TOC 
Internet Engineering Task ForceM. Scharf
Internet-DraftAlcatel-Lucent Bell Labs
Intended status: InformationalA. Ford
Expires: January 10, 2011Roke Manor Research
 July 9, 2010


MPTCP Application Interface Considerations
draft-scharf-mptcp-api-02

Abstract

Multipath TCP (MPTCP) adds the capability of using multiple paths to a regular TCP session. Even though it is designed to be totally backward compatible to applications, the data transport differs compared to regular TCP, and there are several additional degrees of freedom that applications may wish to exploit. This document summarizes the impact that MPTCP may have on applications, such as changes in performance. Furthermore, it discusses compatibility issues of MPTCP in combination with legacy applications. Finally, the document describes a basic application interface for MPTCP-aware applications that provides access to multipath address information and a level of control equivalent to regular TCP.

Status of This Memo

This Internet-Draft is submitted in full conformance with the provisions of BCP 78 and BCP 79.

Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF). Note that other groups may also distribute working documents as Internet-Drafts. The list of current Internet-Drafts is at http://datatracker.ietf.org/drafts/current/.

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.”

This Internet-Draft will expire on January 10, 2011.

Copyright Notice

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Table of Contents

1.  Introduction
2.  Terminology
3.  Comparison of MPTCP and Regular TCP
    3.1.  Performance Impact
        3.1.1.  Throughput
        3.1.2.  Delay
        3.1.3.  Resilience
    3.2.  Potential Problems
        3.2.1.  Impact of Middleboxes
        3.2.2.  Outdated Implicit Assumptions
        3.2.3.  Security Implications
4.  Operation of MPTCP with Legacy Applications
    4.1.  Overview of the MPTCP Network Stack
    4.2.  Address Issues
        4.2.1.  Specification of Addresses by Applications
        4.2.2.  Querying of Addresses by Applications
    4.3.  Socket Option Issues
        4.3.1.  General Guideline
        4.3.2.  Disabling of the Nagle Algorithm
        4.3.3.  Buffer Sizing
        4.3.4.  Other Socket Options
    4.4.  Default Enabling of MPTCP
    4.5.  Summary of Advices to Application Developers
5.  Basic API for MPTCP-aware Applications
    5.1.  Design Considerations
    5.2.  Requirements on the Basic MPTCP API
    5.3.  Sockets Interface Extensions by the Basic MPTCP API
        5.3.1.  Overview
        5.3.2.  Enabling and Disabling of MPTCP
        5.3.3.  Binding MPTCP to Specified Addresses
        5.3.4.  Querying the MPTCP Subflow Addresses
        5.3.5.  Getting a Unique Connection Identifier
    5.4.  Usage Examples
6.  Other Compatibility Issues
    6.1.  Incompatibilities with other Multihoming Solutions
    6.2.  Interactions with DNS
7.  Security Considerations
8.  IANA Considerations
9.  Conclusion
10.  Acknowledgments
11.  References
    11.1.  Normative References
    11.2.  Informative References
Appendix A.  Requirements on a Future Advanced MPTCP API
    A.1.  Design Considerations
    A.2.  MPTCP Usage Scenarios and Application Requirements
    A.3.  Potential Requirements on an Advanced MPTCP API
Appendix B.  Change History of the Document




 TOC 

1.  Introduction

Multipath TCP (MPTCP) adds the capability of using multiple paths to a regular TCP session [1] (Postel, J., “Transmission Control Protocol,” September 1981.). The motivations for this extension include increasing throughput, overall resource utilisation, and resilience to network failure, and these motivations are discussed, along with high-level design decisions, as part of the MPTCP architecture [4] (Ford, A., Raiciu, C., Barre, S., and J. Iyengar, “Architectural Guidelines for Multipath TCP Development,” June 2010.). MPTCP [5] (Ford, A., Raiciu, C., and M. Handley, “TCP Extensions for Multipath Operation with Multiple Addresses,” June 2010.) offers the same reliable, in-order, byte-stream transport as TCP, and is designed to be backward compatible with both applications and the network layer. It requires support inside the network stack of both endpoints.

This document first presents the impacts that MPTCP may have on applications, such as performance changes compared to regular TCP. Second, it defines the interoperation of MPTCP and legacy applications that are unaware of the multipath transport. MPTCP is designed to be usable without any application changes, but some compatibility issues have to be taken into account. Third, this memo specifies a basic Application Programming Interface (API) for MPTCP-aware applications. The API presented here is an extension to the regular TCP API to allow an MPTCP-aware application the same level of control and access to information of an MPTCP connection that would be possible with the standard TCP API on a regular TCP connection.

An advanced API for MPTCP is outside the scope of this document. Such an advanced API could offer a more fine-grained control over multipath transport functions and policies. The appendix includes a brief, non-compulsory list of potential features of such an advanced API.

