the Quick-Start packets. Because the Quick-Start request packet might not have used the fast path in routers, the round-trip time measurement for the Quick-Start request might be unnecessarily large. If the congestion window has not been fully used when the first ack arrives ending the Quick- Start mode, then the congestion window is decreased to the amount that has actually been used so far. This should address the problem of an overly-large congestion window from an overly-large measurement of the round-trip time. If the Quick-Start mode ends with all Quick-Start packets being successfully acknowledged, the TCP sender returns to using the default congestion control mechanisms. After all the packets are acknowledged from a Quick-Start request for an initial window, for example, the TCP sender remains in slow-start, if permitted by ssthresh, continuing to increase its congestion window rather aggressively from one round-trip time to the next. To add robustness, the TCP sender is required to use Limited Slow-Start Jain/Floyd/Allman/Sarolahti Section 4.4. [Page 21] INTERNET-DRAFT Expires: August 2005 February 2005 along with Quick-Start. With Limited Slow-Start, the TCP sender limits the number of packets by which the congestion window is increased for one window of data during slow-start [F04]. 4.5. TCP: Responding to a Loss of a Quick-Start Packet For TCP, we have defined a ``Quick-Start packet'' as one of the packets sent in the window immediately following a successful Quick- Start request. After detecting the loss of a Quick-Start packet, TCP MUST revert to the default congestion control procedures that would have been used if the Quick-Start request had not been approved. For example, if Quick-Start is used for setting the initial window, and a packet from the initial window is lost, then the TCP sender must then slow-start with the default initial window that would have been used if Quick-Start had not been used. In addition to reverting to the default congestion control mechanisms, the sender must take into account that the Quick-Start congestion window was too large. Thus, the sender should decrease ssthresh to at most half the number of Quick-Start packets that were successfully transmitted. Section A.5 discusses possible alternatives in responding to the loss of a Quick-Start packet. 4.6. TCP: A Quick-Start Request for a Larger Initial Window Some of the issues of using Quick-Start are related to the specific scenario in which Quick-Start is used. This section discusses the following issues that arise when Quick-Start is used by TCP to request a larger initial window: (1) determining the rate to request; (2) interactions with Path MTU Discovery; and (3) Quick- Start request packets that are eaten by middleboxes. (1) Determining the rate to request: As discussed in [SAF05], the data sender does not necessarily have information about the size of the data transfer at connection initiation; for example, in request-response protocols such as HTTP, the server doesn't know the size or name of the requested object during connection initiation. [SAF05] explores some of the performance implications of overly-large Quick-Start requests, and discusses heuristics that end-nodes could use to size their requests appropriately. In the absence of other information, there could be a configured value for the Quick-Start Rate Request. Quick-Start will be more effective if Quick-Start requests are not larger than necessary; every Quick-Start request that is approved but not used takes away from the bandwidth pool available for granting successive Quick- Jain/Floyd/Allman/Sarolahti Section 4.6. [Page 22] INTERNET-DRAFT Expires: August 2005 February 2005 Start requests. Therefore, it is recommended that the request for the initial sending rate be somewhat conservative, in order to improve the chances for more Quick-Start requests to be approved. (2) Interactions with Path MTU Discovery: A second issue when Quick-Start is used to request a large initial window concerns the interactions between the large initial window and Path MTU Discovery. Some of the issues are discussed in RFC 3390: "When larger initial windows are implemented along with Path MTU Discovery [RFC1191], alternatives are to set the "Don't Fragment" (DF) bit in all segments in the initial window, or to set the "Don't Fragment" (DF) bit in one of the segments. It is an open question as to which of these two alternatives is best." Unfortunately, the sender doesn't necessarily know the Path MTU when it sends packets in the initial window. The sender should be conservative in the packet size used. Sending a large number of overly-large packets with the DF bit set is not desirable, but sending a large number of packets that are fragmented in the network can be equally undesirable. One possibility would be for the sender to delay using the approved rate request for one round-trip time, while it sends a small number of packets to do Path MTU Discovery. While delaying the use of an approved rate request indefinitely is not acceptable, delaying the use for one round-trip time is within the bounds of acceptable behavior. In the future, it might be possible for the TCP SYN packet to do a probe about the Path MTU. For example, [W03] has proposed an IP Option that queries routers for their MTU before starting a Path MTU Discovery process. (3) Quick-Start request packets that are eaten by middleboxes: It is always possible for a TCP SYN packet carrying a Quick-Start request to be dropped in the network due to congestion, or to be blocked due to interactions with middleboxes. Measurement studies of interactions between transport protocols and middleboxes [MAF04] show that for 70% of the web servers investigated, no connection is established if the TCP SYN packet contains an unknown IP option (and for 43% of the web servers, no connection is established if the TCP SYN packet contains an IP TimeStamp Option). In both cases, this is presumably due to middleboxes along that path. If the TCP sender doesn't receive a response to the SYN or SYN/ACK Jain/Floyd/Allman/Sarolahti Section 4.6. [Page 23] INTERNET-DRAFT Expires: August 2005 February 2005 packet containing the Quick-Start Request, then the TCP sender SHOULD resend the SYN or SYN/ACK packet without the Quick-Start Request. Similarly, if the TCP sender receives a TCP reset in response to the SYN or SYN/ACK packet containing the Quick-Start Request, then the TCP sender SHOULD resend the SYN or SYN/ACK packet without the Quick-Start Request [RFC3360]. While RFC 1122 and 2988 recommend that the sender should set the initial RTO to three seconds, many TCP implementations set the initial RTO to one second. For a TCP SYN packet sent with a Quick- Start request, we recommend an RTO of one second, so that the sender can retransmit the SYN packet reasonably promptly if the original TCP SYN packet is dropped by a middlebox in the network. We note that if the TCP SYN packet is using the IP Quick-Start Option for a Quick-Start request, and it also using bits in the TCP header to negotiate ECN-capability with the TCP host at the other end, then the drop of a TCP SYN packet could be due to congestion, to a middlebox dropping the packet because of the IP Option, or because of a middlebox dropping the packet because of the information in the TCP header negotiating ECN. In this case, the sender could resend the dropped packet without either the Quick- Start or the ECN requests. Alternately, the sender could resend the dropped packet with only the ECN request in the TCP header, resending the TCP SYN packet without either the Quick-Start or the ECN requests if the second TCP SYN packet is dropped. The second choice seems reasonable to us, given that a TCP SYN packet today is more likely to be blocked due to IP Options than due to an ECN request in the TCP header. 4.7. TCP: A Quick-Start Request after an Idle Period This section discusses the following issues that arise when Quick- Start is used by TCP to request a larger window after an idle period: (1) determining the rate to request; and (2) the response if Quick-Start packets are dropped; (1) Determining the rate to request: After an idle period, an easy rule of thumb would be for the TCP sender to determine the largest congestion window that the TCP connection achieved since the last packet drop, to translate this congestion window to a sending rate, and use this rate in the Quick- Start request after the idle period. If the request is granted, then the sender essentially restarts with its old congestion window from before the idle period. The sender should not use Quick-Start if the idle period has been Jain/Floyd/Allman/Sarolahti Section 4.7. [Page 24] INTERNET-DRAFT Expires: August 2005 February 2005 less than an RTO, and the congestion window has not decayed down to less than half of its value at the start of the idle period. (2) Response if Quick-Start packets are dropped: If Quick-Start packets are dropped after an idle period, then the sender should revert to half of the Quick-Start window, or to the congestion window that the sender would have used if the Quick-Start request had not been approved, whichever is smaller. A technical question is whether a Quick-Start Request sent in the middle of a connection could carry a data payload. For example, for TCP, a Quick-Start Request in the middle of a connection could carry a data payload, or could be in a TCP acknowledgement packet. Is there any advice in this regard that should be offered to the transport protocol? 