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rfc:rfc8912



Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) A. Morton Request for Comments: 8912 AT&T Labs Category: Standards Track M. Bagnulo ISSN: 2070-1721 UC3M

                                                            P. Eardley
                                                                    BT
                                                            K. D'Souza
                                                             AT&T Labs
                                                         November 2021
            Initial Performance Metrics Registry Entries

Abstract

 This memo defines the set of initial entries for the IANA Registry of
 Performance Metrics.  The set includes UDP Round-Trip Latency and
 Loss, Packet Delay Variation, DNS Response Latency and Loss, UDP
 Poisson One-Way Delay and Loss, UDP Periodic One-Way Delay and Loss,
 ICMP Round-Trip Latency and Loss, and TCP Round-Trip Delay and Loss.

Status of This Memo

 This is an Internet Standards Track document.
 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).  Further information on
 Internet Standards is available in 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/rfc8912.

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 Revised BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of the
 Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as described
 in the Revised BSD License.

Table of Contents

 1.  Introduction
   1.1.  Requirements Language
 2.  Scope
 3.  Registry Categories and Columns
 4.  UDP Round-Trip Latency and Loss Registry Entries
   4.1.  Summary
     4.1.1.  ID (Identifier)
     4.1.2.  Name
     4.1.3.  URI
     4.1.4.  Description
     4.1.5.  Change Controller
     4.1.6.  Version (of Registry Format)
   4.2.  Metric Definition
     4.2.1.  Reference Definition
     4.2.2.  Fixed Parameters
   4.3.  Method of Measurement
     4.3.1.  Reference Methods
     4.3.2.  Packet Stream Generation
     4.3.3.  Traffic Filtering (Observation) Details
     4.3.4.  Sampling Distribution
     4.3.5.  Runtime Parameters and Data Format
     4.3.6.  Roles
   4.4.  Output
     4.4.1.  Type
     4.4.2.  Reference Definition
     4.4.3.  Metric Units
     4.4.4.  Calibration
   4.5.  Administrative Items
     4.5.1.  Status
     4.5.2.  Requester
     4.5.3.  Revision
     4.5.4.  Revision Date
   4.6.  Comments and Remarks
 5.  Packet Delay Variation Registry Entry
   5.1.  Summary
     5.1.1.  ID (Identifier)
     5.1.2.  Name
     5.1.3.  URI
     5.1.4.  Description
     5.1.5.  Change Controller
     5.1.6.  Version (of Registry Format)
   5.2.  Metric Definition
     5.2.1.  Reference Definition
     5.2.2.  Fixed Parameters
   5.3.  Method of Measurement
     5.3.1.  Reference Methods
     5.3.2.  Packet Stream Generation
     5.3.3.  Traffic Filtering (Observation) Details
     5.3.4.  Sampling Distribution
     5.3.5.  Runtime Parameters and Data Format
     5.3.6.  Roles
   5.4.  Output
     5.4.1.  Type
     5.4.2.  Reference Definition
     5.4.3.  Metric Units
     5.4.4.  Calibration
   5.5.  Administrative Items
     5.5.1.  Status
     5.5.2.  Requester
     5.5.3.  Revision
     5.5.4.  Revision Date
   5.6.  Comments and Remarks
 6.  DNS Response Latency and Loss Registry Entries
   6.1.  Summary
     6.1.1.  ID (Identifier)
     6.1.2.  Name
     6.1.3.  URI
     6.1.4.  Description
     6.1.5.  Change Controller
     6.1.6.  Version (of Registry Format)
   6.2.  Metric Definition
     6.2.1.  Reference Definition
     6.2.2.  Fixed Parameters
   6.3.  Method of Measurement
     6.3.1.  Reference Methods
     6.3.2.  Packet Stream Generation
     6.3.3.  Traffic Filtering (Observation) Details
     6.3.4.  Sampling Distribution
     6.3.5.  Runtime Parameters and Data Format
     6.3.6.  Roles
   6.4.  Output
     6.4.1.  Type
     6.4.2.  Reference Definition
     6.4.3.  Metric Units
     6.4.4.  Calibration
   6.5.  Administrative Items
     6.5.1.  Status
     6.5.2.  Requester
     6.5.3.  Revision
     6.5.4.  Revision Date
   6.6.  Comments and Remarks
 7.  UDP Poisson One-Way Delay and Loss Registry Entries
   7.1.  Summary
     7.1.1.  ID (Identifier)
     7.1.2.  Name
     7.1.3.  URI
     7.1.4.  Description
     7.1.5.  Change Controller
     7.1.6.  Version (of Registry Format)
   7.2.  Metric Definition
     7.2.1.  Reference Definition
     7.2.2.  Fixed Parameters
   7.3.  Method of Measurement
     7.3.1.  Reference Methods
     7.3.2.  Packet Stream Generation
     7.3.3.  Traffic Filtering (Observation) Details
     7.3.4.  Sampling Distribution
     7.3.5.  Runtime Parameters and Data Format
     7.3.6.  Roles
   7.4.  Output
     7.4.1.  Type
     7.4.2.  Reference Definition
     7.4.3.  Metric Units
     7.4.4.  Calibration
   7.5.  Administrative Items
     7.5.1.  Status
     7.5.2.  Requester
     7.5.3.  Revision
     7.5.4.  Revision Date
   7.6.  Comments and Remarks
 8.  UDP Periodic One-Way Delay and Loss Registry Entries
   8.1.  Summary
     8.1.1.  ID (Identifier)
     8.1.2.  Name
     8.1.3.  URI
     8.1.4.  Description
     8.1.5.  Change Controller
     8.1.6.  Version (of Registry Format)
   8.2.  Metric Definition
     8.2.1.  Reference Definition
     8.2.2.  Fixed Parameters
   8.3.  Method of Measurement
     8.3.1.  Reference Methods
     8.3.2.  Packet Stream Generation
     8.3.3.  Traffic Filtering (Observation) Details
     8.3.4.  Sampling Distribution
     8.3.5.  Runtime Parameters and Data Format
     8.3.6.  Roles
   8.4.  Output
     8.4.1.  Type
     8.4.2.  Reference Definition
     8.4.3.  Metric Units
     8.4.4.  Calibration
   8.5.  Administrative Items
     8.5.1.  Status
     8.5.2.  Requester
     8.5.3.  Revision
     8.5.4.  Revision Date
   8.6.  Comments and Remarks
 9.  ICMP Round-Trip Latency and Loss Registry Entries
   9.1.  Summary
     9.1.1.  ID (Identifier)
     9.1.2.  Name
     9.1.3.  URI
     9.1.4.  Description
     9.1.5.  Change Controller
     9.1.6.  Version (of Registry Format)
   9.2.  Metric Definition
     9.2.1.  Reference Definition
     9.2.2.  Fixed Parameters
   9.3.  Method of Measurement
     9.3.1.  Reference Methods
     9.3.2.  Packet Stream Generation
     9.3.3.  Traffic Filtering (Observation) Details
     9.3.4.  Sampling Distribution
     9.3.5.  Runtime Parameters and Data Format
     9.3.6.  Roles
   9.4.  Output
     9.4.1.  Type
     9.4.2.  Reference Definition
     9.4.3.  Metric Units
     9.4.4.  Calibration
   9.5.  Administrative Items
     9.5.1.  Status
     9.5.2.  Requester
     9.5.3.  Revision
     9.5.4.  Revision Date
   9.6.  Comments and Remarks
 10. TCP Round-Trip Delay and Loss Registry Entries
   10.1.  Summary
     10.1.1.  ID (Identifier)
     10.1.2.  Name
     10.1.3.  URI
     10.1.4.  Description
     10.1.5.  Change Controller
     10.1.6.  Version (of Registry Format)
   10.2.  Metric Definition
     10.2.1.  Reference Definition
     10.2.2.  Fixed Parameters
   10.3.  Method of Measurement
     10.3.1.  Reference Methods
     10.3.2.  Packet Stream Generation
     10.3.3.  Traffic Filtering (Observation) Details
     10.3.4.  Sampling Distribution
     10.3.5.  Runtime Parameters and Data Format
     10.3.6.  Roles
   10.4.  Output
     10.4.1.  Type
     10.4.2.  Reference Definition
     10.4.3.  Metric Units
     10.4.4.  Calibration
   10.5.  Administrative Items
     10.5.1.  Status
     10.5.2.  Requester
     10.5.3.  Revision
     10.5.4.  Revision Date
   10.6.  Comments and Remarks
 11. Security Considerations
 12. IANA Considerations
 13. References
   13.1.  Normative References
   13.2.  Informative References
 Acknowledgments
 Authors' Addresses