The de facto standard API for TCP/IP applications is the "sockets" interface. This document defines experimental MPTCP-specific extensions, using additional socket options. It is up to the applications, high-level programming languages, or libraries to decide whether to use these optional extensions. For instance, an application may want to turn on or off the MPTCP mechanism for certain data transfers, or limit its use to certain interfaces. The syntax and semantics of the specification is in line with the Posix standard [8] (, “IEEE Std. 1003.1-2008 Standard for Information Technology -- Portable Operating System Interface (POSIX). Open Group Technical Standard: Base Specifications, Issue 7, 2008.,” .) as much as possible.

There are also various related extensions of the sockets interface: [12] (Komu, M., Bagnulo, M., Slavov, K., and S. Sugimoto, “Socket Application Program Interface (API) for Multihoming Shim,” February 2010.) specifies sockets API extensions for a multihoming shim layer. The API enables interactions between applications and the multihoming shim layer for advanced locator management and for access to information about failure detection and path exploration. Experimental extensions to the sockets API are also defined for the Host Identity Protocol (HIP) [13] (Komu, M. and T. Henderson, “Basic Socket Interface Extensions for Host Identity Protocol (HIP),” January 2010.) in order to manage the bindings of identifiers and locator. Further related API extensions exist for IPv6 [10] (Stevens, W., Thomas, M., Nordmark, E., and T. Jinmei, “Advanced Sockets Application Program Interface (API) for IPv6,” May 2003.), Mobile IP [11] (Chakrabarti, S. and E. Nordmark, “Extension to Sockets API for Mobile IPv6,” July 2006.), and SCTP [14] (Stewart, R., Poon, K., Tuexen, M., Yasevich, V., and P. Lei, “Sockets API Extensions for Stream Control Transmission Protocol (SCTP),” February 2010.). There can be interactions or incompatibilities of these APIs with MPTCP, which are discussed later in this document.

Some network stack implementations, specially on mobile devices, have centralized connection managers or other higher-level APIs to solve multi-interface issues, as surveyed in [16] (Wasserman, M. and P. Seite, “Current Practices for Multiple Interface Hosts,” June 2010.). Their interaction with MPTCP is outside the scope of this note.

The target readers of this document are application programmers who develop application software that may benefit significantly from MPTCP. This document also provides the necessary information for developers of MPTCP to implement the API in a TCP/IP network stack.



 TOC 

2.  Terminology

The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in [3] (Bradner, S., “Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels,” March 1997.).

This document uses the terminology introduced in [5] (Ford, A., Raiciu, C., and M. Handley, “TCP Extensions for Multipath Operation with Multiple Addresses,” June 2010.).



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3.  Comparison of MPTCP and Regular TCP

This section discusses the impact that the use of MPTCP will have on applications, in comparison to what may be expected from the use of regular TCP.



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3.1.  Performance Impact

One of the key goals of adding multipath capability to TCP is to improve the performance of a transport connection by load distribution over separate subflows across potentially disjoint paths. Furthermore, it is an explicit goal of MPTCP that it should not provide a worse performing connection that would have existed through the use of legacy, single-path TCP. A corresponding congestion control algorithm is described in [7] (Raiciu, C., Handley, M., and D. Wischik, “Coupled Multipath-Aware Congestion Control,” October 2009.). The following sections summarize the performance impact of MPTCP as seen by an application.



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3.1.1.  Throughput

The most obvious performance improvement that will be gained with the use of MPTCP is an increase in throughput, since MPTCP will pool more than one path (where available) between two endpoints. This will provide greater bandwidth for an application. If there are shared bottlenecks between the flows, then the congestion control algorithms will ensure that load is evenly spread amongst regular and multipath TCP sessions, so that no end user receives worse performance than single-path TCP.

Furthermore, this means that an MPTCP session could achieve throughput that is greater than the capacity of a single interface on the device. If any applications make assumptions about interfaces due to throughput (or vice versa), they must take this into account (although MPTCP will always respect an application's request for a particular interface).

The transport of MPTCP signaling information results in a small overhead. If multiple subflows share a same bottleneck, this overhead slightly reduces the capacity that is available for data transport. Yet, this potential reduction of throughput will be neglectible in many usage scenarios, and the protocol contains optimisations in its design so that this overhead is minimal.



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3.1.2.  Delay

If the delays on the constituent subflows of an MPTCP connection differ, the jitter perceivable to an application may appear higher as the data is striped across the subflows. Although MPTCP will ensure in-order delivery to the application, the application must be able to cope with the data delivery being burstier than may be usual with single-path TCP. Since burstiness is commonplace on the Internet today, it is unlikely that applications will suffer from such an impact on the traffic profile, but application authors may wish to consider this in future development.

In addition, applications that make round trip time (RTT) estimates at the application level may have some issues. Whilst the average delay calculated will be accurate, whether this is useful for an application will depend on what it requires this information for. If a new application wishes to derive such information, it should consider how multiple subflows may affect its measurements, and thus how it may wish to respond. In such a case, an application may wish to express its scheduling preferences, as described later in this document.



