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rfc:rfc8867



Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) Z. Sarker Request for Comments: 8867 Ericsson AB Category: Informational V. Singh ISSN: 2070-1721 callstats.io

                                                                X. Zhu
                                                         Cisco Systems
                                                            M. Ramalho
                                                         AcousticComms
                                                          January 2021

Test Cases for Evaluating Congestion Control for Interactive Real-Time

                               Media

Abstract

 The Real-time Transport Protocol (RTP) is used to transmit media in
 multimedia telephony applications.  These applications are typically
 required to implement congestion control.  This document describes
 the test cases to be used in the performance evaluation of such
 congestion control algorithms in a controlled environment.

Status of This Memo

 This document is not an Internet Standards Track specification; it is
 published for informational purposes.
 This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force
 (IETF).  It represents the consensus of the IETF community.  It has
 received public review and has been approved for publication by the
 Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG).  Not all documents
 approved by the IESG are candidates for any level of Internet
 Standard; see Section 2 of RFC 7841.
 Information about the current status of this document, any errata,
 and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at
 https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8867.

Copyright Notice

 Copyright (c) 2021 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the
 document authors.  All rights reserved.
 This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal
 Provisions Relating to IETF Documents
 (https://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of
 publication of this document.  Please review these documents
 carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect
 to this document.  Code Components extracted from this document must
 include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of
 the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as
 described in the Simplified BSD License.

Table of Contents

 1.  Introduction
 2.  Terminology
 3.  Structure of Test Cases
 4.  Recommended Evaluation Settings
   4.1.  Evaluation Metrics
   4.2.  Path Characteristics
   4.3.  Media Source
 5.  Basic Test Cases
   5.1.  Variable Available Capacity with a Single Flow
   5.2.  Variable Available Capacity with Multiple Flows
   5.3.  Congested Feedback Link with Bi-directional Media Flows
   5.4.  Competing Media Flows with the Same Congestion Control
         Algorithm
   5.5.  Round Trip Time Fairness
   5.6.  Media Flow Competing with a Long TCP Flow
   5.7.  Media Flow Competing with Short TCP Flows
   5.8.  Media Pause and Resume
 6.  Other Potential Test Cases
   6.1.  Media Flows with Priority
   6.2.  Explicit Congestion Notification Usage
   6.3.  Multiple Bottlenecks
 7.  Wireless Access Links
 8.  Security Considerations
 9.  IANA Considerations
 10. References
   10.1.  Normative References
   10.2.  Informative References
 Acknowledgments
 Authors' Addresses

1. Introduction

 This memo describes a set of test cases for evaluating congestion
 control algorithm proposals in controlled environments for real-time
 interactive media.  It is based on the guidelines enumerated in
 [RFC8868] and the requirements discussed in [RFC8836].  The test
 cases cover basic usage scenarios and are described using a common
 structure, which allows for additional test cases to be added to
 those described herein to accommodate other topologies and/or the
 modeling of different path characteristics.  The described test cases
 in this memo should be used to evaluate any proposed congestion
 control algorithm for real-time interactive media.

2. Terminology

 The terminology defined in RTP [RFC3550], RTP Profile for Audio and
 Video Conferences with Minimal Control [RFC3551], RTCP Extended
 Report (XR) [RFC3611], Extended RTP Profile for RTCP-based Feedback
 (RTP/AVPF) [RFC4585], and Support for Reduced-Size RTCP [RFC5506]
 applies.