4.8. An Example Quick-Start Scenario with TCP The following is an example scenario in the case when both hosts request Quick-Start for setting their initial windows: * The TCP SYN packet from Host A contains a Quick-Start Request in the IP header. * Routers along the forward path modify the Quick-Start Request as appropriate. * Host B receives the Quick-Start Request in the SYN packet, and calculates the TTL Diff. If Host B approves the Quick-Start Request, then Host B sends a Quick-Start Response in the TCP header of the SYN/ACK packet. Host B also sends a Quick-Start Request in the IP header of the SYN/ACK packet. * Routers along the reverse path modify the Quick-Start Request as appropriate. * Host A receives the Quick-Start Response in the SYN/ACK packet, and checks the TTL Diff and Rate Request for validity. If they are valid, then Host A sets its initial congestion window appropriately, and sets up rate-based pacing to be used with the initial window. If the Quick-Start Response is not valid, then Host A uses TCP's default initial window. Host A also calculates the TTL Diff for the Quick-Start Request in the incoming SYN/ACK packet, and sends a Quick-Start Response in the TCP header of the ACK packet. Jain/Floyd/Allman/Sarolahti Section 4.8. [Page 25] INTERNET-DRAFT Expires: August 2005 February 2005 * Host A repeats sending the Quick-Start Response in data packets at least once per round-trip time until it receives an acknowledgement from Host B for one of those data packets. * Host B receives the Quick-Start Response in an ACK packet, and checks the TTL Diff and Rate Request for validity. If the Quick- Start Response is valid, then Host B sets its initial congestion window appropriately, and sets up rate-based pacing to be used with its initial window. If the Quick-Start Response is not valid, then Host B uses TCP's default initial window. 5. The Quick-Start Mechanism in other Transport Protocols The section earlier specified the use of Quick-Start in TCP. In this section, we generalize this to give guidelines for the use of Quick-Start with other transport protocols. We also discuss briefly how Quick-Start could be specified for other transport protocols. The general guidelines for Quick-Start in transport protocols are as follows: * Quick-Start is only specified for unicast transport protocols with appropriate congestion control mechanisms. * A transport-level mechanism is needed for the Quick-Start response from the receiver to the sender. This response contains the Rate Request and the TTL Diff. The Quick-Start response should ideally be sent reliably. * The sender checks the validity of the Quick-Start response. * The sender has an estimate of the round-trip time, and translates the Quick-Start response into an allowed window or allowed sending rate. The sender starts sending Quick-Start packets, rate-paced out at the approved sending rate. * After the sender receives the first acknowledgement packet for a Quick-Start packet, no more Quick-Start packets are sent. The sender adjusts its current congestion window or sending rate to be consistent with the actual amount of data that was transmitted in that round-trip time. * When the last Quick-Start packet is acknowledged, the sender continues using the standard congestion control mechanisms of that protocol. * If one of the Quick-Start packets is lost, then the sender reverts Jain/Floyd/Allman/Sarolahti Section 5. [Page 26] INTERNET-DRAFT Expires: August 2005 February 2005 to the standard congestion control method of that protocol that would have been used if the Quick-Start request had not been approved. In addition, the sender takes into account the information that the Quick-Start congestion window was too large (e.g., by decreasing ssthresh in TCP). 5.1. Quick-Start with DCCP DCCP is a new transport protocol for congestion-controlled, unreliable datagrams, intended for applications such as streaming media, Internet telephony, and on-line games. In DCCP, the application has a choice of congestion control mechanisms, with the currently-specified Congestion Control Identifiers (CCIDs) being CCID 2 for TCP-like congestion control, and CCID 3 for TFRC, an equation-based form of congestion control. We refer the reader to [KHF04] for a more detailed description of DCCP, and of the congestion control mechanisms. Because CCID 3 uses a rate-based congestion control mechanism, it raises some new issues about the use of Quick-Start with transport protocols. In this document we don't attempt to specify the use of Quick-Start with DCCP. However, we do discuss some of the issues that might arise. In considering the use of Quick-Start with CCID 3 for requesting a higher initial sending rate, the following questions arise: (1) how does the sender respond if a Quick-Start packet is dropped; and (2) when does the sender determine that there has been no feedback from the receiver, and reduce the sending rate? (1) How does the sender respond if a Quick-Start packet is dropped: As in TCP, if an initial Quick-Start packet is dropped, the CCID 3 sender should revert to the congestion control mechanisms it would have used if the Quick-Start request had not been approved. (2) When does the sender decide there has been no feedback from the receiver: Unlike TCP, CCID 3 does not use acknowledgements for every packet, or for every other packet. In contrast, the CCID 3 receiver sends feedback to the sender roughly once per round-trip time. In CCID 3, the allowed sending rate is halved if no feedback is received from the receiver in at least four round-trip times (when the sender is sending at least one packet every two round-trip times). When a Quick-Start request is used, it would seem prudent to use a smaller time interval, e.g., to reduce the sending rate if no feedback is received from the receiver in at least two round-trip times. Jain/Floyd/Allman/Sarolahti Section 5.1. [Page 27] INTERNET-DRAFT Expires: August 2005 February 2005 The question also arises of how the sending rate should be reduced after a period of no feedback from the receiver. The default CCID 3 response of halving the sending rate might not be sufficient; an alternative would be to reduce the sending rate to the sending rate that would have been used if no Quick-Start request had been approved. That is, if a CCID 3 sender uses a Quick-Start request, special rules might be required to handle the sender's response to a period of no feedback from the receiver regarding the Quick-Start packets. Similarly, in considering the use of Quick-Start with CCID 3 for requesting a higher sending rate after an idle period, the following questions arise: (1) what rate does the sender request; (2) what is the response to a loss; and (3) when does the sender determine that there has been no feedback from the receiver, and the sending rate must be reduced? (1) What rate does the sender request: As in TCP, there is a straightforward answer to the rate request that the CCID 3 sender should use in requesting a higher sending rate after an idle period. The sender knows the current loss event rate, either from its own calculations or from feedback from the receiver, and can determine the sending rate allowed by that loss event rate. This is the upper bound on the sending rate that should be requested by the CCID 3 sender. A Quick-Start request is useful with CCID 3 when the sender is coming out of an idle or underutilized period, because in standard operation CCID 3 does not allow the sender to send more that twice as fast as the receiver has reported received in the most recent feedback message. (2) What is the response to loss: The response to the loss of Quick-Start packets should be to return to the sending rate that would have been used if Quick-Start had not been requested. (3) When does the sender decide there has been no feedback from the receiver: As in the case of the initial sending rate, it would seem prudent to reduce the sending rate if no feedback is received from the receiver in at least two round-trip times. It seems likely that in this case, the sending rate should be reduced to the sending rate that would have been used if no Quick-Start request had been approved. 6. Evaluation of Quick-Start Jain/Floyd/Allman/Sarolahti Section 6. [Page 28] INTERNET-DRAFT Expires: August 2005 February 2005 6.1. Benefits of Quick-Start The main benefit of Quick-Start is the faster start-up for the transport connection itself. For a small TCP transfer of one to five packets, Quick-Start is probably of very little benefit; at best, it might shorten the connection lifetime from three to two round-trip times (including the round-trip time for connection establishment). Similarly, for a very large transfer, where the slow-start phase would have been only a small fraction of the connection lifetime, Quick-Start would be of limited benefit. Quick-Start would not significantly shorten the connection lifetime, but it might eliminate or at least shorten the start-up phase. However, for moderate-sized connections in a well-provisioned environment, Quick-Start could allow the entire transfer of M packets to be completed in one round-trip time (after the initial round-trip time for the SYN exchange), instead of the log_2(M)-2 round-trip times that it would normally for the data transfer, in an uncongested environments (assuming an initial window of four packets). 6.2. Costs of Quick-Start This section discusses the costs of Quick-Start for the connection and for the routers along the path. The cost of having a Quick-Start packet dropped: For the sender the biggest risk in using Quick-Start lies in the possibility of suffering from congestion-related losses of the Quick-Start packets. This should be an unlikely situation because routers are expected to approve Quick-Start Requests only when they are significantly underutilized. However, a transient increase in cross-traffic in one of the routers, a sudden decrease in available bandwidth on one of the links, or congestion at a non-IP queue could result in packet losses even when the Quick-Start Request was approved by all of the routers along the path. If a Quick-Start packet is dropped, then the sender reverts to the congestion control mechanisms it would have used if the Quick-Start request has not been approved, so the performance cost to the connection of having a Quick-Start packet dropped is small, compared to the performance without Quick-Start. (On the other hand, the performance difference between Quick-Start with a Quick-Start packet dropped and Quick- Start with no Quick-Start packet dropped can be considerable.) Added complexity at routers: The main cost of Quick-Start at routers concerns the costs of added complexity. The added complexity at the end-points is moderate, and Jain/Floyd/Allman/Sarolahti Section 6.2. [Page 29] INTERNET-DRAFT Expires: August 2005 February 2005 might easily be outweighed by the benefit of Quick-Start to the end hosts. The added complexity at the routers is also somewhat moderate; it involves estimating the unused bandwidth on the output link over the last several seconds, processing the Quick-Start request, and keeping a counter of the aggregate Quick-Start rate approved over the last fraction of