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3.1.3.  Resilience

The use of multiple subflows simultaneously means that, if one should fail, all traffic will move to the remaining subflow(s), and additionally any lost packets can be retransmitted on these subflows.

Subflow failure may be caused by issues within the network, which an application would be unaware of, or interface failure on the node. An application may, under certain circumstances, be in a position to be aware of such failure (e.g. by radio signal strength, or simply an interface enabled flag), and so must not make assumptions of an MPTCP flow's stablity based on this. MPTCP will never override an application's request for a given interface, however, so the cases where this issue may be applicable are limited.



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3.2.  Potential Problems



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3.2.1.  Impact of Middleboxes

MPTCP has been designed in order to pass through the majority of middleboxes. Empirical evidence suggests that new TCP options can successfully be used on most paths in the Internet. Nevertheless some middleboxes may still refuse to pass MPTCP messages due to the presence of TCP options, or they may strip TCP options. If this is the case, MPTCP should fall back to regular TCP. Although this will not create a problem for the application (its communication will be set up either way), there may be additional (and indeed, user-perceivable) delay while the first handshake fails. A detailed discussion of the various fallback mechanisms, for failures occurring at different points in the connection, is presented in [5] (Ford, A., Raiciu, C., and M. Handley, “TCP Extensions for Multipath Operation with Multiple Addresses,” June 2010.).

There may also be middleboxes that transparently change the length of content. If such middleboxes are present, MPTCP's reassembly of the byte stream in the receiver is difficult. Still, MPTCP can detect such middleboxes and then fall back to regular TCP. An overview of the impact of middleboxes is presented in [4] (Ford, A., Raiciu, C., Barre, S., and J. Iyengar, “Architectural Guidelines for Multipath TCP Development,” June 2010.) and MPTCP's mechanisms to work around these are presented and discussed in [5] (Ford, A., Raiciu, C., and M. Handley, “TCP Extensions for Multipath Operation with Multiple Addresses,” June 2010.).

MPTCP can also have other unexpected implications. For instance, intrusion detection systems could be triggered. A full analysis of MPTCP's impact on such middleboxes is for further study after deployment experiments.



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3.2.2.  Outdated Implicit Assumptions

In regular TCP, there is a one-to-one mapping of the socket interface to a flow through a network. Since MPTCP can make use of multiple flows, applications cannot implicitly rely on this one-to-one mapping any more. Applications that require the transport along a single path can disable the use of MPTCP as described later in this document. Examples include monitoring tools that want to measure the available bandwidth on a path, or routing protocols such as BGP that require the use of a specific link.



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3.2.3.  Security Implications

The support for multiple IP addresses within one MPTCP connection can result in additional security vulnerabilities, such as possibilities for attackers to hijack connections. The protocol design of MPTCP minimizes this risk. An attacker on one of the paths can cause harm, but this is hardly an additional security risk compared to single-path TCP, which is vulnerable to man-in-the-middle attacks, too. A detailed thread analysis of MPTCP is published in [6] (Bagnulo, M., “Threat Analysis for Multi-addressed/Multi-path TCP,” March 2010.).



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4.  Operation of MPTCP with Legacy Applications



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4.1.  Overview of the MPTCP Network Stack

MPTCP is an extension of TCP, but it is designed to be backward compatible for legacy applications. TCP interacts with other parts of the network stack by different interfaces. The de facto standard API between TCP and applications is the sockets interface. The position of MPTCP in the protocol stack can be illustrated in Figure 1 (MPTCP protocol stack).