3. Structure of Test Cases

 All the test cases in this document follow a basic structure allowing
 implementers to describe a new test scenario without repeatedly
 explaining common attributes.  The structure includes a general
 description section that describes the test case and its motivation.
 Additionally the test case defines a set of attributes that
 characterize the testbed, for example, the network path between
 communicating peers and the diverse traffic sources.
 Define the test case:
    General description:  describes the motivation and the goals of
       the test case.
    Expected behavior:  describes the desired rate adaptation
       behavior.
    List of metrics to evaluate the desired behavior:  this indicates
       the minimum set of metrics (e.g., link utilization, media
       sending rate) that a proposed algorithm needs to measure to
       validate the expected rate adaptation behavior.  It should also
       indicate the time granularity (e.g., averaged over 10 ms, 100
       ms, or 1 s) for measuring certain metrics.  Typical measurement
       interval is 200 ms.
 Define testbed topology:
    Every test case needs to define an evaluation testbed topology.
    Figure 1 shows such an evaluation topology.  In this evaluation
    topology, S1..Sn are traffic sources.  These sources generate
    media traffic and use the congestion control algorithm(s) under
    investigation.  R1..Rn are the corresponding receivers.  A test
    case can have one or more such traffic sources (S) and their
    corresponding receivers (R).  The path from the source to
    destination is denoted as "forward", and the path from a
    destination to a source is denoted as "backward".  The following
    basic structure of the test case has been described from the
    perspective of media-generating endpoints attached on the left-
    hand side of Figure 1.  In this setup, the media flows are
    transported in the forward direction, and the corresponding
    feedback/control messages are transported in the backward
    direction.  However, it is also possible to set up the test with
    media in both forward and backward directions.  In that case,
    unless otherwise specified by the test case, it is expected that
    the backward path does not introduce any congestion-related
    impairments and has enough capacity to accommodate both media and
    feedback/control messages.  It should be noted that, depending on
    the test cases, it is possible to have different path
    characteristics in either of the directions.
    +---+                                                        +---+
    |S1 |====== \               Forward -->             / =======|R1 |
    +---+       \\                                     //        +---+
                 \\                                   //
    +---+       +-----+                            +-----+       +---+
    |S2 |=======|  A  |--------------------------->|  B  |=======|R2 |
    +---+       |     |<---------------------------|     |       +---+
                +-----+                            +-----+
    (...)         //                                  \\         (...)
                 //          <-- Backward              \\
    +---+       //                                      \\       +---+
    |Sn |====== /                                        \ ======|Rn |
    +---+                                                        +---+
                 Figure 1: Example of a Testbed Topology
    In a testbed environment with real equipment, there may exist a
    significant amount of unwanted traffic on the portions of the
    network path between the endpoints.  Some of this traffic may be
    generated by other processes on the endpoints themselves (e.g.,
    discovery protocols) or by other endpoints not presently under
    test.  Such unwanted traffic should be removed or avoided to the
    greatest extent possible.
 Define testbed attributes:
    Duration:  defines the duration of the test in seconds.
    Path characteristics:  defines the end-to-end transport level path
       characteristics of the testbed for a particular test case.  Two
       sets of attributes describe the path characteristics, one for
       the forward path and the other for the backward path.  The path
       characteristics for a particular path direction are applicable
       to all the sources "S" sending traffic on that path.  If only
       one attribute is specified, it is used for both path
       directions; however, unless specified the reverse path has no
       capacity restrictions and no path loss.
       Path direction:  forward or backward.
       Minimum bottleneck-link capacity:  defines the minimum capacity
          of the end-to-end path.
       Reference bottleneck capacity:  defines a reference value for
          the bottleneck capacity for test cases with time-varying
          bottleneck capacities.  All bottleneck capacities will be
          specified as a ratio with respect to the reference capacity
          value.
       One-way propagation delay:  describes the end-to-end latency
          along the path when network queues are empty, i.e., the time
          it takes for a packet to go from the sender to the receiver
          without encountering any queuing delay.
       Maximum end-to-end jitter:  defines the maximum jitter that can
          be observed along the path.
       Bottleneck queue type:  for example, "tail drop" [RFC7567],
          Flow Queue Controlled Delay (FQ-CoDel) [RFC8290], or
          Proportional Integral controller Enhanced (PIE) [RFC8033].
       Bottleneck queue size:  defines the size of queue in terms of
          queuing time when the queue is full (in milliseconds).
       Path loss ratio:  characterizes the non-congested, additive
          losses to be generated on the end-to-end path.  This must
          describe the loss pattern or loss model used to generate the
          losses.
    Application-related:  defines the traffic source behavior for
       implementing the test case:
       Media traffic source:  defines the characteristics of the media
          sources.  When using more than one media source, the
          different attributes are enumerated separately for each
          different media source.
          Media type:  Video/Voice.
          Media flow direction:  forward, backward, or both.
          Number of media sources:  defines the total number of media
             sources.
          Media codec:  Constant Bit Rate (CBR) or Variable Bit Rate
             (VBR).
          Media source behavior:  describes the media encoder
             behavior.  It defines the main parameters that affect the
             adaptation behavior.  This may include but is not limited
             to the following:
             Adaptability:  describes the adaptation options.  For
                example, in the case of video, it defines the
                following ranges of adaptation: bit rate, frame rate,
                and video resolution.  Similarly, in the case of
                voice, it defines the range of bit rate adaptation,
                the sampling rate variation, and the variation in
                packetization interval.
             Output variation:  for a VBR encoder, it defines the
                encoder output variation from the average target rate
                over a particular measurement interval.  For example,
                on average the encoder output may vary between 5% to
                15% above or below the average target bit rate when
                measured over a 100 ms time window.  The time interval
                over which the variation is specified must be
                provided.
             Responsiveness to a new bit rate request:  the lag in
                time between a new bit rate request from the
                congestion control algorithm and actual rate changes
                in encoder output.  Depending on the encoder, this
                value may be specified in absolute time (e.g., 10 ms
                to 1000 ms) or other appropriate metric (e.g., next
                frame interval time).
             More detailed discussions on expected media source
             behavior, including those from synthetic video traffic
             sources, can be found in [RFC8593].
          Media content:  describes the chosen video scenario.  For
             example, video test sequences are available at [xiph-seq]
             and [HEVC-seq].  Different video scenarios give different
             distributions of video frames produced by the video
             encoder.  Hence, it is important to specify the media
             content used in a particular test.  If a synthetic video
             traffic source [RFC8593] is used, then the synthetic
             video traffic source needs to be configured according to
             the characteristics of the media content specified.
          Media timeline:  describes the point when the media source
             is introduced and removed from the testbed.  For example,
             the media source may start transmitting immediately when
             the test case begins, or after a few seconds.
          Startup behavior:  the media starts at a defined bit rate,
             which may be the minimum, maximum bit rate, or a value in
             between (in Kbps).
       Competing traffic source:  describes the characteristics of the
          competing traffic source, the different types of competing
          flows are enumerated in [RFC8868].
          Traffic direction:  forward, backward, or both.
          Type of sources:  defines the types of competing traffic
             sources.  Types of competing traffic flows are listed in
             [RFC8868].  For example, the number of TCP flows
             connected to a web browser, the mean size and
             distribution of the content downloaded.
          Number of sources:  defines the total number of competing
             sources of each media type per traffic direction.
          Congestion control:  enumerates the congestion control used
             by each type of competing traffic.
          Traffic timeline:  describes when the competing traffic
             starts and ends in the test case.
    Additional attributes:  describes attributes essential for
       implementing a test case that are not included in the above
       structure.  These attributes must be well defined, so that the
       other implementers of that particular test case are able to
       implement it easily.
 Any attribute can have a set of values (enclosed within "[]").  Each
 member value of such a set must be treated as different value for the
 same attribute.  It is desired to run separate tests for each such
 attribute value.
 The test cases described in this document follow the above structure.

4. Recommended Evaluation Settings

 This section describes recommended test case settings and could be
 overwritten by the respective test cases.

4.1. Evaluation Metrics

 To evaluate the performance of the candidate algorithms, the
 implementers must log enough information to visualize the following
 metrics at a fine enough time granularity:
 1.  Flow level:
     A.  End-to-end delay for the congestion-controlled media flow(s).
         For example, end-to-end delay observed on the IP packet level
         and the video frame level.
     B.  Variation in sending bit rate and throughput.  Mainly
         observing the frequency and magnitude of oscillations.
     C.  Packet losses observed at the receiving endpoint.
     D.  Feedback message overhead.
     E.  Convergence time.  Time to reach steady state for the
         congestion-controlled media flow(s).  Each occurrence of
         convergence during the test period needs to be presented.
 2.  Transport level:
     A.  Bandwidth utilization.
     B.  Queue length (milliseconds at specified path capacity).