1. Introduction

 This memo defines an initial set of entries for the Performance
 Metrics Registry.  It uses terms and definitions from the IP
 Performance Metrics (IPPM) literature, primarily [RFC2330].
 Although there are several standard templates for organizing
 specifications of Performance Metrics (see [RFC7679] for an example
 of the traditional IPPM template, based to a large extent on the
 Benchmarking Methodology Working Group's traditional template in
 [RFC1242], and see [RFC6390] for a similar template), none of these
 templates were intended to become the basis for the columns of an
 IETF-wide Registry of metrics.  While examining aspects of metric
 specifications that need to be registered, it became clear that none
 of the existing metric templates fully satisfy the particular needs
 of a Registry.
 Therefore, [RFC8911] defines the overall format for a Performance
 Metrics Registry.  Section 5 of [RFC8911] also gives guidelines for
 those requesting registration of a Metric -- that is, the creation of
 one or more entries in the Performance Metrics Registry:
 |  In essence, there needs to be evidence that (1) a candidate
 |  Registered Performance Metric has significant industry interest or
 |  has seen deployment and (2) there is agreement that the candidate
 |  Registered Performance Metric serves its intended purpose.
 The process defined in [RFC8911] also requires that new entries be
 administered by IANA through the Specification Required policy
 [RFC8126], which will ensure that the metrics are tightly defined.

1.1. Requirements Language

 The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
 "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and
 "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in
 BCP 14 [RFC2119] [RFC8174] when, and only when, they appear in all
 capitals, as shown here.

2. Scope

 This document defines a set of initial Performance Metrics Registry
 Entries.  Most are Active Performance Metrics, which are based on
 RFCs prepared in the IPPM Working Group of the IETF, according to
 their framework [RFC2330] and its updates.

3. Registry Categories and Columns

 This memo uses the terminology defined in [RFC8911].
 This section provides the categories and columns of the Registry, for
 easy reference.  An entry (row) therefore gives a complete
 description of a Registered Metric.
 Registry Categories and Columns are shown below in this format:
     Category
     ------------------...
     Column |  Column |...
 Summary
 ---------------------------------------------------------------
 Identifier | Name | URI | Desc. | Reference | Change     | Ver |
            |      |     |       |           | Controller |
 Metric Definition
 -----------------------------------------
 Reference Definition | Fixed Parameters |
 Method of Measurement
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------
 Reference | Packet     | Traffic | Sampling     | Runtime    | Role |
 Method    | Stream     | Filter  | Distribution | Parameters |      |
           | Generation |
 Output
 -----------------------------------------
 Type | Reference  | Units | Calibration |
      | Definition |       |             |
 Administrative Information
 -------------------------------------
 Status |Requester | Rev | Rev. Date |
 Comments and Remarks
 --------------------

4. UDP Round-Trip Latency and Loss Registry Entries

 This section specifies an initial Registry Entry for UDP Round-Trip
 Latency and another entry for the UDP Round-Trip Loss Ratio.
    Note: Each Registry Entry only produces a "raw" output or a
    statistical summary.  To describe both "raw" and one or more
    statistics efficiently, the Identifier, Name, and Output
    categories can be split, and a single section can specify two or
    more closely related metrics.  For example, this section specifies
    two Registry Entries with many common columns.  See Section 7 for
    an example specifying multiple Registry Entries with many common
    columns.
 All column entries besides the ID, Name, Description, and Output
 Reference Method categories are the same; thus, this section defines
 two closely related Registry Entries.  As a result, IANA has also
 assigned a corresponding URL to each of the two Named Metrics.

4.1. Summary

 This category includes multiple indexes to the Registry Entries: the
 element ID and Metric Name.