a second. However, this added complexity at routers adds to the development cycle, and could prevent the addition of other competing functionality to routers. Thus, careful thought would have to be given to the addition of Quick-Start to IP. The slow path in routers: Another drawback of Quick-Start is that packets containing the Quick-Start Request message might not take the fast path in routers. This would mean extra delay for the end hosts, and extra processing burden for the routers. This extra burden is mitigated somewhat by the following factors: only very few packets would carry the Quick- Start Request option; very small flows of, say, one to five packets would receive little benefit from Quick-Start, and presumably would not use the Quick-Start Request; flows from end hosts with low- bandwidth access links would receive little benefit from Quick- Start, and hopefully could be configured not to use the Quick-Start Request. In addition, in typical environments where most of the packets belong to large flows, the burden of the Quick-Start Option on routers would be considerably reduced. Nevertheless, it is still conceivable, in the worst case, that up to 10% of the packets were Quick-Start packets, and this could slow down the processing of Quick-Start packets in routers considerably. In particular, because many Quick-Start packets are likely to be TCP SYN or SYN/ACK packets, the slow processing of Quick-Start packets would slow down the establishment of the corresponding TCP connections. Multiple paths: One limitation of Quick-Start is that it presumes that the data packets of a connection will follow the same path as the Quick-Start request packet. If this is not the case, then the connection could be sending the Quick-Start packets, at the approved rate, along a path that was already congested, or that became congested as a result of this connection. This is, however, similar to what would happen if the connection's path was changed in the middle of the connection, when the connection had already established the allowed initial rate. Non-IP queues: A problem of any mechanism for feedback from routers at the IP level is that there can be queues and bottlenecks in the end-to-end path that are not in IP-level routers. As an example, these include queues in layer-two Ethernet or ATM networks. One possibility would Jain/Floyd/Allman/Sarolahti Section 6.2. [Page 30] INTERNET-DRAFT Expires: August 2005 February 2005 be that an IP-level router adjacent to such a non-IP queue or bottleneck would be configured to reject Quick-Start requests if that was appropriate. 6.3. Protection against Misbehaving Nodes In this section we discuss the protection against receivers lying about the Quick-Start Request, and against other possible misbehaviors regarding Quick-Start. First, we note that it is not necessarily in the receiver's interest to lie about the Quick-Start Request. If the sender sends at too-high of an initial rate, and has a packet dropped, this does not improve the performance of the connection, relative to the case when the Quick-Start Request was not approved. Receivers lying about whether the request was approved: The use of the Quick-Start TTL initialized by the sender to a random value makes it difficult for the receiver to lie to the sender about whether the request has been approved by all of the routers along the path. If a router that understands the Quick-Start Request deletes the Request, or zeroes the QS TTL in the request, then the chances of a downstream router or misbehaving receiver guessing the value of the QS TTL is at most 1/256. In particular, if a router deletes the Quick-Start Request, it is unlikely that the receiver would be able to send a valid Quick-Start Response back to the sender. Similarly, if there are routers along the path that do not understand or approve of the Quick-Start Request, and that forward the Quick-Start Request unchanged, it would be not be easy for a downstream router or the receiver to cheat and modify the QS TTL field so that the request was considered valid, because the downstream routers do not know the initial value for the QS TTL. Receivers lying about the rate request: The receiver could lie to the sender about the Rate Request in the received Quick-Start Request. However, the receiver doesn't know the Rate Request in the original Quick-Start Request sent by the sender, and a higher Rate Request reported by the receiver will only be considered valid by the sender if it is no higher than the Rate Request originally requested by the sender. This limits the ability of the receiver to cheat. For example, if the sender sends a Quick- Start Request with an Rate Request of X, and the receiver reports receiving a Quick-Start Request with an Rate Request of Y > X, then the sender knows that either some router along the path malfunctioned (increasing the Rate Request inappropriately), or the receiver is lying about the Rate Request in the received packet. Jain/Floyd/Allman/Sarolahti Section 6.3. [Page 31] INTERNET-DRAFT Expires: August 2005 February 2005 However, if the sender sends a Quick-Start Request with an Rate Request of Z, the receiver receives the Quick-Start Request with an approved Rate Request of X, and reports an Rate Request of Y, for X < Y < Z, then the receiver succeeds in lying to the sender about the approved rate. One protection against such misbehavior from the receiver would be for a router decreasing a Rate Request in a Quick-Start Request to report the decrease directly to the sender. However, it is hopefully sufficient protection that the receiver does not know the Rate Request in the original Quick-Start Request. One way to add additional protection would be for senders to use some degree of randomization in the requested Rate Request, so that it is difficult for receivers to guess the original value for the Rate Request. However, this is more difficult if there is fairly coarse granularity in the set of rate requests available to the sender. Similarly, a router could attempt to cheat and increase the rate request, but this would only be effective if there were no downstream routers that denied the Rate Request. Misbehaving routers: In addition to protecting against misbehaving receivers, it is necessary also to protect against misbehaving routers. Consider collusion between an ingress router and an egress router belonging to the same Intranet. The ingress router could decrement the Rate Request at the ingress, with the egress router increasing it again at the egress. The routers between the ingress and egress that approved the decremented rate request might not have been willing to approve the larger, original request. Another form of collusion would be for the ingress router to inform the egress router out-of-band of the IP TTL and QS TTL in the request packet at the ingress. This would enable the egress router to modify the QS TTL so that it appeared that all of the routers along the path had approved the request. We would note that in the extreme case, there does not appear to be any protection against a colluding ingress and egress router. Even if an intermediate router had deleted the Quick-Start Request Option from the packet, the ingress router could have sent the Quick-Start Request Option to the egress router out-of-band, with the egress router inserting the Quick-Start Request Option, with a modified QS TTL field, back in the packet. However, unlike ECN, there is somewhat less incentive for cooperating ingress and egress routers to collude to falsely modify Jain/Floyd/Allman/Sarolahti Section 6.3. [Page 32] INTERNET-DRAFT Expires: August 2005 February 2005 the Quick-Start Request so that it appears to have been approved by all of the routers along the path. With ECN, a colluding ingress router could falsely mark a packet as ECN-capable, with the colluding egress router returning the ECN field in the IP header to its original non-ECN-capable codepoint, and congested routers along the path could have been fooled into not dropping that packet. This collusion would give an unfair competitive advantage to the traffic protected by the colluding ingress and egress routers. In contrast, with Quick-Start, the ingress and egress routers colluding to make it falsely appear that a Quick-Start request was approved does not necessarily give an advantage to the traffic covered by that collusion. If some router along the path really does not have enough available bandwidth to approve the Quick-Start request, then the Quick-Start packets sent as a result of the falsely-approved request could be dropped in the network, to the resulting disadvantage of the connection. Thus, while the ingress and egress routers could collude to prevent intermediate routers from denying a Quick-Start request, it would generally not be to the connection's advantage for this to happen. Of course, if the congested router was ECN-capable, and the colluding ingress and egress routers were lying about ECN-capability as well as about Quick-Start, then the result could be that the Quick-Start request falsely appears to the sender to have been approved, the Quick-Start packets falsely appear to the congested router to be ECN-capable, and the colluding routers succeed in giving a competitive advantage to the traffic protected by their collusion. Misbehaving middleboxes: A separate possibility is that of traffic normalizers or other middleboxes along that path that re-write IP TTLs, in order to foil other kinds of attacks in the network. If such a traffic normalizer re-wrote the IP TTL, but did not adjust the Quick-Start TTL by the same amount, then the sender's mechanism for determining if the request was approved by all routers along the path would no longer be reliable. Re-writing the IP TTL could result in false positives (with the sender incorrectly believing that the Quick-Start request was approved) as well as false negatives (with the sender incorrectly believing that the Quick-Start request was denied). 6.4. Quick-Start with QoS-enabled Traffic The discussion in this paper has largely been of Quick-Start with default, best-effort traffic. However, Quick-Start could also be used by traffic using some form of differentiated services, and Jain/Floyd/Allman/Sarolahti Section 6.4. [Page 33] INTERNET-DRAFT Expires: August 2005 February 2005 routers could take the traffic class into account when deciding whether or not to grant the Quick-Start request. We don't address this context further in this paper, since it is orthogonal to the specification of Quick-Start. However, we note that routers should be discouraged from granting Quick-Start requests for higher- priority traffic when this is likely to result in significant packet loss for lower-priority traffic. 