     +-------------------------------+
     |           Application         |
     +-------------------------------+
            ^                 |
 ~~~~~~~~~~~|~Socket Interface|~~~~~~~~~~~
            |                 v
    +-------------------------------+
    |             MPTCP             |
    + - - - - - - - + - - - - - - - +
    | Subflow (TCP) | Subflow (TCP) |
    +-------------------------------+
    |       IP      |      IP       |
    +-------------------------------+
 Figure 1: MPTCP protocol stack 

In general, MPTCP can affect all interfaces that make assumptions about the coupling of a TCP connection to a single IP address and TCP port pair, to one sockets endpoint, to one network interface, or to a given path through the network.

This means that there are two classes of applications:

In the following, it is discussed to which extent MPTCP affects legacy applications using the existing sockets API. The existing sockets API implies that applications deal with data structures that store, amongst others, the IP addresses and TCP port numbers of a TCP connection. A design objective of MPTCP is that legacy applications can continue to use the established sockets API without any changes. However, in MPTCP there is a one-to-many mapping between the socket endpoint and the subflows. This has several subtle implications for legacy applications using sockets API functions.



 TOC 

4.2.  Address Issues



 TOC 

4.2.1.  Specification of Addresses by Applications

During binding, an application can either select a specific address, or bind to INADDR_ANY. Furthermore, on some systems other socket options (e. g., SO_BINDTODEVICE) can be used to bind to a specific interface. If an application uses a specific address or binds to a specific interface, then MPTCP MUST respect this and not interfere in the application's choices. If an application binds to INADDR_ANY, it is assumed that the application does not care which addresses to use locally. In this case, a local policy MAY allow MPTCP to automatically set up multiple subflows on such a connection.

The basic sockets API of MPTCP-aware applications allows to express further preferences in an MPTCP-compatible way (e.g. bind to a subset of interfaces only).



 TOC 

4.2.2.  Querying of Addresses by Applications

Applications can use the getpeername() or getsockname() functions in order to retrieve the IP address of the peer or of the local socket. These functions can be used for various purposes, including security mechanisms, geo-location, or interface checks. The socket API was designed with an assumption that a socket is using just one address, and since this address is visible to the application, the application may assume that the information provided by the functions is the same during the lifetime of a connection. However, in MPTCP, unlike in TCP, there is a one-to-many mapping of a connection to subflows, and subflows can be added and removed while the connections continues to exist. Therefore, MPTCP cannot expose addresses by getpeername() or getsockname() that are both valid and constant during the connection's lifetime.

This problem is addressed as follows: If used by a legacy application, the MPTCP stack MUST always return the addresses of the first subflow of an MPTCP connection, in all circumstances, even if that particular subflow is no longer in use.

As this address may not be valid any more if the first subflow is closed, the MPTCP stack MAY close the whole MPTCP connection if the first subflow is closed (i.e. fate sharing between the initial subflow and the MPTCP connection as a whole). Whether to close the whole MPTCP connection by default SHOULD be controlled by a local policy. Further experiments are needed to investigate its implications.

Instead of getpeername() or getsockname(), MPTCP-aware applications can use new API calls, documented later, in order to retrieve the full list of address pairs for the subflows in use.

TBD: If a socket is used by an MPTCP-aware application and thus does not use the backward compatibility mode, the functions getpeername() and getsockname() could fail with a new error code EMULTIPATH. The motivation would be that an MPTCP-aware application should not use these two functions due to their ambiguity. Instead, the information about the addresses in use should be accessed by the basic MPTCP sockets API, if needed. The alternative would be to always returning the addresses of the first subflow - which is the best option is currently unspecified, and may be left to the implementation.



 TOC 

4.3.  Socket Option Issues



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4.3.1.  General Guideline

The existing sockets API includes options that modify the behavior of sockets and their underlying communications protocols. Various socket options exist on socket, TCP, and IP level. The value of an option can usually be set by the setsockopt() system function. The getsockopt() function gets information. In general, the existing sockets interface functions cannot configure each MPTCP subflow individually. In order to be backward compatible, existing APIs therefore SHOULD apply to all subflows within one connection, as far as possible.



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4.3.2.  Disabling of the Nagle Algorithm

One commonly used TCP socket option (TCP_NODELAY) disables the Nagle algorithm as described in [2] (Braden, R., “Requirements for Internet Hosts - Communication Layers,” October 1989.). This option is also specified in the Posix standard [8] (, “IEEE Std. 1003.1-2008 Standard for Information Technology -- Portable Operating System Interface (POSIX). Open Group Technical Standard: Base Specifications, Issue 7, 2008.,” .). Applications can use this option in combination with MPTCP exactly in the same way. It then SHOULD disable the Nagle algorithm for the MPTCP connection, i.e., all subflows.

In addition, the MPTCP protocol instance MAY use a different path scheduler algorithm if TCP_NODELAY is present. For instance, it could use an algorithm that is optimized for latency-sensitive traffic. Specific algorithms are outside the scope of this document.



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4.3.3.  Buffer Sizing