4.1.1. ID (Identifier)

 IANA has allocated the numeric Identifiers 1 and 2 for the two Named
 Metric Entries in Section 4.  See Section 4.1.2 for mapping to Names.

4.1.2. Name

 1:  RTDelay_Active_IP-UDP-Periodic_RFC8912sec4_Seconds_95Percentile
 2:  RTLoss_Active_IP-UDP-Periodic_RFC8912sec4_Percent_LossRatio

4.1.3. URI

 URL: https://www.iana.org/assignments/performance-metrics/
 RTDelay_Active_IP-UDP-Periodic_RFC8912sec4_Seconds_95Percentile
 URL: https://www.iana.org/assignments/performance-metrics/
 RTLoss_Active_IP-UDP-Periodic_RFC8912sec4_Percent_LossRatio

4.1.4. Description

 RTDelay:  This metric assesses the delay of a stream of packets
    exchanged between two hosts (which are the two measurement
    points).  The output is the round-trip delay for all successfully
    exchanged packets expressed as the 95th percentile of their
    conditional delay distribution.
 RTLoss:  This metric assesses the loss ratio of a stream of packets
    exchanged between two hosts (which are the two measurement
    points).  The output is the round-trip loss ratio for all
    transmitted packets expressed as a percentage.

4.1.5. Change Controller

 IETF

4.1.6. Version (of Registry Format)

 1.0

4.2. Metric Definition

 This category includes columns to prompt the entry of all necessary
 details related to the metric definition, including the RFC reference
 and values of input factors, called "Fixed Parameters".

4.2.1. Reference Definition

 For delay:
    Almes, G., Kalidindi, S., and M.  Zekauskas, "A Round-trip Delay
    Metric for IPPM", RFC 2681, DOI 10.17487/RFC2681, September 1999,
    <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2681>.  [RFC2681]
    Section 2.4 of [RFC2681] provides the reference definition of the
    singleton (single value) round-trip delay metric.  Section 3.4 of
    [RFC2681] provides the reference definition expanded to cover a
    multi-singleton sample.  Note that terms such as "singleton" and
    "sample" are defined in Section 11 of [RFC2330].
    Note that although the definition of round-trip delay between the
    Source (Src) and the Destination (Dst) as provided in Section 2.4
    of [RFC2681] is directionally ambiguous in the text, this metric
    tightens the definition further to recognize that the host in the
    Src Role will send the first packet to the host in the Dst Role
    and will ultimately receive the corresponding return packet from
    the Dst (when neither is lost).
    Finally, note that the variable "dT" is used in [RFC2681] to refer
    to the value of round-trip delay in metric definitions and
    methods.  The variable "dT" has been reused in other IPPM
    literature to refer to different quantities and cannot be used as
    a global variable name.
 For loss:
    Morton, A., "Round-Trip Packet Loss Metrics", RFC 6673, DOI
    10.17487/RFC6673, August 2012, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/
    rfc6673>.  [RFC6673]
 Both Delay and Loss metrics employ a maximum waiting time for
 received packets, so the count of lost packets to total packets sent
 is the basis for the loss ratio calculation as per Section 6.1 of
 [RFC6673].

4.2.2. Fixed Parameters

 Type-P as defined in Section 13 of [RFC2330]:
    IPv4 header values:
       DSCP:  Set to 0
       TTL:  Set to 255
       Protocol:  Set to 17 (UDP)
    IPv6 header values:
       DSCP:  Set to 0
       Hop Count:  Set to 255
       Next Header:  Set to 17 (UDP)
       Flow Label:  Set to 0
       Extension Headers:  None
    UDP header values:
       Checksum:  The checksum MUST be calculated and the non-zero
          checksum included in the header
    UDP Payload:
       Total of 100 bytes
 Other measurement Parameters:
    Tmax:  A loss threshold waiting time with value 3.0, expressed in
       units of seconds, as a positive value of type decimal64 with
       fraction digits = 4 (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) and with a
       resolution of 0.0001 seconds (0.1 ms), with lossless conversion
       to/from the 32-bit NTP timestamp as per Section 6 of [RFC5905].

4.3. Method of Measurement

 This category includes columns for references to relevant sections of
 the RFC(s) and any supplemental information needed to ensure an
 unambiguous method for implementations.

4.3.1. Reference Methods

 The methodology for this metric (equivalent to Type-P-Round-trip-
 Delay and Type-P-Round-trip-Delay-Poisson-Stream) is defined as in
 Section 2.6 of [RFC2681] (for singletons) and Section 3.6 of
 [RFC2681] (for samples) using the Type-P and Tmax defined in the
 Fixed Parameters column.  However, the Periodic stream will be
 generated according to [RFC3432].
 The reference method distinguishes between long-delayed packets and
 lost packets by implementing a maximum waiting time for packet
 arrival.  Tmax is the waiting time used as the threshold to declare a
 packet lost.  Lost packets SHALL be designated as having undefined
 delay and counted for the RTLoss metric [RFC6673].
 The calculations on the delay (RTT) SHALL be performed on the
 conditional distribution, conditioned on successful packet arrival
 within Tmax.  Also, when all packet delays are stored, the process
 that calculates the RTT value MUST enforce the Tmax threshold on
 stored values before calculations.  See Section 4.1 of [RFC3393] for
 details on the conditional distribution to exclude undefined values
 of delay, and see Section 5 of [RFC6703] for background on this
 analysis choice.
 The reference method requires some way to distinguish between
 different packets in a stream to establish correspondence between
 sending times and receiving times for each successfully arriving
 packet.  Sequence numbers or other send-order identification MUST be
 retained at the Src or included with each packet to disambiguate
 packet reordering if it occurs.
 If a standard measurement protocol is employed, then the measurement
 process will determine the sequence numbers or timestamps applied to
 test packets after the Fixed and Runtime Parameters are passed to
 that process.  The chosen measurement protocol will dictate the
 format of sequence numbers and timestamps, if they are conveyed in
 the packet payload.
 Refer to Section 4.4 of [RFC6673] for an expanded discussion of the
 instruction to "send a Type-P packet back to the Src as quickly as
 possible" in Section 2.6 of [RFC2681].  Section 8 of [RFC6673]
 presents additional requirements that MUST be included in the Method
 of Measurement for this metric.