6.5. Limitations of Quick-Start The Quick-Start proposal, taken together with the recent proposal for HighSpeed TCP [F03], could go a significant way towards extending the range of performance for best-effort traffic in the Internet. However, there are many things that the Quick-Start proposal would not accomplish. Quick-Start is not a congestion control mechanism, and would not help in making more precise use of the available bandwidth, that is, of achieving the goal of very high throughput with very low delay and very low packet loss rates. Quick-Start would not give routers more control over the decrease rates of active connections. One of the open questions addressed later in this document is whether the limited capabilities of Quick- Start are sufficient to warrant standardization and deployment, or whether more work is needed to explore the space of potential mechanisms. 6.6. Attacks on Quick-Start As discussed in [SAF05], Quick-Start is vulnerable to two kinds of Quick-Start attacks: (1) attacks to increase the routers' processing and state load; and (2) attacks with bogus Quick-Start requests to temporarily tie up available Quick-Start bandwidth, preventing routers from approving Quick-Start requests from other connections. Routers can protect against the first kind of attack by applying a simple limit on the rate at which Quick-Start requests will be considered by the router. The second kind of attack, which is more difficult to defend against, is discussed in more detail in [SAF05]. 6.7. Simulations with Quick-Start Quick-Start was added to the NS simulator [SH02] by Srikanth Sundarrajan, and additional functionality was added by Pasi Sarolahti. The validation test is at `test-all-quickstart' in the 'tcl/test' directory in NS. The initial simulation studies from [SH02] show a significant performance improvement using Quick-Start Jain/Floyd/Allman/Sarolahti Section 6.7. [Page 34] INTERNET-DRAFT Expires: August 2005 February 2005 for moderate-sized flows (between 4KB and 128KB) in under-utilized environments. These studies are of file transfers, with the improvement measured as the relative increase in the overall throughput for the file transfer. The study shows that potential improvement from Quick-Start is proportional to the delay-bandwidth product of the path. The Quick-Start simulations in [SAF05] explore the following: the potential benefit of Quick-Start for the connection; the relative benefits of different router-based algorithms for approving Quick- Start requests; and the effectiveness of Quick-Start as a function of the senders' algorithms for choosing the size of the rate request. [SAF05] also consideres the potential of Extreme Quick- Start algorithms at routers, which keep per-flow state at routers for Quick-Start connections, in protecting the availability of Quick-Start bandwidth in the face of frequent overly-larqe Quick- Start requests. 7. Related Work Any evaluation of Quick-Start must include a discussion of the relative benefits of approaches that use no explicit information from routers, and of approaches that use more fine-grained feedback from routers as part of a larger congestion control mechanism. We discuss three classes of proposals (no explicit feedback from routers; explicit feedback about the initial rate; and more fine- grained feedback from routers) in the sections below. 7.1. Fast Start-ups without Explicit Information from Routers One possibility would be for senders to use information from the packet streams to learn about the available bandwidth, without explicit information from routers. These techniques would not allow a start-up as fast as that available from Quick-Start, in an underutilized environment; one has to have sent some packets already to use the packet stream to learn about available bandwidth. However, these techniques could allow a start-up considerably faster than the current slow-start. While it seems clear that approaches *without* explicit feedback from the routers will be strictly less powerful that is possible *with* explicit feedback, it is also possible that approaches that are more aggressive than slow-start are possible without explicit feedback from routers. Periodic packet streams: [JD02] explores the use of periodic packet streams to estimate the available bandwidth along a path. The idea is that the one-way Jain/Floyd/Allman/Sarolahti Section 7.1. [Page 35] INTERNET-DRAFT Expires: August 2005 February 2005 delays of a periodic packet stream show an increasing trend when the stream's rate is higher than the available bandwidth. While [JD02] states that the proposed mechanism does not cause significant increases in network utilization, losses, or delays when done by one flow at a time, the approach could be problematic if conducted concurrently by a number of flows. [JD02] also gives an overview of some of the earlier work on inferring the available bandwidth from packet trains. Swift-Start: The Swift Start proposal from [PRAKS02] combines packet-pair and packet-pacing techniques, beginning with a four-segment burst of packets to estimate the available bandwidth along the path. While continued research on the limits of the ability of TCP and other transport protocols to learn of available bandwidth without explicit feedback from the router seems useful, we note that there are several fundamental advantages of explicit feedback from routers. (1) Explicit feedback is faster than implicit feedback: One advantage of explicit feedback from the routers is that it allows the transport sender to reliably learn of available bandwidth in one round-trip time. (2) Explicit feedback is more reliable than implicit feedback: A second advantage of explicit feedback from the routers is that the available bandwidth along the path does not necessarily map to the allowed sending rate for an individual flow. As an example, if the TCP sender sends four packets back-to-back in the initial window, and the TCP receiver reports that the data packets were received with roughly the same spacing as they were transmitted, does this mean that the flow can infer an underutilized path? And how fast can the flow send in the next round-trip time? Do the results depend on the level of statistical multiplexing at the congested link, and on the number of flows attempting a faster start-up at the same time? 7.2. Optimistic Sending without Explicit Information from Routers Another possibility that has been suggested [S02] is for the sender to start with a large initial window without explicit permission from the routers and without bandwidth estimation techniques, and for the first packet of the initial window to contain information such as the size or sending rate of the initial window. The proposal would be that congested routers would use this information in the first data packet to drop or delay many or all of the packets Jain/Floyd/Allman/Sarolahti Section 7.2. [Page 36] INTERNET-DRAFT Expires: August 2005 February 2005 from that initial window. In this way a flow's optimistically-large initial window would not force the router to drop packets from competing flows in the network. Such an approach would seem to require some mechanism for the sender to ensure that the routers along the path understood the mechanism for marking the first packet of a large initial window. Obviously there would be a number of questions to consider about an approach of optimistic sending. (1) Incremental deployment: One question would be the potential complications of incremental deployment, where some of the routers along the path might not understand the packet information describing the initial window. (2) Congestion collapse: There could also be concerns about congestion collapse if many flows used large initial windows, many packets were dropped from optimistic initial windows, and many congested links ended up carrying packets that are only going to be dropped downstream. (3) Distributed Denial of Service attacks: A third key question would be the potential role of optimistic sender in amplifying the damage done by a Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attack. (4) Performance hits if a packet is dropped: A fourth issue would be to quantify the performance hit to the connection when a packet is dropped from one of the initial windows. 7.3. Fast Start-ups with other Information from Routers There have been several proposals somewhat similar to Quick-Start, where the transport protocol collects explicit information from the routers along the path. An IP Option about the free buffer size: In related work, Joon-Sang Park and John Heidemann investigated the use of a slightly different IP option for TCP connections to discover the available bandwidth along the path [P00]. In that proposal, the IP option would query the routers along the path about the smallest available free buffer size. Also, the IP option would have been sent after the initial SYN exchange, when the TCP sender already had an estimate of the round-trip time. The Performance Transparency Protocol: The Performance Transparency Protocol (PTP) includes a proposal for Jain/Floyd/Allman/Sarolahti Section 7.3. [Page 37] INTERNET-DRAFT Expires: August 2005 February 2005 a single PTP packet that would collect information from routers along the path from the sender to the receiver [W00]. For example, a single PTP packet could be used to determine the bottleneck bandwidth along a path. ETEN: Additional proposals for end nodes to collect explicit information from routers include Explicit Transport Error Notification (ETEN), which includes a cumulative mechanism to notify endpoints of aggregate congestion statistics along the path [KAPS02]. 