4.2. Path Characteristics

 Each path between a sender and receiver as described in Figure 1 has
 the following characteristics unless otherwise specified in the test
 case:
 Path direction:  forward and backward.
 Reference bottleneck capacity:  1 Mbps.
 One-way propagation delay:  50 ms.  Implementers are encouraged to
    run the experiment with additional propagation delays mentioned in
    [RFC8868].
 Maximum end-to-end jitter:  30 ms.  Jitter models are described in
    [RFC8868].
 Bottleneck queue type:  "tail drop".  Implementers are encouraged to
    run the experiment with other Active Queue Management (AQM)
    schemes, such as FQ-CoDel and PIE.
 Bottleneck queue size:  300 ms.
 Path loss ratio:  0%.
 Examples of additional network parameters are discussed in [RFC8868].
 For test cases involving time-varying bottleneck capacity, all
 capacity values are specified as a ratio with respect to a reference
 capacity value, so as to allow flexible scaling of capacity values
 along with media source rate range.  There exist two different
 mechanisms for inducing path capacity variation: a) by explicitly
 modifying the value of physical link capacity, or b) by introducing
 background non-adaptive UDP traffic with time-varying traffic rate.
 Implementers are encouraged to run the experiments with both
 mechanisms for test cases specified in Section 5.1, Section 5.2, and
 Section 5.3.

4.3. Media Source

 Unless otherwise specified, each test case will include one or more
 media sources as described below:
 Media type:  Video
    Media codec:  VBR
    Media source behavior:
       Adaptability:
          Bit rate range:  150 Kbps - 1.5 Mbps.  In real-life
             applications, the bit rate range can vary a lot depending
             on the provided service; for example, the maximum bit
             rate can be up to 4 Mbps.  However, for running tests to
             evaluate the congestion control algorithms, it is more
             important to have a look at how they react to a certain
             amount of bandwidth change.  Also it is possible that the
             media traffic generator used in a particular simulator or
             testbed is not capable of generating a higher bit rate.
             Hence, we have selected a suitable bit rate range typical
             of consumer-grade video conferencing applications in
             designing the test case.  If a different bit rate range
             is used in the test cases, then the end-to-end path
             capacity values will also need to be scaled accordingly.
          Frame resolution:  144p - 720p (or 1080p).  This resolution
             range is selected based on the bit rate range.  If a
             different bit rate range is used in the test cases, then
             a suitable frame resolution range also needs to be
             selected.
          Frame rate:  10 fps - 30 fps.  This frame rate range is
             selected based on the bit rate range.  If a different bit
             rate range is used in the test cases, then the frame rate
             range also needs to be suitably adjusted.
       Variation from target bit rate:  +/-5%. Unless otherwise
          specified in the test case(s), bit rate variation should be
          calculated over a one (1) second period of time.
       Responsiveness to new bit rate request:  100 ms
    Media content:  The media content should represent a typical video
       conversational scenario with head and shoulder movement.  We
       recommend using the Foreman video sequence [xiph-seq].
    Media startup behavior:  150 Kbps.  It should be noted that
       applications can use smart ways to select an optimal startup
       bit rate value for a certain network condition.  In such cases,
       the candidate proposals may show the effectiveness of such a
       smart approach as additional information for the evaluation
       process.
 Media type:  Audio
    Media codec:  CBR
    Media bit rate:  20 Kbps

5. Basic Test Cases

5.1. Variable Available Capacity with a Single Flow

 In this test case, the minimum bottleneck-link capacity between the
 two endpoints varies over time.  This test is designed to measure the
 responsiveness of the candidate algorithm.  This test tries to
 address the requirements in [RFC8836], which requires the algorithm
 to adapt the flow(s) and provide lower end-to-end latency when there
 exists:
  • an intermediate bottleneck
  • change in available capacity (e.g., due to interface change,

routing change, abrupt arrival/departure of background non-

    adaptive traffic)
  • maximum media bit rate is greater than link capacity. In this

case, when the application tries to ramp up to its maximum bit

    rate, since the link capacity is limited to a lower value, the
    congestion control scheme is expected to stabilize the sending bit
    rate close to the available bottleneck capacity.
 It should be noted that the exact variation in available capacity due
 to any of the above depends on the underlying technologies.  Hence,
 we describe a set of known factors, which may be extended to devise a
 more specific test case targeting certain behaviors in a certain
 network environment.
 Expected behavior:  The candidate algorithm is expected to detect the
    path capacity constraint, converge to the bottleneck link's
    capacity, and adapt the flow to avoid unwanted media rate
    oscillation when the sending bit rate is approaching the
    bottleneck link's capacity.  Such oscillations might occur when
    the media flow(s) attempts to reach its maximum bit rate but
    overshoots the usage of the available bottleneck capacity, then to
    rectify, it reduces the bit rate and starts to ramp up again.
 Evaluation metrics:  As described in Section 4.1.
 Testbed topology:  One media source S1 is connected to the
    corresponding R1.  The media traffic is transported over the
    forward path and corresponding feedback/control traffic is
    transported over the backward path.
                              Forward -->
 +---+       +-----+                               +-----+       +---+
 |S1 |=======|  A  |------------------------------>|  B  |=======|R1 |
 +---+       |     |<------------------------------|     |       +---+
             +-----+                               +-----+
                           <-- Backward
          Figure 2: Testbed Topology for Limited Link Capacity
 Testbed attributes:
    Test duration:  100 s
    Path characteristics:  as described in Section 4.2
    Application-related:
       Media Traffic:
          Media type:  Video
             Media direction:  forward
             Number of media sources:  one (1)
             Media timeline:
                Start time:  0 s
                End time:  99 s
          Media type:  Audio
             Media direction:  forward
             Number of media sources:  one (1)
             Media timeline:
                Start time:  0 s
                End time:  99 s
       Competing traffic:
          Number of sources:  zero (0)
 Test-specific information:
    One-way propagation delay:  [50 ms, 100 ms].  On the forward path
       direction.
    This test uses bottleneck path capacity variation as listed in
    Table 1.
    When using background non-adaptive UDP traffic to induce a time-
    varying bottleneck, the physical path capacity remains at 4 Mbps,
    and the UDP traffic source rate changes over time as (4 - (Y x
    r)), where r is the Reference bottleneck capacity in Mbps, and Y
    is the path capacity ratio specified in Table 1.
 +=========================+================+=======+===============+
 | Variation pattern index | Path direction | Start | Path capacity |
 |                         |                | time  | ratio         |
 +=========================+================+=======+===============+
 | One                     | Forward        | 0 s   | 1.0           |
 +-------------------------+----------------+-------+---------------+
 | Two                     | Forward        | 40 s  | 2.5           |
 +-------------------------+----------------+-------+---------------+
 | Three                   | Forward        | 60 s  | 0.6           |
 +-------------------------+----------------+-------+---------------+
 | Four                    | Forward        | 80 s  | 1.0           |
 +-------------------------+----------------+-------+---------------+
  Table 1: Path Capacity Variation Pattern for the Forward Direction