4.3.2. Packet Stream Generation

 This section provides details regarding packet traffic, which is used
 as the basis for measurement.  In IPPM Metrics, this is called the
 "stream"; this stream can easily be described by providing the list
 of stream Parameters.
 Section 3 of [RFC3432] prescribes the method for generating Periodic
 streams using associated Parameters.
 incT:  The nominal duration of the inter-packet interval, first bit
    to first bit, with value 0.0200, expressed in units of seconds, as
    a positive value of type decimal64 with fraction digits = 4 (see
    Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) and with a resolution of 0.0001 seconds
    (0.1 ms).
 dT:  The duration of the interval for allowed sample start times,
    with value 1.0, expressed in units of seconds, as a positive value
    of type decimal64 with fraction digits = 4 (see Section 9.3 of
    [RFC6020]) and with a resolution of 0.0001 seconds (0.1 ms).
    Note: An initiation process with a number of control exchanges
    resulting in unpredictable start times (within a time interval)
    may be sufficient to avoid synchronization of periodic streams and
    is a valid replacement for selecting a start time at random from a
    fixed interval.
 The T0 Parameter will be reported as a measured Parameter.
 Parameters incT and dT are Fixed Parameters.

4.3.3. Traffic Filtering (Observation) Details

 N/A

4.3.4. Sampling Distribution

 N/A

4.3.5. Runtime Parameters and Data Format

 Runtime Parameters are input factors that must be determined,
 configured into the measurement system, and reported with the results
 for the context to be complete.
 Src:  The IP address of the host in the Src Role (format
    ipv4-address-no-zone value for IPv4 or ipv6-address-no-zone value
    for IPv6; see Section 4 of [RFC6991]).
 Dst:  The IP address of the host in the Dst Role (format
    ipv4-address-no-zone value for IPv4 or ipv6-address-no-zone value
    for IPv6; see Section 4 of [RFC6991]).
 T0:  A time, the start of a measurement interval (format "date-time"
    as specified in Section 5.6 of [RFC3339]; see also "date-and-time"
    in Section 3 of [RFC6991]).  The UTC Time Zone is required by
    Section 6.1 of [RFC2330].  When T0 is "all-zeros", a start time is
    unspecified and Tf is to be interpreted as the duration of the
    measurement interval.  The start time is controlled through other
    means.
 Tf:  A time, the end of a measurement interval (format "date-time" as
    specified in Section 5.6 of [RFC3339]; see also "date-and-time" in
    Section 3 of [RFC6991]).  The UTC Time Zone is required by
    Section 6.1 of [RFC2330].  When T0 is "all-zeros", an ending time
    and date is ignored and Tf is interpreted as the duration of the
    measurement interval.

4.3.6. Roles

 Src:  Launches each packet and waits for return transmissions from
    the Dst.
 Dst:  Waits for each packet from the Src and sends a return packet to
    the Src.

4.4. Output

 This category specifies all details of the output of measurements
 using the metric.

4.4.1. Type

 Percentile: For the conditional distribution of all packets with a
 valid value of round-trip delay (undefined delays are excluded), this
 is a single value corresponding to the 95th percentile, as follows:
 See Section 4.1 of [RFC3393] for details on the conditional
 distribution to exclude undefined values of delay, and see Section 5
 of [RFC6703] for background on this analysis choice.
 The percentile = 95, meaning that the reported delay, "95Percentile",
 is the smallest value of round-trip delay for which the Empirical
 Distribution Function, EDF(95Percentile), is greater than or equal to
 95% of the singleton round-trip delay values in the conditional
 distribution.  See Section 11.3 of [RFC2330] for the definition of
 the percentile statistic using the EDF.
 For LossRatio, the count of lost packets to total packets sent is the
 basis for the loss ratio calculation as per Section 6.1 of [RFC6673].

4.4.2. Reference Definition

 For all outputs:
 T0:  The start of a measurement interval (format "date-time" as
    specified in Section 5.6 of [RFC3339]; see also "date-and-time" in
    Section 3 of [RFC6991]).  The UTC Time Zone is required by
    Section 6.1 of [RFC2330].
 Tf:  The end of a measurement interval (format "date-time" as
    specified in Section 5.6 of [RFC3339]; see also "date-and-time" in
    Section 3 of [RFC6991]).  The UTC Time Zone is required by
    Section 6.1 of [RFC2330].
 TotalPkts:  The count of packets sent by the Src to the Dst during
    the measurement interval.
 95Percentile:  The time value of the result is expressed in units of
    seconds, as a positive value of type decimal64 with fraction
    digits = 9 (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) with a resolution of
    0.000000001 seconds (1.0 ns).
 Percent_LossRatio:  The numeric value of the result is expressed in
    units of lost packets to total packets times 100%, as a positive
    value of type decimal64 with fraction digits = 9 (see Section 9.3
    of [RFC6020]) with a resolution of 0.0000000001.

4.4.3. Metric Units

 The 95th percentile of round-trip delay is expressed in seconds.
 The round-trip loss ratio is expressed as a percentage of lost
 packets to total packets sent.

4.4.4. Calibration

 Section 3.7.3 of [RFC7679] provides a means to quantify the
 systematic and random errors of a time measurement.  Calibration in-
 situ could be enabled with an internal loopback at the Source host
 that includes as much of the measurement system as possible, performs
 address manipulation as needed, and provides some form of isolation
 (e.g., deterministic delay) to avoid send-receive interface
 contention.  Some portion of the random and systematic error can be
 characterized in this way.
 When a measurement controller requests a calibration measurement, the
 loopback is applied and the result is output in the same format as a
 normal measurement, with an additional indication that it is a
 calibration result.
 Both internal loopback calibration and clock synchronization can be
 used to estimate the available accuracy of the Output Metric Units.
 For example, repeated loopback delay measurements will reveal the
 portion of the output result resolution that is the result of system
 noise and is thus inaccurate.

4.5. Administrative Items

4.5.1. Status

 Current

4.5.2. Requester

 RFC 8912

4.5.3. Revision

 1.0

4.5.4. Revision Date

 2021-11-17

4.6. Comments and Remarks

 None

5. Packet Delay Variation Registry Entry

 This section gives an initial Registry Entry for a Packet Delay
 Variation (PDV) metric.