7.4. Fast Start-ups with more Fine-Grained Feedback from Routers Proposals for more fine-grained congestion-related feedback from routers include XCP [KHR02] and AntiECN marking [K03]. Section A.6 discusses in more detail the relationship between Quick-Start and proposals for more fine-grained per-packet feedback from routers. XCP: Proposals such as XCP for new congestion control mechanisms based on more feedback from routers are more powerful than Quick-Start, but also are more complex to understand and more difficult to deploy. XCP routers maintain no per-flow state, but provide more fine- grained feedback to end-nodes than the one-bit congestion feedback of ECN. The per-packet feedback from XCP can be positive or negative, and specifies the increase or decrease in the sender's congestion window when this packet is acknowledged. AntiECN: The AntiECN proposal is for a single bit in the packet header that routers could set to indicate that they are underutilized. For each TCP ACK arriving at the sender indicating that a packet has been received with the Anti-ECN bit set, the sender would be able to increase its congestion window by one packet, as it would during slow-start. 8. Implementation and Deployment Issues This section discusses some of the implementation issues with Quick- Start. This section also discusses some of the key deployment issues, such as the chicken-and-egg deployment problems of mechanisms that have to be deployed in both routers and end nodes in order to work, and the problems posed by the wide deployment of middleboxes today that block the use of known or unknown IP Options. Jain/Floyd/Allman/Sarolahti Section 8. [Page 38] INTERNET-DRAFT Expires: August 2005 February 2005 8.1. Implementation Issues for Sending Quick-Start Requests Section 4.6 has discussed some of the issues with deciding the initial sending rate to request. Quick-Start raises additional issues about the communication between the transport protocol and the application, and about the use of the past history with Quick- Start in the end node. One possibility is that a protocol implementation could provide an API for applications to indicate when they want to request Quick- Start, and what rate they would like to request. In the conventional socket API this could be a socket option that is set before a connection is established. Some applications, such those that use TCP for bulk transfers, do not have interest in the transmission rate, but they might know the amount of data that can be sent immediately. Based on this, the sender implementation could decide whether Quick-Start would be useful, and what rate should be requested. Datagram-based real-time streaming applications, on the other hand, may have a specific preference on the transmission rate and they could indicate the required rate explicitly to the transport protocol to be used in the Quick-Start Request. We note that when Quick-Start is used, the TCP sender is required to implement an additional timer for the paced transmission of Quick- Start packets. 8.2. Implementation Issues for Processing Quick-Start Requests A router or other network host must be able to determine the approximate bandwidth of its outbound network interfaces in order to process incoming Quick-Start rate requests, including those that originate from the host itself. One possibility would be for hosts to rely on configuration information to determine link bandwidths; this has the drawback of not being robust to errors in configuration. Another possibility would be for network device drivers to infer the bandwidth for the interface and to communicate this to the IP layer. Particular issues will arise for wireless links with variable bandwidth, where decisions will have to be made about how frequently the network host gets updates of the changing bandwidth. It seems appropriate that Quick-Start Requests would be handled particularly conservatively for links with variable bandwidth. to avoid cases where Quick-Start Requests are approved, the link bandwidth is reduced, and the data packets that are send end up being dropped. Jain/Floyd/Allman/Sarolahti Section 8.2. [Page 39] INTERNET-DRAFT Expires: August 2005 February 2005 8.3. Possible Deployment Scenarios Because of possible problems discussed above concerning using Quick- Start over some network paths, the most realistic initial deployment of Quick-Start would likely to take place in Intranets and other controlled environments. Quick-Start is most useful on high bandwidth-delay paths that are significantly underutilized. The primary initial users of Quick-Start would likely be in organizations that provide network services to their users and also have control over a large portion of the network path. Below are a few examples of networking environments where Quick- Start would potentially be useful. These are the environments that might consider an initial deployment of Quick-Start in the routers and end-nodes, where the incentives for routers to deploy Quick- Start might be the most clear. * Centrally-administrated organizational Intranets often have large network capacity and the networks are underutilized for most of the time. with the network nodes along the path administrated by a single organization. Such Intranets might also include high- bandwidth and high-delay paths to remote sites. In such an environment, Quick-Start would be of benefit to users, and there would be a clear incentive for the deployment of Quick-Start in routers. * Quick-Start could also be useful in high-delay environments of Cellular Wide-Area Wireless Networks such as the GPRS [BW97] and their enhancements and next generations. For example, GPRS EDGE (Enhanced Data for GSM Evolution) is expected to provide wireless bandwidth of up to 384 Kbps (roughly 32 1500-byte packets per second) while the GPRS round-trip times are typically up to one second excluding any possible queueing delays in the network [GPAR02]. In addition, these networks sometimes have variable additional delays due to resource allocation that could be avoided by keeping the connection path constantly utilized, starting from initial slow start. Thus, Quick-Start could be of significant benefit to users in these environments. * Geostationary Orbit (GEO) satellite links have one-way propagation delays on the order of 250 ms while the bandwidth is typically measured in megabits per second [RFC2488]. Because of the considerable bandwidth-delay product on the link, TCP's slow start is a major performance limitation in the beginning of the connection. A large initial congestion window would be useful to users of such satellite links. Jain/Floyd/Allman/Sarolahti Section 8.3. [Page 40] INTERNET-DRAFT Expires: August 2005 February 2005 8.4. Would QuickStart packets take the slow path in routers? How much delay would the slow path add to the processing time for this packet? Similarly, if QuickStart packets took the slow path, how much stress would it add to routers for there to be many more packets on the slow path, because of the number of packets using QuickStart? These are both questions to be considered for the deployment of Quick-Start in the Internet. 8.5. A Comparison with the Deployment Problems of ECN For ECN, only one router along the path has to understand. For Quick-Start, all of the routers along the path would have to understand. Also, Quick-Start has the complicating factor of using IP Options, while ECN uses a field in the IP header itself. 9. Security Considerations One security consideration would be if Quick-Start resulted in the sender using an Rate Request that was inappropriately large, resulting in congestion along the path. Such congestion could result in an unacceptable level of packet drops along the path. Such congestion could also be part of a Denial of Service attack. A misbehaving TCP sender could use a non-conformant initial congestion window even without the use of Quick-Start, so we restrict our attention to problems with Quick-Start with conformant TCP senders. (We also note that if the TCP sender is a busy web server, then the TCP sender has some incentive to be conformant in this regard.) Section 6.3 discusses the dangers of receivers or routers lying about the Quick-Start rate request, or about whether the rate request was approved. 10. Conclusions We are presenting the Quick-Start mechanism as a proposal for a simple, understandable, and incrementally-deployable mechanism that would be sufficient to allow connections to start up with large initial rates, or large initial congestion windows, in overprovisioned, high-bandwidth environments. We expect there will be an increasing number of overprovisioned, high-bandwidth environments where the Quick-Start mechanism, or another mechanism of similar power, could be of significant benefit to a wide range of traffic. We are presenting the Quick-Start mechanism as a request for feedback from the Internet community in considering these Jain/Floyd/Allman/Sarolahti Section 10. [Page 41] INTERNET-DRAFT Expires: August 2005 February 2005 issues. 11. Acknowledgements The authors wish to thank Mark Handley for discussions of these issues. The authors also thank the End-to-End Research Group, the Transport Services Working Group, and members of IPAM's program on Large Scale Communication Networks for both positive and negative feedback on this proposal. We thank Srikanth Sundarrajan for the initial implementation of Quick-Start in the NS simulator, and for the initial simulation study. We also thank Mohammed Ashraf, John Border, Tom Dunigan, John Heidemann, Paul Hyder, Dina Katabi, and Vern Paxson for feedback. This draft builds upon the concepts described in [RFC3390], [AHO98], [RFC2415], and [RFC3168]. This is a modification of a draft originally by Amit Jain for Initial Window Discovery. A. Design Decisions A.1. Alternate Mechanisms for the Quick-Start Request: ICMP and RSVP This document has proposed using an IP Option for the Quick-Start Request from the sender to the receiver, and using transport mechanisms for the Quick-Start Response from the receiver back to the sender. In this section we discuss alternate mechanisms, and consider whether ICMP [RFC792, RFC2463] or RSVP [RFC2205] protocols could be used for delivering the Quick-Start Request. A.1.1. ICMP Being a control protocol used between Internet nodes, one could argue that ICMP is the ideal method for requesting a permission for faster startup from routers. The ICMP header is above the IP header. Quick-Start would be done with ICMP as follows: If the ICMP protocol is used to implement Quick-Start, the equivalent of the Quick-Start IP option would be carried in the ICMP header of the ICMP Quick-Start Request. The