5.2. Variable Available Capacity with Multiple Flows

 This test case is similar to Section 5.1.  However, this test will
 also consider persistent network load due to competing traffic.
 Expected behavior:  The candidate algorithm is expected to detect the
    variation in available capacity and adapt the media stream(s)
    accordingly.  The flows stabilize around their maximum bit rate as
    the maximum link capacity is large enough to accommodate the
    flows.  When the available capacity drops, the flows adapt by
    decreasing their sending bit rate, and when congestion disappears,
    the flows are again expected to ramp up.
 Evaluation metrics:  As described in Section 4.1.
 Testbed topology:  Two (2) media sources S1 and S2 are connected to
    their corresponding destinations R1 and R2.  The media traffic is
    transported over the forward path and corresponding feedback/
    control traffic is transported over the backward path.
 +---+                                                         +---+
 |S1 |===== \                                         / =======|R1 |
 +---+      \\             Forward -->               //        +---+
             \\                                     //
             +-----+                               +-----+
             |  A  |------------------------------>|  B  |
             |     |<------------------------------|     |
             +-----+                               +-----+
               //                                    \\
              //          <-- Backward                \\
 +---+       //                                        \\       +---+
 |S2 |====== /                                          \ ======|R2 |
 +---+                                                          +---+
       Figure 3: Testbed Topology for Variable Available Capacity
 Testbed attributes:  Testbed attributes are similar to those
    described in Section 5.1, except for the test-specific capacity
    variation setup.
 Test-specific information:  This test uses path capacity variation as
    listed in Table 2 with a corresponding end time of 125 seconds.
    The reference bottleneck capacity is 2 Mbps.  When using
    background non-adaptive UDP traffic to induce time-varying
    bottleneck for congestion-controlled media flows, the physical
    path capacity is 4 Mbps, and the UDP traffic source rate changes
    over time as (4 - (Y x r)), where r is the Reference bottleneck
    capacity in Mbps, and Y is the path capacity ratio specified in
    Table 2.
 +=========================+================+=======+===============+
 | Variation pattern index | Path direction | Start | Path capacity |
 |                         |                | time  | ratio         |
 +=========================+================+=======+===============+
 | One                     | Forward        | 0 s   | 2.0           |
 +-------------------------+----------------+-------+---------------+
 | Two                     | Forward        | 25 s  | 1.0           |
 +-------------------------+----------------+-------+---------------+
 | Three                   | Forward        | 50 s  | 1.75          |
 +-------------------------+----------------+-------+---------------+
 | Four                    | Forward        | 75 s  | 0.5           |
 +-------------------------+----------------+-------+---------------+
 | Five                    | Forward        | 100 s | 1.0           |
 +-------------------------+----------------+-------+---------------+
  Table 2: Path Capacity Variation Pattern for the Forward Direction

5.3. Congested Feedback Link with Bi-directional Media Flows

 Real-time interactive media uses RTP; hence it is assumed that RTCP,
 RTP header extension, or such would be used by the congestion control
 algorithm in the back channel.  Due to the asymmetric nature of the
 link between communicating peers, it is possible for a participating
 peer to not receive such feedback information due to an impaired or
 congested back channel (even when the forward channel might not be
 impaired).  This test case is designed to observe the candidate
 congestion control behavior in such an event.
 Expected behavior:  It is expected that the candidate algorithms are
    able to cope with the lack of feedback information and to adapt to
    minimize the performance degradation of media flows in the forward
    channel.
    It should be noted that for this test case, logs are compared with
    the reference case, i.e., when the backward channel has no
    impairments.
 Evaluation metrics:  As described in Section 4.1.
 Testbed topology:  One (1) media source S1 is connected to
    corresponding R1, but both endpoints are additionally receiving
    and sending data, respectively.  The media traffic (S1->R1) is
    transported over the forward path, and the corresponding feedback/
    control traffic is transported over the backward path.  Likewise,
    media traffic (S2->R2) is transported over the backward path, and
    the corresponding feedback/control traffic is transported over the
    forward path.
 +---+                                                          +---+
 |S1 |====== \                Forward -->              / =======|R1 |
 +---+       \\                                       //        +---+
              \\                                     //
           +-----+                               +-----+
           |  A  |------------------------------>|  B  |
           |     |<------------------------------|     |
           +-----+                               +-----+
              //                                     \\
             //            <-- Backward               \\
 +---+      //                                         \\       +---+
 |R2 |===== /                                           \ ======|S2 |
 +---+                                                          +---+
         Figure 4: Testbed Topology for Congested Feedback Link
 Testbed attributes:
    Test duration:  100 s
    Path characteristics:
       Reference bottleneck capacity:  1 Mbps
    Application-related:
       Media source:
          Media type:  Video
             Media direction:  forward and backward
             Number of media sources:  two (2)
             Media timeline:
                Start time:  0 s
                End time:  99 s
          Media type:  Audio
             Media direction:  forward and backward
             Number of media sources:  two (2)
             Media timeline:
                Start time:  0 s
                End time:  99 s
       Competing traffic:
          Number of sources:  zero (0)
 Test-specific information:  This test uses path capacity variations
    to create a congested feedback link.  Table 3 lists the variation
    patterns applied to the forward path, and Table 4 lists the
    variation patterns applied to the backward path.  When using
    background non-adaptive UDP traffic to induce a time-varying
    bottleneck for congestion-controlled media flows, the physical
    path capacity is 4 Mbps for both directions, and the UDP traffic
    source rate changes over time as (4-x) Mbps in each direction,
    where x is the bottleneck capacity specified in Table 4.
 +=========================+================+=======+===============+
 | Variation pattern index | Path direction | Start | Path capacity |
 |                         |                | time  | ratio         |
 +=========================+================+=======+===============+
 | One                     | Forward        | 0 s   | 2.0           |
 +-------------------------+----------------+-------+---------------+
 | Two                     | Forward        | 20 s  | 1.0           |
 +-------------------------+----------------+-------+---------------+
 | Three                   | Forward        | 40 s  | 0.5           |
 +-------------------------+----------------+-------+---------------+
 | Four                    | Forward        | 60 s  | 2.0           |
 +-------------------------+----------------+-------+---------------+
  Table 3: Path Capacity Variation Pattern for the Forward Direction
 +=========================+================+=======+===============+
 | Variation pattern index | Path direction | Start | Path capacity |
 |                         |                | time  | ratio         |
 +=========================+================+=======+===============+
 | One                     | Backward       | 0 s   | 2.0           |
 +-------------------------+----------------+-------+---------------+
 | Two                     | Backward       | 35 s  | 0.8           |
 +-------------------------+----------------+-------+---------------+
 | Three                   | Backward       | 70 s  | 2.0           |
 +-------------------------+----------------+-------+---------------+
 Table 4: Path Capacity Variation Pattern for the Backward Direction