5.1. Summary

 This category includes multiple indexes to the Registry Entry: the
 element ID and Metric Name.

5.1.1. ID (Identifier)

 IANA has allocated the numeric Identifier 3 for the Named Metric
 Entry in Section 5.  See Section 5.1.2 for mapping to Name.

5.1.2. Name

 3:  OWPDV_Active_IP-UDP-Periodic_RFC8912sec5_Seconds_95Percentile

5.1.3. URI

 URL: https://www.iana.org/assignments/performance-metrics/
 OWPDV_Active_IP-UDP-Periodic_RFC8912sec5_Seconds_95Percentile

5.1.4. Description

 This metric assesses packet delay variation with respect to the
 minimum delay observed on the periodic stream.  The output is
 expressed as the 95th percentile of the one-way packet delay
 variation distribution.

5.1.5. Change Controller

 IETF

5.1.6. Version (of Registry Format)

 1.0

5.2. Metric Definition

 This category includes columns to prompt the entry of all necessary
 details related to the metric definition, including the RFC reference
 and values of input factors, called "Fixed Parameters".

5.2.1. Reference Definition

 Paxson, V., Almes, G., Mahdavi, J., and M.  Mathis, "Framework for IP
 Performance Metrics", RFC 2330, DOI 10.17487/RFC2330, May 1998,
 <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2330>.  [RFC2330]
 Demichelis, C. and P.  Chimento, "IP Packet Delay Variation Metric
 for IP Performance Metrics (IPPM)", RFC 3393, DOI 10.17487/RFC3393,
 November 2002, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3393>.  [RFC3393]
 Morton, A. and B.  Claise, "Packet Delay Variation Applicability
 Statement", RFC 5481, DOI 10.17487/RFC5481, March 2009,
 <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5481>.  [RFC5481]
 Mills, D., Martin, J., Ed., Burbank, J., and W.  Kasch, "Network Time
 Protocol Version 4: Protocol and Algorithms Specification", RFC 5905,
 DOI 10.17487/RFC5905, June 2010, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/
 rfc5905>.  [RFC5905]
 See Sections 2.4 and 3.4 of [RFC3393].  The measured singleton delay
 differences are referred to by the variable name "ddT" (applicable to
 all forms of delay variation).  However, this Metric Entry specifies
 the PDV form defined in Section 4.2 of [RFC5481], where the singleton
 PDV for packet i is referred to by the variable name "PDV(i)".

5.2.2. Fixed Parameters

 IPv4 header values:
    DSCP:  Set to 0
    TTL:  Set to 255
    Protocol:  Set to 17 (UDP)
 IPv6 header values:
    DSCP:  Set to 0
    Hop Count:  Set to 255
    Next Header:  Set to 17 (UDP)
    Flow Label:  Set to 0
    Extension Headers:  None
 UDP header values:
    Checksum:  The checksum MUST be calculated and the non-zero
       checksum included in the header
 UDP Payload:
    Total of 200 bytes
 Other measurement Parameters:
    Tmax:  A loss threshold waiting time with value 3.0, expressed in
       units of seconds, as a positive value of type decimal64 with
       fraction digits = 4 (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) and with a
       resolution of 0.0001 seconds (0.1 ms), with lossless conversion
       to/from the 32-bit NTP timestamp as per Section 6 of [RFC5905].
    F:  A selection function unambiguously defining the packets from
       the stream selected for the metric.  See Section 4.2 of
       [RFC5481] for the PDV form.
 See the Packet Stream Generation section for two additional Fixed
 Parameters.

5.3. Method of Measurement

 This category includes columns for references to relevant sections of
 the RFC(s) and any supplemental information needed to ensure an
 unambiguous method for implementations.

5.3.1. Reference Methods

 See Sections 2.6 and 3.6 of [RFC3393] for general singleton element
 calculations.  This Metric Entry requires implementation of the PDV
 form defined in Section 4.2 of [RFC5481].  Also see measurement
 considerations in Section 8 of [RFC5481].
 The reference method distinguishes between long-delayed packets and
 lost packets by implementing a maximum waiting time for packet
 arrival.  Tmax is the waiting time used as the threshold to declare a
 packet lost.  Lost packets SHALL be designated as having undefined
 delay.
 The calculations on the one-way delay SHALL be performed on the
 conditional distribution, conditioned on successful packet arrival
 within Tmax.  Also, when all packet delays are stored, the process
 that calculates the one-way delay value MUST enforce the Tmax
 threshold on stored values before calculations.  See Section 4.1 of
 [RFC3393] for details on the conditional distribution to exclude
 undefined values of delay, and see Section 5 of [RFC6703] for
 background on this analysis choice.
 The reference method requires some way to distinguish between
 different packets in a stream to establish correspondence between
 sending times and receiving times for each successfully arriving
 packet.  Sequence numbers or other send-order identification MUST be
 retained at the Src or included with each packet to disambiguate
 packet reordering if it occurs.
 If a standard measurement protocol is employed, then the measurement
 process will determine the sequence numbers or timestamps applied to
 test packets after the Fixed and Runtime Parameters are passed to
 that process.  The chosen measurement protocol will dictate the
 format of sequence numbers and timestamps, if they are conveyed in
 the packet payload.

5.3.2. Packet Stream Generation

 This section provides details regarding packet traffic, which is used
 as the basis for measurement.  In IPPM Metrics, this is called the
 "stream"; this stream can easily be described by providing the list
 of stream Parameters.
 Section 3 of [RFC3432] prescribes the method for generating Periodic
 streams using associated Parameters.
 incT:  The nominal duration of the inter-packet interval, first bit
    to first bit, with value 0.0200, expressed in units of seconds, as
    a positive value of type decimal64 with fraction digits = 4 (see
    Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) and with a resolution of 0.0001 seconds
    (0.1 ms).
 dT:  The duration of the interval for allowed sample start times,
    with value 1.0, expressed in units of seconds, as a positive value
    of type decimal64 with fraction digits = 4 (see Section 9.3 of
    [RFC6020]) and with a resolution of 0.0001 seconds (0.1 ms).
    Note: An initiation process with a number of control exchanges
    resulting in unpredictable start times (within a time interval)
    may be sufficient to avoid synchronization of periodic streams and
    is a valid replacement for selecting a start time at random from a
    fixed interval.
 The T0 Parameter will be reported as a measured Parameter.
 Parameters incT and dT are Fixed Parameters.