ICMP Quick-Start Request would have to pass by the routers on the path to the receiver; for now, we don't address the mechanisms that would be needed to accomplish this. A router that approves the Quick-Start Request would take the same actions as in the case with the Quick-Start IP Option, and forward the packet to the next router along the path. A router that does not approve the Quick-Start Request, even with a decreased Jain/Floyd/Allman/Sarolahti Section A.1.1. [Page 42] INTERNET-DRAFT Expires: August 2005 February 2005 value for the Requested Rate, would delete the ICMP Quick-Start Request, and send an ICMP Reply to the sender that the request was not approved. If the ICMP Reply was dropped in the network, and did not reach the receiver, the sender would still know that the request was not approved from the absence of feedback from the receiver. If the ICMP Quick-Start request was dropped in the network due to congestion, the sender would assume that the request was not approved. If the ICMP Quick-Start Request reached the receiver, the receiver would use transport-level mechanisms to send a response to the sender, exactly as with the IP Option. One benefit of using ICMP would be that the delivery of the TCP SYN packet or other initial packet would not be delayed by IP option processing at routers. A greater advantage is that if middleboxes were blocking packets with Quick-Start Requests, using the Quick- Start Request in a separate ICMP packet would mean that the middlebox behavior would not affect the connection as a whole. (To get this robustness to middleboxes with TCP using an IP Quick-Start Option, one would have to have a TCP-level Quick-Start Request packet that was sent concurrently but separately from the TCP SYN packet.) However, there are a number of disadvantages to using ICMP. Some firewalls and middleboxes may not forward the ICMP Quick-Start Request packets. (If the ICMP Reply packet is dropped in the network, this is not a problem, as we stated above.) In addition, it would be difficult, if not impossible, for a router in the middle of an IP tunnel to deliver an ICMP Reply packet to the actual source, for example when the inner IP header is encrypted as in IPsec tunnel mode [RFC2401]. Again, however, the ICMP Reply packet would not be essential to the correct operation of ICMP Quick-Start. Unauthenticated out-of-band ICMP messages could enable some types of attacks by third-party malicious hosts that are not possible when the control information is carried in-band with the IP packets that can only be altered by the routers on the connection path. Finally, as a minor concern, using ICMP would cause a small amount of additional traffic in the network, which is not the case when using IP options. A.1.2. RSVP With some modifications RSVP [RFC2205] could be used as a bearer protocol for carrying the Quick-Start Requests. Because routers are expected to process RSVP packets more extensively than the normal transport protocol IP packets, delivering a Quick-Start rate request using an RSVP packet would seem an appealing choice. However, Quick- Jain/Floyd/Allman/Sarolahti Section A.1.2. [Page 43] INTERNET-DRAFT Expires: August 2005 February 2005 Start with RSVP would require a few differences from the conventional usage of RSVP. Quick-Start would not require periodical refreshing of soft state, because Quick-Start does not require per- connection state in routers. Quick-Start Requests would be transmitted downstream from the sender to receiver in the RSVP Path messages, which is different from the conventional RSVP model where the reservations originate from the receiver. Furthermore, the Quick-Start Response would be sent using the transport-level mechanisms instead of using the RSVP Resv message. If RSVP was used for carrying a Quick-Start Request, a new "Quick- Start Request" class object would be included in the RSVP Path message that is sent from the sender to receiver. The object would contain the rate request field in addition to the common length and type fields. The Send_TTL field in the RSVP common header could be used as the equivalent of the QS TTL field. The Quick-Start capable routers along the path would inspect the Quick-Start Request object in the RSVP Path message, decrement Send_TTL and adjust the rate request field if needed. If an RSVP router did not understand the Quick-Start Request object, it would reject the entire RSVP message and send an RSVP PathErr message back to the sender. When an RSVP message with the Quick-Start Request object reaches the receiver, the receiver sends a Quick-Start Reply message in the corresponding transport protocol header in the same way as described in the context of IP options earlier. If the RSVP message with the Quick- Start Request object was dropped along the path, the transport sender would simply proceed with the normal congestion control procedures. Much of the discussion about benefits and drawbacks of using ICMP for making the Quick-Start Request also applies to the RSVP case. If the Quick-Start Request was transmitted in a separate packet instead of as an IP option, the transport protocol packet delivery would not be delayed due to IP option processing at the routers, and the initial transport packets would reach their destination more reliably. The possible disadvantages of using ICMP and RSVP are also expected to be similar: middleboxes in the network may not be able to forward the Quick-Start Request messages, and the IP tunnels might cause problems for processing the Quick-Start Requests. A.2. Alternate Encoding Functions In this section we look at alternate encoding functions for the Rate Request field in the Quick-Start Request. The main requirements for this function is that it should have a sufficiently wide range for the requested rate. There is no need for overly-fine-grained precision in the requested rate. Similarly, while it would be Jain/Floyd/Allman/Sarolahti Section A.2. [Page 44] INTERNET-DRAFT Expires: August 2005 February 2005 attractive for the encoding function to be easily computable, it is also possible for end-nodes and routers to simply store the 256-entry table giving the mapping between the value N in the Rate Request field, and the actual rate request f(N). Linear functions: The Quick-Start Request contains an 8-bit field for the Rate Request. One possible proposal would be for this field to be formatted in bits per second, scaled so that one unit equals 80 Kbps. Thus, for the value N in the Rate Request field, the requested rate is 80,000*N bps. This gives a request range between 80 Kbps and 20.48 Mbps. For 1500-byte packets, this corresponds to a request range between 6 and 1706 packets per second. Powers of two: If a granularity of factors of two is sufficient for the Rate Request, then the encoding function with the most range would be for the requested rate to be K*2^N, for N the value in the Rate Request field, and for K some constant. For N=0, the rate request would be set to zero, regardless of the encoding function. For example, for K=40,000, the request range would be from 80 Kbps to 40*2^256 Kbps. This clearly would be an unnecessarily large request range. For a four-bit Rate Request field, the upper limit on the rate request is 1.3 Gbps. It is possible that an upper limit of 1.3 Gbps would be fine for the Quick-Start rate request, and that connections wishing to start up with a higher initial sending rate should be encouraged to use other mechanisms, such as the explicit reservation of bandwidth. If an upper limit of 1.3 Gbps is not acceptable, then five bits could be used for the Rate Request field. If the granularity of factors of two is too coarse, then the encoding function could use a base less than two. An alternate form for the encoding function would be to use a hybrid of linear and exponential functions. We note that the Rate Request also has to be constrained by the abilities of the transport protocol. For example, for TCP with Window Scaling, the maximum window is at most 2**30 bytes. For a TCP connection with a long, 1 second round-trip time, this would give a maximum sending rate of 1.07 Gbps. A.3. The Quick-Start Request: Packets or Bytes? One of the design questions is whether the Rate Request field should be in bytes per second or in packets per second. We will discuss this separately from the perspective of the transport, and from the Jain/Floyd/Allman/Sarolahti Section A.3. [Page 45] INTERNET-DRAFT Expires: August 2005 February 2005 perspective of the router. For TCP, the results from the Quick-Start Request are translated into a congestion window in bytes, using the measured round-trip time and the MSS. This window applies only to the bytes of data payload, and does not include the bytes in the TCP or IP packet headers. Other transport protocols would conceivably use the Quick- Start Request directly in packets per second, or could translate the Quick-Start Request to a congestion window in packets. The assumption of this draft is that the router only approves the Quick-Start Request when the output link is significantly underutilized. For this, the router could measure the available bandwidth in bytes per second, or could convert between packets and bytes by some mechanism. If the Quick-Start Request was in bytes per second, and applied only to the data payload, then the router would have to convert from bytes per second of data payload, to bytes per second of packets on the wire. If the Rate Request field was in bytes per second and the sender ended up using very small packets, this could translate to a significantly larger number in terms of bytes per second on the wire. Therefore, for a Quick-Start Request in bytes per second, it makes most sense for this to include the transport and IP headers as well as the data payload. Of course, this will be at best a rough approximation on the part of the sender; the transport-level sender might not know the size of the transport and IP headers in bytes, and might know nothing at all about the separate headers added in IP tunnels downstream. This rough estimate seems sufficient, however, given the overall lack of fine precision in Quick-Start functionality. It has been suggested that the router could possibly use information from the MSS option in the TCP packet header of the SYN packet to convert the Quick-Start Request from packets per second