5.4. Competing Media Flows with the Same Congestion Control Algorithm

 In this test case, more than one media flow share the bottleneck
 link, and each of them uses the same congestion control algorithm.
 This is a typical scenario where a real-time interactive application
 sends more than one media flow to the same destination, and these
 flows are multiplexed over the same port.  In such a scenario, it is
 likely that the flows will be routed via the same path and need to
 share the available bandwidth amongst themselves.  For the sake of
 simplicity, it is assumed that there are no other competing traffic
 sources in the bottleneck link and that there is sufficient capacity
 to accommodate all the flows individually.  While this appears to be
 a variant of the test case defined in Section 5.2, it focuses on the
 capacity-sharing aspect of the candidate algorithm.  The previous
 test case, on the other hand, measures adaptability, stability, and
 responsiveness of the candidate algorithm.
 Expected behavior:  It is expected that the competing flows will
    converge to an optimum bit rate to accommodate all the flows with
    minimum possible latency and loss.  Specifically, the test
    introduces three media flows at different time instances.  When
    the second flow appears, there should still be room to accommodate
    another flow on the bottleneck link.  Lastly, when the third flow
    appears, the bottleneck link should be saturated.
 Evaluation metrics:  As described in Section 4.1.
 Testbed topology:  Three media sources S1, S2, and S3 are connected
    to R1, R2, and R3, respectively.  The media traffic is transported
    over the forward path, and the corresponding feedback/control
    traffic is transported over the backward path.
 +---+                                                         +---+
 |S1 |===== \                Forward -->              / =======|R1 |
 +---+      \\                                       //        +---+
             \\                                     //
 +---+       +-----+                               +-----+       +---+
 |S2 |=======|  A  |------------------------------>|  B  |=======|R2 |
 +---+       |     |<------------------------------|     |       +---+
             +-----+                               +-----+
             //          <-- Backward               \\
 +---+      //                                       \\       +---+
 |S3 |===== /                                         \ ======|R3 |
 +---+                                                        +---+
     Figure 5: Testbed Topology for Multiple Congestion-Controlled
                              Media Flows
 Testbed attributes:
    Test duration:  120 s
    Path characteristics:
       Reference bottleneck capacity:  3.5 Mbps
       Path capacity ratio:  1.0
    Application-related:
       Media Source:
          Media type:  Video
             Media direction:  forward
             Number of media sources:  three (3)
             Media timeline:  New media flows are added sequentially,
                at short time intervals.  See the test-specific setup
                below.
          Media type:  Audio
             Media direction:  forward
             Number of media sources:  three (3)
             Media timeline:  New media flows are added sequentially,
                at short time intervals.  See the test-specific setup
                below.
       Competing traffic:
          Number of sources:  zero (0)
 Test-specific information:  Table 5 defines the media timeline for
    both media types.
           +=========+============+============+==========+
           | Flow ID | Media type | Start time | End time |
           +=========+============+============+==========+
           | 1       | Video      | 0 s        | 119 s    |
           +---------+------------+------------+----------+
           | 2       | Video      | 20 s       | 119 s    |
           +---------+------------+------------+----------+
           | 3       | Video      | 40 s       | 119 s    |
           +---------+------------+------------+----------+
           | 4       | Audio      | 0 s        | 119 s    |
           +---------+------------+------------+----------+
           | 5       | Audio      | 20 s       | 119 s    |
           +---------+------------+------------+----------+
           | 6       | Audio      | 40 s       | 119 s    |
           +---------+------------+------------+----------+
             Table 5: Media Timelines for Video and Audio
                            Media Sources

5.5. Round Trip Time Fairness

 In this test case, multiple media flows share the bottleneck link,
 but the one-way propagation delay for each flow is different.  For
 the sake of simplicity, it is assumed that there are no other
 competing traffic sources in the bottleneck link and that there is
 sufficient capacity to accommodate all the flows.  While this appears
 to be a variant of test case 5.2 (Section 5.2), it focuses on the
 capacity-sharing aspect of the candidate algorithm under different
 RTTs.
 Expected behavior:  It is expected that the competing flows will
    converge to bit rates to accommodate all the flows with minimum
    possible latency and loss.  The effectiveness of the algorithm
    depends on how fast and fairly the competing flows converge to
    their steady states irrespective of the RTT observed.
 Evaluation metrics:  As described in Section 4.1.
 Testbed topology:  Five (5) media sources S1..S5 are connected to
    their corresponding media sinks R1..R5.  The media traffic is
    transported over the forward path, and the corresponding feedback/
    control traffic is transported over the backward path.  The
    topology is the same as in Section 5.4.
 Testbed attributes:
    Test duration:  300 s
    Path characteristics:
       Reference bottleneck capacity:  4 Mbps
       Path capacity ratio:  1.0
       One-way propagation delay for each flow:  10 ms for S1-R1, 25
          ms for S2-R2, 50 ms for S3-R3, 100 ms for S4-R4, and 150 ms
          S5-R5.
    Application-related:
       Media source:
          Media type:  Video
             Media direction:  forward
             Number of media sources:  five (5)
             Media timeline:  New media flows are added sequentially,
                at short time intervals.  See the test-specific setup
                below.
          Media type:  Audio
             Media direction:  forward
             Number of media sources:  five (5)
             Media timeline:  New media flows are added sequentially,
                at short time intervals.  See the test-specific setup
                below.
       Competing traffic:
          Number of sources:  zero (0)
 Test-specific information:  Table 6 defines the media timeline for
    both media types.
           +=========+============+============+==========+
           | Flow ID | Media type | Start time | End time |
           +=========+============+============+==========+
           | 1       | Video      | 0 s        | 299 s    |
           +---------+------------+------------+----------+
           | 2       | Video      | 10 s       | 299 s    |
           +---------+------------+------------+----------+
           | 3       | Video      | 20 s       | 299 s    |
           +---------+------------+------------+----------+
           | 4       | Video      | 30 s       | 299 s    |
           +---------+------------+------------+----------+
           | 5       | Video      | 40 s       | 299 s    |
           +---------+------------+------------+----------+
           | 6       | Audio      | 0 s        | 299 s    |
           +---------+------------+------------+----------+
           | 7       | Audio      | 10 s       | 299 s    |
           +---------+------------+------------+----------+
           | 8       | Audio      | 20 s       | 299 s    |
           +---------+------------+------------+----------+
           | 9       | Audio      | 30 s       | 299 s    |
           +---------+------------+------------+----------+
           | 10      | Audio      | 40 s       | 299 s    |
           +---------+------------+------------+----------+
             Table 6: Media Timeline for Video and Audio
                            Media Sources