5.3.3. Traffic Filtering (Observation) Details

 N/A

5.3.4. Sampling Distribution

 N/A

5.3.5. Runtime Parameters and Data Format

 Src:  The IP address of the host in the Src Role (format
    ipv4-address-no-zone value for IPv4 or ipv6-address-no-zone value
    for IPv6; see Section 4 of [RFC6991]).
 Dst:  The IP address of the host in the Dst Role (format
    ipv4-address-no-zone value for IPv4 or ipv6-address-no-zone value
    for IPv6; see Section 4 of [RFC6991]).
 T0:  A time, the start of a measurement interval (format "date-time"
    as specified in Section 5.6 of [RFC3339]; see also "date-and-time"
    in Section 3 of [RFC6991]).  The UTC Time Zone is required by
    Section 6.1 of [RFC2330].  When T0 is "all-zeros", a start time is
    unspecified and Tf is to be interpreted as the duration of the
    measurement interval.  The start time is controlled through other
    means.
 Tf:  A time, the end of a measurement interval (format "date-time" as
    specified in Section 5.6 of [RFC3339]; see also "date-and-time" in
    Section 3 of [RFC6991]).  The UTC Time Zone is required by
    Section 6.1 of [RFC2330].  When T0 is "all-zeros", an ending time
    and date is ignored and Tf is interpreted as the duration of the
    measurement interval.

5.3.6. Roles

 Src:  Launches each packet and waits for return transmissions from
    the Dst.
 Dst:  Waits for each packet from the Src and sends a return packet to
    the Src (when required by the test protocol).

5.4. Output

 This category specifies all details of the output of measurements
 using the metric.

5.4.1. Type

 Percentile: For the conditional distribution of all packets with a
 valid value of one-way delay (undefined delays are excluded), this is
 a single value corresponding to the 95th percentile, as follows:
 See Section 4.1 of [RFC3393] for details on the conditional
 distribution to exclude undefined values of delay, and see Section 5
 of [RFC6703] for background on this analysis choice.
 The percentile = 95, meaning that the reported delay, "95Percentile",
 is the smallest value of one-way PDV for which the Empirical
 Distribution Function, EDF(95Percentile), is greater than or equal to
 95% of the singleton one-way PDV values in the conditional
 distribution.  See Section 11.3 of [RFC2330] for the definition of
 the percentile statistic using the EDF.

5.4.2. Reference Definition

 T0:  The start of a measurement interval (format "date-time" as
    specified in Section 5.6 of [RFC3339]; see also "date-and-time" in
    Section 3 of [RFC6991]).  The UTC Time Zone is required by
    Section 6.1 of [RFC2330].
 Tf:  The end of a measurement interval (format "date-time" as
    specified in Section 5.6 of [RFC3339]; see also "date-and-time" in
    Section 3 of [RFC6991]).  The UTC Time Zone is required by
    Section 6.1 of [RFC2330].
 95Percentile:  The time value of the result is expressed in units of
    seconds, as a positive value of type decimal64 with fraction
    digits = 9 (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) with a resolution of
    0.000000001 seconds (1.0 ns), and with lossless conversion to/from
    the 64-bit NTP timestamp as per Section 6 of [RFC5905].

5.4.3. Metric Units

 The 95th percentile of one-way PDV is expressed in seconds.

5.4.4. Calibration

 Section 3.7.3 of [RFC7679] provides a means to quantify the
 systematic and random errors of a time measurement.  Calibration in-
 situ could be enabled with an internal loopback that includes as much
 of the measurement system as possible, performs address manipulation
 as needed, and provides some form of isolation (e.g., deterministic
 delay) to avoid send-receive interface contention.  Some portion of
 the random and systematic error can be characterized in this way.
 For one-way delay measurements, the error calibration must include an
 assessment of the internal clock synchronization with its external
 reference (this internal clock is supplying timestamps for
 measurement).  In practice, the time offsets [RFC5905] of clocks at
 both the Source and Destination are needed to estimate the systematic
 error due to imperfect clock synchronization (the time offsets are
 smoothed; thus, the random variation is not usually represented in
 the results).
 time_offset:  The time value of the result is expressed in units of
    seconds, as a signed value of type decimal64 with fraction
    digits = 9 (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) with a resolution of
    0.000000001 seconds (1.0 ns), and with lossless conversion to/from
    the 64-bit NTP timestamp as per Section 6 of [RFC5905].
 When a measurement controller requests a calibration measurement, the
 loopback is applied and the result is output in the same format as a
 normal measurement, with an additional indication that it is a
 calibration result.  In any measurement, the measurement function
 SHOULD report its current estimate of the time offset [RFC5905] as an
 indicator of the degree of synchronization.
 Both internal loopback calibration and clock synchronization can be
 used to estimate the available accuracy of the Output Metric Units.
 For example, repeated loopback delay measurements will reveal the
 portion of the output result resolution that is the result of system
 noise and is thus inaccurate.

5.5. Administrative Items

5.5.1. Status

 Current

5.5.2. Requester

 RFC 8912

5.5.3. Revision

 1.0

5.5.4. Revision Date

 2021-11-17

5.6. Comments and Remarks

 Lost packets represent a challenge for delay variation metrics.  See
 Section 4.1 of [RFC3393] and the delay variation applicability
 statement [RFC5481] for extensive analysis and comparison of PDV and
 an alternate metric, IPDV (Inter-Packet Delay Variation).

6. DNS Response Latency and Loss Registry Entries

 This section gives initial Registry Entries for DNS Response Latency
 and Loss from a network user's perspective, for a specific named
 resource.  The metric can be measured repeatedly for different named
 resources.  [RFC2681] defines a round-trip delay metric.  We build on
 that metric by specifying several of the input Parameters to
 precisely define two metrics for measuring DNS latency and loss.
 All column entries besides the ID, Name, Description, and Output
 Reference Method categories are the same; thus, this section defines
 two closely related Registry Entries.  As a result, IANA has assigned
 corresponding URLs to each of the two Named Metrics.