Applications can explicitly configure send and receive buffer sizes by the sockets API (SO_SNDBUF, SO_RCVBUF). These socket options can also be used in combination with MPTCP and then affect the buffer size of the MPTCP connection. However, when defining buffer sizes, application programmers should take into account that the transport over several subflows requires a certain amount of buffer for resequencing in the receiver. MPTCP may also require more storage space in the sender, in particular, if retransmissions are sent over more than one path. In addition, very small send buffers may prevent MPTCP from efficiently scheduling data over different subflows. Therefore, it does not make sense to use MPTCP in combination with small send or receive buffers.

An MPTCP implementation MAY set a lower bound for send and receive buffers and treat a small buffer size request as an implicit request not to use MPTCP.



 TOC 

4.3.4.  Other Socket Options

Some network stacks also provide other implementation-specific socket options or interfaces that affect TCP's behavior. If a network stack supports MPTCP, it must be ensured that these options do not interfere.



 TOC 

4.4.  Default Enabling of MPTCP

It is up to a local policy at the end system whether a network stack should automatically enable MPTCP for sockets even if there is no explicit sign of MPTCP awareness of the corresponding application. Such a choice may be under the control of the user through system preferences.

The enabling of MPTCP, either by application or by system defaults, does not necessarily mean that MPTCP will always be used. Both endpoints must support MPTCP, and there must be multiple addresses at at least one endpoint, for MPTCP to be used. Even if those requirements are met, however, MPTCP may not be immediately used on a connection. It may make sense for multiple paths to be brought into operation only after a given period of time, or if the connection is saturated.



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4.5.  Summary of Advices to Application Developers



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5.  Basic API for MPTCP-aware Applications



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5.1.  Design Considerations

While applications can use MPTCP with the unmodified sockets API, multipath transport results in many degrees of freedom. MPTCP manages the data transport over different subflows automatically. By default, this is transparent to the application, but an application could use an additional API to interface with the MPTCP layer and to control important aspects of the MPTCP implementation's behaviour.

This document describes a basic MPTCP API. The API uses non-mandatory socket options and only includes a minimum set of functions that provide an equivalent level of control and information as exists for regular TCP. It maintains backward compatibility with legacy applications.

An advanced MPTCP API is outside the scope of this document. The basic API does not allow a sender or a receiver to express preferences about the management of paths or the scheduling of data, even if this can have a significant performance impact and if an MPTCP implementation could benefit from additional guidance by applications. A list of potential further API extensions is provided in the appendix. The specification of such an advanced API is for further study and may partly be implementation-specific.

MPTCP mainly affects the sending of data. Therefore, the basic API only affects the sender side of a data transfer. A receiver may also have preferences about data transfer choices, and it may have performance requirements, too. Yet, the signaling of the receiver's needs is outside of the scope of this document.

As this document specifies sockets API extensions, it is written so that the syntax and semantics are in line with the Posix standard [8] (, “IEEE Std. 1003.1-2008 Standard for Information Technology -- Portable Operating System Interface (POSIX). Open Group Technical Standard: Base Specifications, Issue 7, 2008.,” .) as much as possible.



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5.2.  Requirements on the Basic MPTCP API

Because of the importance of the sockets interface there are several fundamental design objectives for the basic interface between MPTCP and applications:

The following is a list of the core requirements for the basic API:

REQ1:
Turn on/off MPTCP: An application should be able to request to turn on or turn off the usage of MPTCP. This means that an application should be able to explicitly request the use of MPTCP if this is possible. Applications should also be able to request not to enable MPTCP and to use regular TCP transport instead. This can be implicit in many cases, since MPTCP must disabled by the use of binding to a specific address. MPTCP may also be enabled if an application uses AF_MULTIPATH.
REQ2:
An application should be able to restrict MPTCP to binding to a given set of addresses.
REQ3:
An application should be able obtain information on the addresses used by the MPTCP subflows.
REQ4:
An application should be able to extract a unique identifier for the connection (per endpoint).

The first requirement is the most important one, since some applications could benefit a lot from MPTCP, but there are also cases in which it hardly makes sense. The existing sockets API provides similar mechanisms to enable or disable advanced TCP features. The second requirement corresponds to the binding of addresses with the bind() socket call, or, e.g., explicit device bindings with a SO_BINDTODEVICE option. The third requirement ensures that there is an equivalent to getpeername() or getsockname() that is able to deal with more than one subflow. Finally, it should be possible for the application to retrieve a unique connection identifier (local to the endpoint on which it is running) for the MPTCP connection. This is equivalent to using the (address, port) pair for a connection identifier in legacy TCP, which is no longer static in MPTCP.



 TOC 

5.3.  Sockets Interface Extensions by the Basic MPTCP API



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5.3.1.  Overview

The basic MPTCP API consist of four new socket options that are specific to MPTCP. All of these socket options are defined at TCP level (IPPROTO_TCP).