5.6. Media Flow Competing with a Long TCP Flow

 In this test case, one or more media flows share the bottleneck link
 with at least one long-lived TCP flow.  Long-lived TCP flows download
 data throughout the session and are expected to have infinite amount
 of data to send and receive.  This is a scenario where a multimedia
 application coexists with a large file download.  The test case
 measures the adaptivity of the candidate algorithm to competing
 traffic.  It addresses requirement 3 in Section 2 of [RFC8836].
 Expected behavior:  Depending on the convergence observed in test
    cases 5.1 and 5.2, the candidate algorithm may be able to avoid
    congestion collapse.  In the worst case, the media stream will
    fall to the minimum media bit rate.
 Evaluation metrics:  Includes the following metrics in addition to
    those described in Section 4.1:
    1.  Flow level:
        a.  TCP throughput
        b.  Loss for the TCP flow
 Testbed topology:  One (1) media source S1 is connected to the
    corresponding media sink, R1.  In addition, there is a long-lived
    TCP flow sharing the same bottleneck link.  The media traffic is
    transported over the forward path, and the corresponding feedback/
    control traffic is transported over the backward path.  The TCP
    traffic goes over the forward path from S_tcp with acknowledgment
    packets going over the backward path from R_tcp.
  +--+                                                     +--+
  |S1|===== \              Forward -->              / =====|R1|
  +--+      \\                                     //      +--+
             \\                                   //
             +-----+                             +-----+
             |  A  |---------------------------->|  B  |
             |     |<----------------------------|     |
             +-----+                             +-----+
             //        <-- Backward               \\
 +-----+    //                                     \\    +-----+
 |S_tcp|=== /                                       \ ===|R_tcp|
 +-----+                                                 +-----+
   Figure 6: Testbed Topology for TCP vs Congestion-Controlled Media
                                 Flows
 Testbed attributes:
    Test duration:  120 s
    Path characteristics:
       Reference bottleneck capacity:  2 Mbps
       Path capacity ratio:  1.0
       Bottleneck queue size:  [300 ms, 1000 ms]
    Application-related:
       Media source:
          Media type:  Video
             Media direction:  forward
             Number of media sources:  one (1)
             Media timeline:
                Start time:  5 s
                End time:  119 s
          Media type:  Audio
             Media direction:  forward
             Number of media sources:  one (1)
             Media timeline:
                Start time:  5 s
                End time:  119 s
          Additionally, implementers are encouraged to run the
          experiment with multiple media sources.
       Competing traffic:
          Number and types of sources:  one (1) and long-lived TCP
          Traffic direction:  forward
          Congestion control:  default TCP congestion control
             [RFC5681].  Implementers are also encouraged to run the
             experiment with alternative TCP congestion control
             algorithms.
          Traffic timeline:
             Start time:  0 s
             End time:  119 s
 Test-specific information:  none

5.7. Media Flow Competing with Short TCP Flows

 In this test case, one or more congestion-controlled media flows
 share the bottleneck link with multiple short-lived TCP flows.
 Short-lived TCP flows resemble the on/off pattern observed in web
 traffic, wherein clients (for example, browsers) connect to a server
 and download a resource (typically a web page, few images, text
 files, etc.) using several TCP connections.  This scenario shows the
 performance of a multimedia application when several browser windows
 are active.  The test case measures the adaptivity of the candidate
 algorithm to competing web traffic, and it addresses requirement 1.E
 in Section 2 of [RFC8836].
 Depending on the number of short TCP flows, the cross traffic either
 appears as a short burst flow or resembles a long-lived TCP flow.
 The intention of this test is to observe the impact of a short-term
 burst on the behavior of the candidate algorithm.
 Expected behavior:  The candidate algorithm is expected to avoid flow
    starvation during the presence of short and bursty competing TCP
    flows, streaming at least at the minimum media bit rate.  After
    competing TCP flows terminate, the media streams are expected to
    be robust enough to eventually recover to previous steady state
    behavior, and at the very least, avoid persistent starvation.
 Evaluation metrics:  Includes the following metrics in addition to
    those described in Section 4.1:
    1.  Flow level:
        A.  Variation in the sending rate of the TCP flow
        B.  TCP throughput
 Testbed topology:  The topology described here is the same as the one
    described in Figure 6.
 Testbed attributes:
    Test duration:  300 s
    Path characteristics:
       Reference bottleneck capacity:  2.0 Mbps
       Path capacity ratio:  1.0
    Application-related:
       Media source:
          Media type:  Video
             Media direction:  forward
             Number of media sources:  two (2)
             Media timeline:
                Start time:  5 s
                End time:  299 s
          Media type:  Audio
             Media direction:  forward
             Number of media sources:  two (2)
             Media timeline:
                Start time:  5 s
                End time:  299 s
       Competing traffic:
          Number and types of sources:  ten (10), short-lived TCP
             flows.
          Traffic direction:  forward
          Congestion algorithm:  default TCP congestion control
             [RFC5681].  Implementers are also encouraged to run the
             experiment with an alternative TCP congestion control
             algorithm.
          Traffic timeline:  Each short TCP flow is modeled as a
             sequence of file downloads interleaved with idle periods.
             Not all short TCP flows start at the same time, two of
             them start in the ON state, while rest of the eight flows
             start in an OFF state.  For a description of the short
             TCP flow model, see test-specific information below.
 Test-specific information:
    Short TCP traffic model:  The short TCP model to be used in this
       test is described in [RFC8868].