6.1. Summary

 This category includes multiple indexes to the Registry Entries: the
 element ID and Metric Name.

6.1.1. ID (Identifier)

 IANA has allocated the numeric Identifiers 4 and 5 for the two Named
 Metric Entries in Section 6.  See Section 6.1.2 for mapping to Names.

6.1.2. Name

 4:  RTDNS_Active_IP-UDP-Poisson_RFC8912sec6_Seconds_Raw
 5:  RLDNS_Active_IP-UDP-Poisson_RFC8912sec6_Logical_Raw

6.1.3. URI

 URL: https://www.iana.org/assignments/performance-metrics/
 RTDNS_Active_IP-UDP-Poisson_RFC8912sec6_Seconds_Raw
 URL: https://www.iana.org/assignments/performance-metrics/
 RLDNS_Active_IP-UDP-Poisson_RFC8912sec6_Logical_Raw

6.1.4. Description

 This is a metric for DNS Response performance from a network user's
 perspective, for a specific named resource.  The metric can be
 measured repeatedly using different resource names.
 RTDNS:  This metric assesses the response time, the interval from the
    query transmission to the response.
 RLDNS:  This metric indicates that the response was deemed lost.  In
    other words, the response time exceeded the maximum waiting time.

6.1.5. Change Controller

 IETF

6.1.6. Version (of Registry Format)

 1.0

6.2. Metric Definition

 This category includes columns to prompt the entry of all necessary
 details related to the metric definition, including the RFC reference
 and values of input factors, called "Fixed Parameters".

6.2.1. Reference Definition

 For Delay:
    Mockapetris, P., "Domain names - implementation and
    specification", STD 13, RFC 1035, DOI 10.17487/RFC1035, November
    1987, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc1035> (and updates).
    [RFC1035]
    Almes, G., Kalidindi, S., and M.  Zekauskas, "A Round-trip Delay
    Metric for IPPM", RFC 2681, DOI 10.17487/RFC2681, September 1999,
    <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2681>.  [RFC2681]
    Section 2.4 of [RFC2681] provides the reference definition of the
    singleton (single value) round-trip delay metric.  Section 3.4 of
    [RFC2681] provides the reference definition expanded to cover a
    multi-singleton sample.  Note that terms such as "singleton" and
    "sample" are defined in Section 11 of [RFC2330].
    For DNS Response Latency, the entities in [RFC1035] must be mapped
    to [RFC2681].  The Local Host with its User Program and Resolver
    take the Role of "Src", and the Foreign Name Server takes the Role
    of "Dst".
    Note that although the definition of round-trip delay between the
    Source (Src) and the Destination (Dst) at T as provided in
    Section 2.4 of [RFC2681] is directionally ambiguous in the text,
    this metric tightens the definition further to recognize that the
    host in the Src Role will send the first packet to the host in the
    Dst Role and will ultimately receive the corresponding return
    packet from the Dst (when neither is lost).
 For Loss:
    Morton, A., "Round-Trip Packet Loss Metrics", RFC 6673, DOI
    10.17487/RFC6673, August 2012, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/
    rfc6673>.  [RFC6673]
    For DNS Response Loss, the entities in [RFC1035] must be mapped to
    [RFC6673].  The Local Host with its User Program and Resolver take
    the Role of "Src", and the Foreign Name Server takes the Role of
    "Dst".
    Both response time and Loss metrics employ a maximum waiting time
    for received responses, so the count of lost packets to total
    packets sent is the basis for the loss determination as per
    Section 4.3 of [RFC6673].

6.2.2. Fixed Parameters

 Type-P as defined in Section 13 of [RFC2330]:
    IPv4 header values:
       DSCP:  Set to 0
       TTL:  Set to 255
       Protocol:  Set to 17 (UDP)
    IPv6 header values:
       DSCP:  Set to 0
       Hop Count:  Set to 255
       Next Header:  Set to 17 (UDP)
       Flow Label:  Set to 0
       Extension Headers:  None
    UDP header values:
       Source port:  53
       Destination port:  53
       Checksum:  The checksum MUST be calculated and the non-zero
          checksum included in the header
    Payload:
       The payload contains a DNS message as defined in [RFC1035] with
       the following values:
       The DNS header section contains:
          Identification (see the Runtime column)
          QR:  Set to 0 (Query)
          OPCODE:  Set to 0 (standard query)
          AA:  Not set
          TC:  Not set
          RD:  Set to 1 (recursion desired)
          RA:  Not set
          RCODE:  Not set
          QDCOUNT:  Set to 1 (only one entry)
          ANCOUNT:  Not set
          NSCOUNT:  Not set
          ARCOUNT:  Not set
       The Question section contains:
          QNAME:  The Fully Qualified Domain Name (FQDN) provided as
             input for the test; see the Runtime column
          QTYPE:  The query type provided as input for the test; see
             the Runtime column
          QCLASS:  Set to 1 for IN
       The other sections do not contain any Resource Records
       (RRs).
 Other measurement Parameters:
    Tmax:  A loss threshold waiting time (and to help disambiguate
       queries).  The value is 5.0, expressed in units of seconds, as
       a positive value of type decimal64 with fraction digits = 4
       (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) and with a resolution of 0.0001
       seconds (0.1 ms), with lossless conversion to/from the 32-bit
       NTP timestamp as per Section 6 of [RFC5905].
 Observation:  Reply packets will contain a DNS Response and may
    contain RRs.

6.3. Method of Measurement

 This category includes columns for references to relevant sections of
 the RFC(s) and any supplemental information needed to ensure an
 unambiguous method for implementations.