Table Table 1 (Socket options for MPTCP) shows a list of the socket options for the general configuration of MPTCP. The first column gives the name of the option. The second and third columns indicate whether the option can be handled by the getsockopt() system call and/or by the setsockopt() system call. The fourth column lists the type of data structure specified along with the socket option.



Option nameGetSetData type
TCP_MULTIPATH_ENABLE o o int
TCP_MULTIPATH_BIND   o list of "struct sockaddr"
TCP_MULTIPATH_SUBFLOWS o   list of pairs of "struct sockaddr"
TCP_MULTIPATH_CONNID o   uint32

 Table 1: Socket options for MPTCP 

There are restrictions when these new socket options can be used:



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5.3.2.  Enabling and Disabling of MPTCP

An application can explicitly indicate multipath capability by setting the TCP_MULTIPATH_ENABLE option with a value larger than 0. In this case, the MPTCP implementation SHOULD try to negitiate MPTCP for that connection. Note that multipath transport will not necessarily be enabled, as it requires multiple addresses and support in the other end-system and potentially also on middleboxes.

An application can disable MPTCP setting the option with a value of 0. In that case, MPTCP MUST NOT be used on that connection.

After connection establishment, an application can get the value of the TCP_MULTIPATH_ENABLE option. A value of 0 then means lack of MPTCP support. Any value equal to or larger than 1 means that MPTCP is supported.

TBD: In case of success, the value could return the current number of subflows.

As alternative to setting a socket option, an application can also use a new, separate address family called AF_MULTIPATH [9] (Sarolahti, P., “Multi-address Interface in the Socket API,” March 2010.). This separate address family can be used to exchange multiple addresses between an application and the standard sockets API, and additionally acts as an explicit indication that an application is MPTCP-aware, i.e., that it can deal with the semantic changes of the sockets API, in particular concerning getpeername() and getsockname(). The usage of AF_MULTIPATH is also more flexible with respect to multipath transport, either IPv4 or IPv6, or both in parallel [9] (Sarolahti, P., “Multi-address Interface in the Socket API,” March 2010.).



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5.3.3.  Binding MPTCP to Specified Addresses

An application can set the TCP_MULTIPATH_BIND socket option to announce a set of local IP addresses that MPTCP may bind to. The parameter of the option is a list of data structures of type "sockaddr". A MPTCP implementation must iterate over this list since the length of the structures may vary and will be deteremined by the address families.

If used, an application SHOULD always provide the full list of addresses that MPTCP is allowed to use. If the option is set, MPTCP MUST only establish additional subflows using one of the addresses in that list as source addresses. Of course, MPTCP may also use a subset of the addresses only.

The option may be repeatedly set. In that case, an updated list of addresses SHOULD only affect the establishment of new subflows. In addition, MPTCP MAY close the corresponding subflows if an address is not present in an updated list any more, but it is also allowed to keep these subflows open. The basic API does not provide a mechanism to explicitly close a subflow.

TBD: are these the best heuristics? Is it reasonable to expect an application to keep track of all addresses if it wants to do changes? Should it be stronger than a MAY for address removal?



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5.3.4.  Querying the MPTCP Subflow Addresses

An application can get a list of the addresses used by the currently established subflows by means of the TCP_MULTIPATH_SUBFLOWS option, which cannot be set. The return value is a list of pairs of "sockaddr" data structures. In one pair, the first data structure refers to the local IP address and the second one to the remote IP address used by the subflow. The list MUST only include established subflows.

The length of the data structure depends on the number of subflows, and so an application must iterate over the list for its length, determining the length of each "sockaddr" data structure by its address family.



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5.3.5.  Getting a Unique Connection Identifier

An application that wants a unique identifier for the connection, analogous to an (address, port) pair in regular TCP, can use the TCP_MULTIPATH_CONNID option to get a local connection identifier for the MPTCP connection.

This is a 32-bit number, and SHOULD be the same as the local connection identifier sent in the MPTCP handshake.



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5.4.  Usage Examples

TODO: Example C code for the API functions



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6.  Other Compatibility Issues



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6.1.  Incompatibilities with other Multihoming Solutions

The use of MPTCP can interact with various related sockets API extensions. The use of a multihoming shim layer conflicts with multipath transport such as MPTCP or SCTP [12] (Komu, M., Bagnulo, M., Slavov, K., and S. Sugimoto, “Socket Application Program Interface (API) for Multihoming Shim,” February 2010.). Care should be taken for the usage not to confuse with the overlapping features of other APIs:

In order to avoid any conflict, multiaddressed MPTCP SHOULD NOT be enabled if a network stack uses SHIM6, HIP, or Mobile IPv6. Furthermore, applications should not try to use both the MPTCP API and another multihoming or mobility layer API.

It is possible, however, that some of the MPTCP functionality, such as congestion control, could be used in a SHIM6 or HIP environment. Such operation is outside the scope of this document.



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6.2.  Interactions with DNS

In multihomed or multiaddressed environments, there are various issues that are not specific to MPTCP, but have to be considered, too. These problems are summarized in [15] (Blanchet, M. and P. Seite, “Multiple Interfaces Problem Statement,” May 2010.).