to bytes per second, or vice versa. The MSS option is defined as the maximum MSS that the TCP sender expects to receive, not the maximum MSS that the TCP sender plans to send [RFC793]. However, it is probably often the case that this MSS also applies as an upper bound on the MSS used by the TCP sender in sending. We note that the sender does not necessarily know the Path MTU when the Quick-Start Request is sent, or when the initial window of data is sent. Thus, with IPv4, packets from the initial window could end up being fragmented in the network if the "Don't Fragment" (DF) bit is not set [RFC1191]. A Rate Request in bytes per second is reasonably robust to fragmentation. Clearly a Rate Request in packets per second is less robust in the presence of fragmentation. Jain/Floyd/Allman/Sarolahti Section A.3. [Page 46] INTERNET-DRAFT Expires: August 2005 February 2005 Interactions between larger initial windows and Path MTU Discovery are discussed in more detail in RFC 3390 [RFC3390]. For a Quick-Start Request in bytes per second, the transport senders would have the additional complication of estimating the bandwidth usage added by the packet headers. We have chosen an Rate Request field in bytes per second rather than in packets per second because it seems somewhat more robust, particularly to routers. A.4. Quick-Start Semantics: Total Rate or Additional Rate? For a Quick-Start Request sent in the middle of a connection, there are two possible semantics for the Rate Request field, as follows: (1) Total Rate: The requested Rate Request is the requested total rate for the connection, including the current rate; or (2) Additional Rate: The requested Rate Request is the requested increase in the total rate for that connection, over and above the current sending rate. In this section we consider briefly the tradeoffs between these two options, and explain why we have chosen the `Total Rate' semantics. The Total Rate semantics makes it easier for routers to ``allocate'' the same rate to all connections. This lends itself to fairness, and improves convergence times between old and new connections. The Additional Rate semantics lends itself to gaming by the connection, with the sender sending frequent Quick-Start Requests in the hope of gaining a higher rate. For either of these alternatives, there would not be room to report the current sending rate in the Quick-Start Option using the current minimal format for the Quick-Start Request. Thus, either the Quick- Start Option would have to take more than four bytes to include a report of the current sending rate, or the current sending rate would not be reported to the routers. A.5. Alternate Responses to the Loss of a Quick-Start Packet Section 4.5 discusses TCP's response to the loss of a Quick-Start packet in the initial window. This section discusses several Jain/Floyd/Allman/Sarolahti Section A.5. [Page 47] INTERNET-DRAFT Expires: August 2005 February 2005 alternate responses. One possible alternative to reverting to the default slow-start after the loss of a Quick-Start packet from the initial window would have been to halve the congestion window and continue in congestion avoidance. However, we note that this would not have been a desirable response for either the connection or for the network as a whole. The packet loss in the initial window indicates that Quick- Start failed in finding an appropriate congestion window, meaning that the congestion window after halving may easily also be wrong. A more moderate alternate would be to continue in congestion avoidance from a window of (W-D)/2, where W is the Quick-Start congestion window, and D is the number of packets dropped or marked from that window. A.6. Why Not Include More Functionality? As Section 6.5 discussed, this proposal for Quick-Start is a rather coarse-grained mechanism that would allow connections to use larger initial windows along underutilized paths, but that does not attempt to provide a next-generation transport protocol, and does not attempt the goal of providing very high throughput with very low delay. As Section 7.4 discusses, there are a number of proposals such as XCP and AntiECN for more fine-grained per-packet feedback from routers that the current congestion control mechanisms, that do attempt these more ambitious goals. Compared to proposals such as XCP and AntiECN, Quick-Start offers much less control; Quick-Start does not attempt to provide a new congestion control mechanism, but simply to get permission from routers for a higher sending rate at start-up, or after an idle period. At the same time, Quick-Start would allow larger initial windows that would proposals such as AntiECN, requires less input to routers than XCP, and would require less frequent feedback from routers than any new congestion control mechanism. Thus, Quick- Start is less powerful in general than proposals for new congestion control mechanisms such as XCP and AntiECN, but as powerful or more powerful in terms of the specific issue of allowing larger initial windows, and (we think) more amenable to incremental deployment in the current Internet. We do not discuss proposals such as XCP in detail, but simply note that there are a number of open questions. One question concerns whether there is a pressing need for more sophisticated congestion control mechanisms such as XCP in the Internet. Quick-Start is inherently a rather crude tool that does not deliver assurances Jain/Floyd/Allman/Sarolahti Section A.6. [Page 48] INTERNET-DRAFT Expires: August 2005 February 2005 about maintaining high link utilization and low queueing delay; Quick-Start is designed for use in environments that are significantly underutilized, and addresses the single question of whether a higher sending rate is allowed. New congestion control mechanisms with more fine-grained feedback from routers could allow faster startups even in environments with rather high link utilization. Is this a pressing requirement? Are the other benefits of more fine-grained congestion control feedback from routers a pressing requirement? We would argue that even if more fine-grained per-packet feedback from routers was implemented, it is reasonable to have a separate mechanism such as Quick-Start for indicating an allowed initial sending rate, or an allowed total sending rate after an idle or underutilized period. One fundamental difference between Quick-Start and current proposals for fine-grained per-packet feedback is that the feedback of Quick- Start is per-connection, giving an allowed sending rate for the connection as a whole, while the proposals for per-packet feedback for congestion control are about the increase or decrease in the rate or window per-packet, when a particular data packet is acknowledged. A second difference is that unlike per-packet feedback, Quick-Start lends itself to more than just a few bits of feedback from routers to indicate the initial sending rate allowed by the router. While XCP also allocates a byte for per-packet feedback, there has been discussion of variants of XCP with less per-packet feedback. This would be more like other proposals such as anti-ECN that use a single bit of feedback from routers to indicate that the sender can increase as fast as slow-starting, in response to this particular packet acknowledgement. In general, there is probably considerable power in fine-grained proposals with only two bits of feedback, indicating that the sender should decrease, maintain, or increase the sending rate or window when this packet is acknowledged. However, the power of Quick-Start would be considerably limited if it was restricted to only two bits of feedback; it seems likely that determining the initial sending rate fundamentally requires more bits of feedback from routers than does the everyday, per-packet feedback to increase or decrease the sending rate. On a more practical level, one difference between Quick-Start and proposals for per-packet feedback is that there are fewer open issues with Quick-Start than there would be with a new congestion control mechanism. For example, for a mechanism for requesting a initial sending rate, the fairness issues of a general congestion control mechanism go away, and there is no need for the end nodes to Jain/Floyd/Allman/Sarolahti Section A.6. [Page 49] INTERNET-DRAFT Expires: August 2005 February 2005 tell the routers the round-trip time and congestion window, as is done in XCP; all that is needed is for the end nodes to report the requested sending rate. Proposals for Quick-Start Per-Packet Feedback +------------------+----------------------+----------------------+ Semantics: | Allowed sending rate | Change in rate/window, | per connection. | per-packet. +------------------+----------------------+----------------------+ Relationship to | In addition. | Replacement. congestion ctrl: | | +------------------+----------------------+----------------------+ Frequency: | Start-up, or after | Every packet. | an idle period. | +------------------+----------------------+----------------------+ Limitations: | Only useful on | General congestion | underutilized paths.