5.8. Media Pause and Resume

 In this test case, more than one real-time interactive media flow
 share the link bandwidth, and all flows reach to a steady state by
 utilizing the link capacity in an optimum way.  At this stage, one of
 the media flows is paused for a moment.  This event will result in
 more available bandwidth for the rest of the flows as they are on a
 shared link.  When the paused media flow resumes, it no longer has
 the same bandwidth share on the link.  It has to make its way through
 the other existing flows in the link to achieve a fair share of the
 link capacity.  This test case is important specially for real-time
 interactive media, which consists of more than one media flows and
 can pause/resume media flows at any point of time during the session.
 This test case directly addresses requirement 5 in Section 2 of
 [RFC8836].  One can think of it as a variation of the test case
 defined in Section 5.4.  However, it is different as the candidate
 algorithms can use different strategies to increase efficiency, for
 example, in terms of fairness, convergence time, oscillation
 reduction, etc., by capitalizing on the fact that they have previous
 information of the link.
 Expected behavior:  During the period where the third stream is
    paused, the two remaining flows are expected to increase their
    rates and reach the maximum media bit rate.  When the third stream
    resumes, all three flows are expected to converge to the same
    original fair share of rates prior to the media pause/resume
    event.
 Evaluation metrics:  Includes the following metrics in addition to
    those described in Section 4.1:
    1.  Flow level:
        A.  Variation in sending bit rate and throughput.  Mainly
            observing the frequency and magnitude of oscillations.
 Testbed topology:  Same as the test case defined in Section 5.4.
 Testbed attributes:  The general description of the testbed
    parameters are the same as Section 5.4 with changes in the test-
    specific setup as below:
    Other test-specific setup:
    Media flow timeline:
       Flow ID:  one (1)
       Start time:  0 s
       Flow duration:  119 s
       Pause time:  not required
       Resume time:  not required
    Media flow timeline:
       Flow ID:  two (2)
       Start time:  0 s
       Flow duration:  119 s
       Pause time:  at 40 s
       Resume time:  at 60 s
    Media flow timeline:
       Flow ID:  three (3)
       Start time:  0 s
       Flow duration:  119 s
       Pause time:  not required
       Resume time:  not required

6. Other Potential Test Cases

 It has been noticed that there are other interesting test cases
 besides the basic test cases listed above.  In many aspects, these
 additional test cases can help further evaluation of the candidate
 algorithm.  They are listed below.

6.1. Media Flows with Priority

 In this test case, media flows will have different priority levels.
 This is an extension of Section 5.4 where the same test is run with
 different priority levels imposed on each of the media flows.  For
 example, the first flow (S1) is assigned a priority of 2, whereas the
 remaining two flows (S2 and S3) are assigned a priority of 1.  The
 candidate algorithm must reflect the relative priorities assigned to
 each media flow.  In this case, the first flow (S1) must arrive at a
 steady-state rate approximately twice that of the other two flows (S2
 and S3).
 The candidate algorithm can use a coupled congestion control
 mechanism [RFC8699] or use a weighted priority scheduler for the
 bandwidth distribution according to the respective media flow
 priority or use.

6.2. Explicit Congestion Notification Usage

 This test case requires running all the basic test cases with the
 availability of Explicit Congestion Notification (ECN) [RFC6679]
 feature enabled.  The goal of this test is to exhibit that the
 candidate algorithms do not fail when ECN signals are available.
 With ECN signals enabled, the algorithms are expected to perform
 better than their delay-based variants.

6.3. Multiple Bottlenecks

 In this test case, one congestion-controlled media flow, S1->R1,
 traverses a path with multiple bottlenecks.  As illustrated in
 Figure 7, the first flow (S1->R1) competes with the second
 congestion-controlled media flow (S2->R2) over the link between A and
 B, which is close to the sender side.  Again, that flow (S1->R1)
 competes with the third congestion-controlled media flow (S3->R3)
 over the link between C and D, which is close to the receiver side.
 The goal of this test is to ensure that the candidate algorithms work
 properly in the presence of multiple bottleneck links on the end-to-
 end path.
 Expected behavior:  The candidate algorithm is expected to achieve
    full utilization at both bottleneck links without starving any of
    the three congestion-controlled media flows and ensuring fair
    share of the available bandwidth at each bottleneck.
                              Forward ---->
             +---+          +---+        +---+      +---+
             |S2 |          |R2 |        |S3 |      |R3 |
             +---+          +---+        +---+      +---+
               |              |            |          |
               |              |            |          |
 +---+      +-----+       +-----+      +-----+     +-----+      +---+
 |S1 |======|  A  |------>|  B  |----->|  C  |---->|  D  |======|R1 |
 +---+      |     |<------|     |<-----|     |<----|     |      +---+
            +-----+       +-----+      +-----+     +-----+
                     1st                       2nd
              Bottleneck (A->B)          Bottleneck (C->D)
                           <------ Backward
          Figure 7: Testbed Topology for Multiple Bottlenecks
 Testbed topology:  Three media sources S1, S2, and S3 are connected
    to respective destinations R1, R2, and R3.  For all three flows,
    the media traffic is transported over the forward path, and the
    corresponding feedback/control traffic is transported over the
    backward path.
 Testbed attributes:
    Test duration:  300 s
    Path characteristics:
       Reference bottleneck capacity:  2 Mbps
       Path capacity ratio between A and B:  1.0
       Path capacity ratio between B and C:  4.0
       Path capacity ratio between C and D:  0.75
       One-way propagation delay:
          Between S1 and R1:  100 ms
          Between S2 and R2:  40 ms
          Between S3 and R3:  40 ms
    Application-related:
       Media source:
          Media type:  Video
             Media direction:  Forward
             Number of media sources:  Three (3)
             Media timeline:
                Start time:  0 s
                End time:  299 s
          Media type:  Audio
             Media direction:  Forward
             Number of media sources:  Three (3)
             Media timeline:
                Start time:  0 s
                End time:  299 s
       Competing traffic:
          Number of sources:  Zero (0)

7. Wireless Access Links

 Additional wireless network (both cellular network and Wi-Fi network)
 specific test cases are defined in [RFC8869].