Specifically, there can be interactions with DNS. Whilst it is expected that an application will iterate over the list of addresses returned from a call such as getaddrinfo(), MPTCP itself MUST NOT make any assumptions about multiple A or AAAA records from the same DNS query referring to the same host, as it is very likely that multiple addresses refer to multiple servers for load balancing purposes.

TODO: Elaborate on DNS



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7.  Security Considerations

Will be added in a later version of this document.



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8.  IANA Considerations

No IANA considerations.



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9.  Conclusion

This document discusses MPTCP's application implications and specifies a basic MPTCP API. For legacy applications, it is ensured that the existing sockets API continues to work. MPTCP-aware applications can use the basic MPTCP API that provides some control over the transport layer equivalent to regular TCP. A more fine-granular interaction between applications and MPTCP requires an advanced MPTCP API, which is not specified in this document.



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10.  Acknowledgments

Authors sincerely thank to the following people for their helpful comments to the document: Costin Raiciu

Michael Scharf is supported by the German-Lab project (http://www.german-lab.de/) funded by the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF). Alan Ford is supported by Trilogy (http://www.trilogy-project.org/), a research project (ICT-216372) partially funded by the European Community under its Seventh Framework Program. The views expressed here are those of the author(s) only. The European Commission is not liable for any use that may be made of the information in this document.



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11.  References



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11.1. Normative References

[1] Postel, J., “Transmission Control Protocol,” STD 7, RFC 793, September 1981 (TXT).
[2] Braden, R., “Requirements for Internet Hosts - Communication Layers,” STD 3, RFC 1122, October 1989 (TXT).
[3] Bradner, S., “Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels,” BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997 (TXT, HTML, XML).
[4] Ford, A., Raiciu, C., Barre, S., and J. Iyengar, “Architectural Guidelines for Multipath TCP Development,” draft-ietf-mptcp-architecture-01 (work in progress), June 2010 (TXT).
[5] Ford, A., Raiciu, C., and M. Handley, “TCP Extensions for Multipath Operation with Multiple Addresses,” draft-ietf-mptcp-multiaddressed-00 (work in progress), June 2010 (TXT).
[6] Bagnulo, M., “Threat Analysis for Multi-addressed/Multi-path TCP,” draft-ietf-mptcp-threat-02 (work in progress), March 2010 (TXT).
[7] Raiciu, C., Handley, M., and D. Wischik, “Coupled Multipath-Aware Congestion Control,” draft-raiciu-mptcp-congestion-00 (work in progress), October 2009 (TXT).
[8] “IEEE Std. 1003.1-2008 Standard for Information Technology -- Portable Operating System Interface (POSIX). Open Group Technical Standard: Base Specifications, Issue 7, 2008..”


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11.2. Informative References

[9] Sarolahti, P., “Multi-address Interface in the Socket API,” draft-sarolahti-mptcp-af-multipath-01 (work in progress), March 2010 (TXT).
[10] Stevens, W., Thomas, M., Nordmark, E., and T. Jinmei, “Advanced Sockets Application Program Interface (API) for IPv6,” RFC 3542, May 2003 (TXT).
[11] Chakrabarti, S. and E. Nordmark, “Extension to Sockets API for Mobile IPv6,” RFC 4584, July 2006 (TXT).
[12] Komu, M., Bagnulo, M., Slavov, K., and S. Sugimoto, “Socket Application Program Interface (API) for Multihoming Shim,” draft-ietf-shim6-multihome-shim-api-13 (work in progress), February 2010 (TXT).
[13] Komu, M. and T. Henderson, “Basic Socket Interface Extensions for Host Identity Protocol (HIP),” draft-ietf-hip-native-api-12 (work in progress), January 2010 (TXT).
[14] Stewart, R., Poon, K., Tuexen, M., Yasevich, V., and P. Lei, “Sockets API Extensions for Stream Control Transmission Protocol (SCTP),” draft-ietf-tsvwg-sctpsocket-21 (work in progress), February 2010 (TXT).
[15] Blanchet, M. and P. Seite, “Multiple Interfaces Problem Statement,” draft-ietf-mif-problem-statement-04 (work in progress), May 2010 (TXT).
[16] Wasserman, M. and P. Seite, “Current Practices for Multiple Interface Hosts,” draft-ietf-mif-current-practices-01 (work in progress), June 2010 (TXT).


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Appendix A.  Requirements on a Future Advanced MPTCP API



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A.1.  Design Considerations

Multipath transport results in many degrees of freedom. The basic MPTCP API only defines a minimum set of the sockets API extensions for the interface between the MPTCP layer and applications, which does not offer much control of the MPTCP implementation's behaviour. A future, advanced API could address further features of MPTCP and provide more control.

Applications that use TCP may have different requirements on the transport layer. While developers have become used to the characteristics of regular TCP, new opportunities created by MPTCP could allow the service provided to be optimised further. An advanced API could enable MPTCP-aware applications to specify preferences and control certain aspects of the behavior, in addition to the simple control provided by the basic interface. An advanced API could also address aspects that are completely out-of-scope of the basic API, for example, the question whether a receiving application could influence the sending policy.

Furthermore, an advanced MPTCP API could be part of a new overall interface between the network stack and applications that addresses other issues as well, such as the split between identifiers and locators. An API that does not use IP addresses (but, instead e.g. a connectbyname() function) would be useful for numerous purposes, independent of MPTCP.

This appendix documents a list of potential usage scenarios and requirements for the advanded API. The specification and implementation of a corresponding API is outside the scope of this document.



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A.2.  MPTCP Usage Scenarios and Application Requirements