| control mechanism. +------------------+----------------------+----------------------+ Input to routers: | Rate request. | RTT, cwnd, request (XCP). | | None (Anti-ECN). +------------------+----------------------+----------------------+ Bits of feedback: | One byte. | A few bits would | | suffice? +------------------+----------------------+----------------------+ Differences between Quick-Start and Proposals for Fine-Grained Per-Packet Feedback. A separate question concerns whether mechanisms such as Quick-Start, in combination with HighSpeed TCP and other changes in progress, would make a significant contribution towards meeting some of these needs for new congestion control mechanisms. This could be viewed as a positive step of meeting some of the current needs with a simple and reasonably deployable mechanism, or alternately, as a negative step of unnecessarily delaying more fundamental changes. Without answering this question, we would note that our own approach tends to favor the incremental deployment of relatively simple mechanisms, as long as the simple mechanisms are not short-term hacks but mechanisms that lead the overall architecture in the fundamentally correct direction. Jain/Floyd/Allman/Sarolahti Section A.6. [Page 50] INTERNET-DRAFT Expires: August 2005 February 2005 A.7. A QuickStart Nonce? An earlier version of this document included a QuickStart Nonce that was initialized by the sender to a non-zero, `random' eight-bit number, along with a QS TTL that was initialized to the same value as the TTL in the IP header. The QuickStart Nonce would have been returned by the TCP receiver to the TCP sender in the Quick-Start Response. A router could deny the Quick-Start request by failing to decrement the QS TTL field, by zeroing the QS Nonce field, or by deleting the Quick-Start Request from the packet header. The QS Nonce was included to provide some protection against broken downstream routers, or against misbehaving TCP receivers who might be inclined to lie about the Rate Request. This protection is now provided by the use of a random initial value for the QS TTL field. With the old QuickStart Nonce, along with the QS TTL field set to the same value as the TTL field in the IP header, the Quick-Start Request mechanism would have been self-terminating; the Quick-Start Request would terminate at the first participating router after a non-participating router had been encountered on the path. This would have minimized unnecessary overhead incurred by routers because of option processing for the Quick-Start Request. Thus, one disadvantage of the new approach with a random initial value for the QS TTL field is that intermediate routers can no longer determine when some upstream router has not understood the QuickStart option. However, a disadvantage of the old approach was that it offered no protection against downstream routers or the TCP receiver hiding evidence of upstream routers that do not understand the QuickStart option. Normative References [RFC793] J. Postel, Transmission Control Protocol, RFC 793, September 1981. [RFC1191] Mogul, J. and S. Deering, Path MTU Discovery, RFC 1191, November 1990. [RFC2460] S. Deering and R. Hinden. Internet Protocol, Version 6 (IPv6) Specification. RFC 2460, December 1998. [RFC2581] M. Allman, V. Paxson, and W. Stevens. TCP Congestion Control. RFC 2581. April 1999. [RFC3168] Ramakrishnan, K.K., Floyd, S., and Black, D. The Addition of Explicit Congestion Notification (ECN) to IP. RFC 3168, Proposed Standard, September 2001. Jain/Floyd/Allman/Sarolahti [Page 51] INTERNET-DRAFT Expires: August 2005 February 2005 [RFC3390] M. Allman, S. Floyd, and C. Partridge. Increasing TCP's Initial Window. RFC 3390, October 2002. Informative References [RFC792] J. Postel. Internet Control Message Protocol. RFC 792, September 1981. [RFC1812] F. Baker (ed.). Requirements for IP Version 4 Routers. RFC 1812, June 1995. [RFC2140] J. Touch. TCP Control Block Interdependence. RFC 2140. April 1997. [RFC2205] R. Braden, et al. Resource ReSerVation Protocol (RSVP) -- Version 1 Functional Specification. RFC 2205, September 1997. [RFC2309] B. Braden, D. Clark, J. Crowcroft, B. Davie, S. Deering, D. Estrin, S. Floyd, V. Jacobson, G. Minshall, C. Partridge, L. Peterson, K. Ramakrishnan, S. Shenker, J. Wroclawski, L. Zhang, Recommendations on Queue Management and Congestion Avoidance in the Internet, RFC 2309, April 1998. [RFC2401] S. Kent and R. Atkinson. Security Architecture for the Internet Protocol. RFC 2401, November 1998. [RFC2415] K. Poduri and K. Nichols. Simulation Studies of Increased Initial TCP Window Size. RFC 2415. September 1998. [RFC2416] T. Shepard and C. Partridge. When TCP Starts Up With Four Packets Into Only Three Buffers. RFC 2416. September 1998. [RFC2463] A. Conta and S. Deering. Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMPv6) for the Internet Protocol Version 6 (IPv6) Specification. RFC 2463, December 1998. [RFC2488] M. Allman, D. Glover, and L. Sanchez. Enhancing TCP Over Satellite Channels using Standard Mechanisms. RFC 2488. January 1999. [RFC2960] R. Stewart, et. al. Stream Control Transmission Protocol. RFC 2960, October 2000. [RFC3124] H. Balakrishnan and S. Seshan. The Congestion Manager. RFC 3124. June 2001. [RFC3344] C. Perkins (ed.). IP Mobility Support for IPv4. RFC 3344, Jain/Floyd/Allman/Sarolahti [Page 52] INTERNET-DRAFT Expires: August 2005 February 2005 August 2002. [RFC3360] S. Floyd. Inappropriate TCP Resets Considered Harmful. RFC 3360, August 2002. [RFC3775] D. Johnson, C. Perkins, and J. Arkko. Mobility Support in IPv6. RFC 3775, June 2004. [AHO98] M. Allman, C. Hayes and S. Ostermann. An evaluation of TCP with Larger Initial Windows. ACM Computer Communication Review, July 1998. [BW97] G. Brasche and B. Walke. Concepts, Services and Protocols of the new GSM Phase 2+ General Packet Radio Service. IEEE Communications Magazine, pages 94--104, August 1997. [FF99] Floyd, S., and Fall, K., Promoting the Use of End-to-End Congestion Control in the Internet, IEEE/ACM Transactions on Networking, August 1999. [F03] Floyd, S., HighSpeed TCP for Large Congestion Windows, RFC 3649, December 2003. [F04] Floyd, S., Limited Slow-Start for TCP with Large Congestion Windows, RFC 3742, Experimental, March 2004. [GPAR02] A. Gurtov, M. Passoja, O. Aalto, and M. Raitola. Multi- Layer Protocol Tracing in a GPRS Network. In Proceedings of the IEEE Vehicular Technology Conference (Fall VTC2002), Vancouver, Canada, September 2002. [Jac88] V. Jacobson, Congestion Avoidance and Control, ACM SIGCOMM [JD02] Manish Jain, Constantinos Dovrolis, End-to-End Available Bandwidth: Measurement Methodology, Dynamics, and Relation with TCP Throughput, SIGCOMM 2002. [KHR02] Dina Katabi, Mark Handley, and Charles Rohrs, Internet Congestion Control for Future High Bandwidth-Delay Product Environments. ACM Sigcomm 2002, August 2002. URL "http://ana.lcs.mit.edu/dina/XCP/". [KHF04] E. Kohler, M. Handley, and S. Floyd, Datagram Congestion Control Protocol (DCCP), internet draft draft-ietf-dccp-spec-09.txt, work in progress, November 2004. [K03] S. Kunniyur, "AntiECN Marking: A Marking Scheme for High Bandwidth Delay Connections", Proceedings, IEEE ICC '03, May 2003. Jain/Floyd/Allman/Sarolahti [Page 53] INTERNET-DRAFT Expires: August 2005 February 2005 URL "http://www.seas.upenn.edu/~kunniyur/". [KAPS02] Rajesh Krishnan, Mark Allman, Craig Partridge, James P.G. Sterbenz. Explicit Transport Error Notification (ETEN) for Error- Prone Wireless and Satellite Networks. Technical Report No. 8333, BBN Technologies, March 2002. URL "http://roland.lerc.nasa.gov/~mallman/papers/". [MAF04] Alberto Medina, Mark Allman, and Sally Floyd, Measuring Interactions Between Transport Protocols and Middleboxes, Internet Measurement Conference 2004, August 2004. URL "http://www.icir.org/tbit/". [PK98] Venkata N. Padmanabhan and Randy H. Katz, TCP Fast Start: A Technique For Speeding Up Web Transfers, IEEE GLOBECOM '98, November 1998. [P00] Joon-Sang Park, Bandwidth Discovery of a TCP Connection, report to John Jeidemann, 2000, private communication. Citation for acknowledgement purposes only. [PRAKS02] Craig Partridge, Dennis Rockwell, Mark Allman, Rajesh Krishnan, James P.G. Sterbenz. A Swifter Start for TCP. Technical Report No. 8339, BBN Technologies, March 2002. URL "http://roland.lerc.nasa.gov/~mallman/papers/". [S02] Ion Stoica, private communication, 2002. Citation for acknowledgement purposes only. [SAF05] Pasi Sarolahti, Mark Allman, and Sally Floyd. Evaluating Quick-Start for TCP. Under submission, February 2005. URL "http://www.icir.org/floyd/quickstart.html". [SH02] Srikanth Sundarrajan and John Heidemann. Study of TCP Quick Start with NS-2. Class Project, December 2002. Not publically available; citation for acknowledgement purposes only. [W00] Michael Welzl: PTP: Better Feedback for Adaptive Distributed Multimedia Applications on the Internet, IPCCC 2000 (19th IEEE International Performance, Computing, And Communications Conference), Phoenix, Arizona, USA, 20-22 February 2000. URL "http://informatik.uibk.ac.at/users/c70370/research/publications/". [W03] Michael Welzl, PMTU-Options: Path MTU Discovery Using Options, expired internet-draft draft-welzl-pmtud-options-01.txt, work-in- progress. February 2003. Jain/Floyd/Allman/Sarolahti [Page 54] INTERNET-DRAFT Expires: August 2005 February 2005 IANA Considerations The only IANA Considerations would be the addition of an IP option to the list of IP options, and the addition of a TCP option to the list of TCP options. AUTHORS' ADDRESSES Amit Jain F5 Networks Email : a.jain@f5.com Sally Floyd Phone: +1 (510) 666-2989 ICIR (ICSI Center for Internet Research) Email: floyd@icir.org URL: http://www.icir.org/floyd/ Pasi Sarolahti Nokia Research Center P.O. Box 407 FI-00045 NOKIA GROUP Finland Phone: +358 50 4876607 Email: pasi.sarolahti@iki.fi Full Copyright Statement Copyright (C) The Internet Society 2004. This document is subject to the rights, licenses and restrictions contained in BCP 78, and except as set forth therein, the authors retain all their rights. This document and the information contained herein are provided on an "AS IS" basis and THE CONTRIBUTOR, THE ORGANIZATION HE/SHE REPRESENTS OR IS SPONSORED BY (IF ANY), THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING TASK FORCE DISCLAIM ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. Intellectual Property The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any Intellectual Property Rights or other rights that might be claimed Jain/Floyd/Allman/Sarolahti [Page 55] INTERNET-DRAFT Expires: August 2005 February 2005 to pertain to the implementation or use of the technology described in this document or the extent to which any license under such rights might or might not be available; nor does it represent that it has made any independent effort to identify any such rights. Information on the procedures with respect to rights in RFC documents can be found in BCP 78 and BCP 79. Copies of IPR disclosures made to the IETF Secretariat and any assurances of licenses to be made available, or the result of an attempt made to obtain a general license or permission for the use of such proprietary rights by implementers or users of this specification can be obtained from the IETF on-line IPR repository at http://www.ietf.org/ipr. The IETF invites any interested party to bring to its attention any copyrights, patents or patent applications, or other proprietary rights that may cover technology that may be required to implement this standard. Please address the information to the IETF at ietf- ipr@ietf.org. Jain/Floyd/Allman/Sarolahti [Page 56]