8. Security Considerations

 The security considerations in Section 6 of [RFC8868] and the
 relevant congestion control algorithms apply.  The principles for
 congestion control are described in [RFC2914], and in particular any
 new method must implement safeguards to avoid congestion collapse of
 the Internet.
 The evaluation of the test cases are intended to be run in a
 controlled lab environment.  Hence, the applications, simulators, and
 network nodes ought to be well-behaved and should not impact the
 desired results.  Moreover, proper measures must be taken to avoid
 leaking nonresponsive traffic from unproven congestion avoidance
 techniques onto the open Internet.

9. IANA Considerations

 This document has no IANA actions.

10. References

10.1. Normative References

 [RFC3550]  Schulzrinne, H., Casner, S., Frederick, R., and V.
            Jacobson, "RTP: A Transport Protocol for Real-Time
            Applications", STD 64, RFC 3550, DOI 10.17487/RFC3550,
            July 2003, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3550>.
 [RFC3551]  Schulzrinne, H. and S. Casner, "RTP Profile for Audio and
            Video Conferences with Minimal Control", STD 65, RFC 3551,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC3551, July 2003,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3551>.
 [RFC3611]  Friedman, T., Ed., Caceres, R., Ed., and A. Clark, Ed.,
            "RTP Control Protocol Extended Reports (RTCP XR)",
            RFC 3611, DOI 10.17487/RFC3611, November 2003,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3611>.
 [RFC4585]  Ott, J., Wenger, S., Sato, N., Burmeister, C., and J. Rey,
            "Extended RTP Profile for Real-time Transport Control
            Protocol (RTCP)-Based Feedback (RTP/AVPF)", RFC 4585,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC4585, July 2006,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4585>.
 [RFC5506]  Johansson, I. and M. Westerlund, "Support for Reduced-Size
            Real-Time Transport Control Protocol (RTCP): Opportunities
            and Consequences", RFC 5506, DOI 10.17487/RFC5506, April
            2009, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5506>.
 [RFC5681]  Allman, M., Paxson, V., and E. Blanton, "TCP Congestion
            Control", RFC 5681, DOI 10.17487/RFC5681, September 2009,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5681>.
 [RFC6679]  Westerlund, M., Johansson, I., Perkins, C., O'Hanlon, P.,
            and K. Carlberg, "Explicit Congestion Notification (ECN)
            for RTP over UDP", RFC 6679, DOI 10.17487/RFC6679, August
            2012, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6679>.
 [RFC8593]  Zhu, X., Mena, S., and Z. Sarker, "Video Traffic Models
            for RTP Congestion Control Evaluations", RFC 8593,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC8593, May 2019,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8593>.
 [RFC8836]  Jesup, R. and Z. Sarker, Ed., "Congestion Control
            Requirements for Interactive Real-Time Media", RFC 8836,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC8836, January 2021,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8836>.
 [RFC8868]  Singh, V., Ott, J., and S. Holmer, "Evaluating Congestion
            Control for Interactive Real-Time Media", RFC 8868,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC8868, January 2021,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8868>.
 [RFC8869]  Sarker, Z., Zhu, X., and J. Fu, "Evaluation Test Cases for
            Interactive Real-Time Media over Wireless Networks",
            RFC 8869, DOI 10.17487/RFC8869, January 2021,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8869>.

10.2. Informative References

 [HEVC-seq] HEVC, "Test Sequences",
            <http://www.netlab.tkk.fi/~varun/test_sequences/>.
 [RFC2914]  Floyd, S., "Congestion Control Principles", BCP 41,
            RFC 2914, DOI 10.17487/RFC2914, September 2000,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2914>.
 [RFC7567]  Baker, F., Ed. and G. Fairhurst, Ed., "IETF
            Recommendations Regarding Active Queue Management",
            BCP 197, RFC 7567, DOI 10.17487/RFC7567, July 2015,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7567>.
 [RFC8033]  Pan, R., Natarajan, P., Baker, F., and G. White,
            "Proportional Integral Controller Enhanced (PIE): A
            Lightweight Control Scheme to Address the Bufferbloat
            Problem", RFC 8033, DOI 10.17487/RFC8033, February 2017,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8033>.
 [RFC8290]  Hoeiland-Joergensen, T., McKenney, P., Taht, D., Gettys,
            J., and E. Dumazet, "The Flow Queue CoDel Packet Scheduler
            and Active Queue Management Algorithm", RFC 8290,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC8290, January 2018,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8290>.
 [RFC8699]  Islam, S., Welzl, M., and S. Gjessing, "Coupled Congestion
            Control for RTP Media", RFC 8699, DOI 10.17487/RFC8699,
            January 2020, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8699>.
 [xiph-seq] Xiph.org, "Video Test Media",
            <http://media.xiph.org/video/derf/>.

Acknowledgments

 Much of this document is derived from previous work on congestion
 control at the IETF.
 The content and concepts within this document are a product of the
 discussion carried out within the Design Team.

Authors' Addresses

 Zaheduzzaman Sarker
 Ericsson AB
 Torshamnsgatan 23
 SE-164 83 Stockholm
 Sweden
 Phone: +46 10 717 37 43
 Email: zaheduzzaman.sarker@ericsson.com
 Varun Singh
 CALLSTATS I/O Oy
 Rauhankatu 11 C
 FI-00100 Helsinki
 Finland
 Email: varun.singh@iki.fi
 URI:   http://www.callstats.io/
 Xiaoqing Zhu
 Cisco Systems
 12515 Research Blvd
 Austin, TX 78759
 United States of America
 Email: xiaoqzhu@cisco.com
 Michael A. Ramalho
 AcousticComms Consulting
 6310 Watercrest Way Unit 203
 Lakewood Ranch, FL 34202-5211
 United States of America
 Phone: +1 732 832 9723
 Email: mar42@cornell.edu
 URI:   http://ramalho.webhop.info/
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