There are different MPTCP usage scenarios. An application that wishes to transmit bulk data will want MPTCP to provide a high throughput service immediately, through creating and maximising utilisation of all available subflows. This is the default MPTCP use case.

But at the other extreme, there are applications that are highly interactive, but require only a small amount of throughput, and these are optimally served by low latency and jitter stability. In such a situation, it would be preferable for the traffic to use only the lowest latency subflow (assuming it has sufficient capacity), maybe with one or two additional subflows for resilience and recovery purposes. The key challenge for such a strategy is that the delay on a path may fluctuate significantly and that just always selecting the path with the smallest delay might result in instability.

The choice between bulk data transport and latency-sensitive transport affects the scheduler in terms of whether traffic should be, by default, sent on one subflow or across several ones. Even if the total bandwidth required is less than that available on an individual path, it is desirable to spread this load to reduce stress on potential bottlenecks, and this is why this method should be the default for bulk data transport. However, that may not be optimal for applications that require latency/jitter stability.

In the case of the latter option, a further question arises: Should additional subflows be used whenever the primary subflow is overloaded, or only when the primary path fails (hot-standby)? In other words, is latency stability or bandwidth more important to the application? This results in two different options: Firstly, there is the single path which can overflow into an additional subflow; and secondly there is single-path with hot-standby, whereby an application may want an alternative backup subflow in order to improve resilience. In case that data delivery on the first subflow fails, the data transport could immediately be continued on the second subflow, which is idle otherwise.

A further, mostly orthogonal question is whether data should be duplicated over the different subflows, in particular if there is spare capacity. This could improve both the timeliness and reliability of data delivery.

In summary, there are at least three possible performance objectives for multipath transport (not necessarily disjoint):

  1. High bandwidth
  2. Low latency and jitter stability
  3. High reliability

In an advanced API, applications could provide high-level guidance to the MPTCP implementation concerning these performance requirements, for instance, which is considered to be the most important one. The MPTCP stack would then use internal mechanisms to fulfill this abstract indication of a desired service, as far as possible. This would both affect the assignment of data (including retransmissions) to existing subflows (e.g., 'use all in parallel', 'use as overflow', 'hot standby', 'duplicate traffic') as well as the decisions when to set up additional subflows to which addresses. In both cases different policies can exist, which can be expected to be implementation-specific.

Therefore, an advanced API could provide a mechanism how applications can specify their high-level requirements in an implementation-independent way. One possibility would be to select one "application profile" out of a number of choices that characterize typical applications. Yet, as applications today do not have to inform TCP about their communication requirements, it requires further studies whether such an approach would be realistic.

Of course, independent of an advanced API, such functionality could also partly be achieved by MPTCP-internal heuristics that infer some application preferences e.g. from existing socket options, such as TCP_NODELAY. Whether this would be reliable, and indeed appropriate, is for further study, too.



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A.3.  Potential Requirements on an Advanced MPTCP API

The following is a list of potential requirements for an advanced MPTCP API beyond the features of the basic API. It is included here for information only:

REQ5:
An application should be able to establish MPTCP connections without using IP addresses as locators.
REQ6:
An application should be able obtain usage information and statistics about all subflows (e.g., ratio of traffic sent via this subflow).
REQ7:
An application should be able to request a change in the number of subflows in use, thus triggering removal or addition of subflows. An even finer control granularity would be a request for the establishment of a new subflow to a provided destination, or a request for the termination of a specified, existing subflow.
REQ8:
An application should be able to inform the MPTCP implementation about its high-level performance requirements, e.g., in form of a profile.
REQ9:
An application should be able to control the automatic establishment/termination of subflows. This would imply a selection among different heuristics of the path manager, e.g., 'try as soon as possible', 'wait until there is a bunch of data', etc.
REQ10:
An application should be able to set preferred subflows or subflow usage policies. This would result in a selection among different configurations of the multipath scheduler.
REQ11:
An application should be able to control the level of redundancy by telling whether segments should be sent on more than one path in parallel.

An advanced API fulfilling these requirements would allow application developers to more specifically configure MPTCP. It could avoid suboptimal decisions of internal, implicit heuristics. However, it is unclear whether all of these requirements would have a significant benefit to applications, since they are going above and beyond what the existing API to regular TCP provides.



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Appendix B.  Change History of the Document

Changes compared to version 01:

Changes compared to version 00:



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Authors' Addresses

  Michael Scharf
  Alcatel-Lucent Bell Labs
  Lorenzstrasse 10
  70435 Stuttgart
  Germany
EMail:  michael.scharf@alcatel-lucent.com
  
  Alan Ford
  Roke Manor Research
  Old Salisbury Lane
  Romsey, Hampshire SO51 0ZN
  UK
Phone:  +44 1794 833 465
EMail:  alan.ford@roke.co.uk