6.3.1. Reference Methods

 The methodology for this metric (equivalent to Type-P-Round-trip-
 Delay-Poisson-Stream) is defined as in Section 2.6 of [RFC2681] (for
 singletons) and Section 3.6 of [RFC2681] (for samples) using the
 Type-P and Timeout defined in the Fixed Parameters column.
 The reference method distinguishes between long-delayed packets and
 lost packets by implementing a maximum waiting time for packet
 arrival.  Tmax is the waiting time used as the threshold to declare a
 response packet lost.  Lost packets SHALL be designated as having
 undefined delay and counted for the RLDNS metric.
 The calculations on the delay (RTT) SHALL be performed on the
 conditional distribution, conditioned on successful packet arrival
 within Tmax.  Also, when all packet delays are stored, the process
 that calculates the RTT value MUST enforce the Tmax threshold on
 stored values before calculations.  See Section 4.1 of [RFC3393] for
 details on the conditional distribution to exclude undefined values
 of delay, and see Section 5 of [RFC6703] for background on this
 analysis choice.
 The reference method requires some way to distinguish between
 different packets in a stream to establish correspondence between
 sending times and receiving times for each successfully arriving
 reply.
 DNS messages bearing queries provide for random ID Numbers in the
 Identification header field, so more than one query may be launched
 while a previous request is outstanding when the ID Number is used.
 Therefore, the ID Number MUST be retained at the Src and included
 with each response packet to disambiguate packet reordering if it
 occurs.
 If a DNS Response does not arrive within Tmax, the response time
 RTDNS is undefined, and RLDNS = 1.  The Message ID SHALL be used to
 disambiguate the successive queries that are otherwise identical.
 Since the ID Number field is only 16 bits in length, it places a
 limit on the number of simultaneous outstanding DNS queries during a
 stress test from a single Src address.
 Refer to Section 4.4 of [RFC6673] for an expanded discussion of the
 instruction to "send a Type-P packet back to the Src as quickly as
 possible" in Section 2.6 of [RFC2681].  However, the DNS server is
 expected to perform all required functions to prepare and send a
 response, so the response time will include processing time and
 network delay.  Section 8 of [RFC6673] presents additional
 requirements that SHALL be included in the Method of Measurement for
 this metric.
 In addition to operations described in [RFC2681], the Src MUST parse
 the DNS headers of the reply and prepare the query response
 information for subsequent reporting as a measured result, along with
 the round-trip delay.

6.3.2. Packet Stream Generation

 This section provides details regarding packet traffic, which is used
 as the basis for measurement.  In IPPM Metrics, this is called the
 "stream"; this stream can easily be described by providing the list
 of stream Parameters.
 Section 11.1.3 of [RFC2330] provides three methods to generate
 Poisson sampling intervals.  The reciprocal of lambda is the average
 packet spacing; thus, the Runtime Parameter is
 Reciprocal_lambda = 1/lambda, in seconds.
 Method 3 SHALL be used.  Where given a start time (Runtime
 Parameter), the subsequent send times are all computed prior to
 measurement by computing the pseudorandom distribution of inter-
 packet send times (truncating the distribution as specified in the
 Parameter Trunc), and the Src sends each packet at the computed
 times.
 Note that Trunc is the upper limit on inter-packet times in the
 Poisson distribution.  A random value greater than Trunc is set equal
 to Trunc instead.

6.3.3. Traffic Filtering (Observation) Details

 N/A

6.3.4. Sampling Distribution

 N/A

6.3.5. Runtime Parameters and Data Format

 Runtime Parameters are input factors that must be determined,
 configured into the measurement system, and reported with the results
 for the context to be complete.
 Src:  The IP address of the host in the Src Role (format
    ipv4-address-no-zone value for IPv4 or ipv6-address-no-zone value
    for IPv6; see Section 4 of [RFC6991]).
 Dst:  The IP address of the host in the Dst Role (format
    ipv4-address-no-zone value for IPv4 or ipv6-address-no-zone value
    for IPv6; see Section 4 of [RFC6991]).
 T0:  A time, the start of a measurement interval (format "date-time"
    as specified in Section 5.6 of [RFC3339]; see also "date-and-time"
    in Section 3 of [RFC6991]).  The UTC Time Zone is required by
    Section 6.1 of [RFC2330].  When T0 is "all-zeros", a start time is
    unspecified and Tf is to be interpreted as the duration of the
    measurement interval.  The start time is controlled through other
    means.
 Tf:  A time, the end of a measurement interval (format "date-time" as
    specified in Section 5.6 of [RFC3339]; see also "date-and-time" in
    Section 3 of [RFC6991]).  The UTC Time Zone is required by
    Section 6.1 of [RFC2330].  When T0 is "all-zeros", an ending time
    and date is ignored and Tf is interpreted as the duration of the
    measurement interval.
 Reciprocal_lambda:  Average packet interval for Poisson streams,
    expressed in units of seconds, as a positive value of type
    decimal64 with fraction digits = 4 (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020])
    with a resolution of 0.0001 seconds (0.1 ms), and with lossless
    conversion to/from the 32-bit NTP timestamp as per Section 6 of
    [RFC5905].
 Trunc:  Upper limit on Poisson distribution, expressed in units of
    seconds, as a positive value of type decimal64 with fraction
    digits = 4 (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) with a resolution of
    0.0001 seconds (0.1 ms), and with lossless conversion to/from the
    32-bit NTP timestamp as per Section 6 of [RFC5905] (values above
    this limit will be clipped and set to the limit value).
 ID:  The 16-bit Identifier assigned by the program that generates the
    query.  The ID value must vary in successive queries (a list of
    IDs is needed); see Section 4.1.1 of [RFC1035].  This Identifier
    is copied into the corresponding reply and can be used by the
    requester (Src) to match replies with any outstanding queries.
 QNAME:  The domain name of the query, formatted as specified in
    Section 4 of [RFC6991].
 QTYPE:  The query type, which will correspond to the IP address
    family of the query (decimal 1 for IPv4 or 28 for IPv6), formatted
    as a uint16, as per Section 9.2 of [RFC6020].

6.3.6. Roles

 Src:  Launches each packet and waits for return transmissions from
    the Dst.
 Dst:  Waits for each packet from the Src and sends a return packet to
    the Src.

6.4. Output

 This category specifies all details of the output of measurements
 using the metric.

6.4.1. Type

 Raw: For each DNS query packet sent, sets of values as defined in the
 next column, including the status of the response, only assigning
 delay values to successful query-response pairs.

6.4.2. Reference Definition

 For all outputs:
 T:  The time the DNS query was sent during the measurement interval
    (format "date-time" as specified in Section 5.6 of [RFC3339]; see
    also "date-and-time" in Section 3 of [RFC6991]).  The UTC Time
    Zone is required by Section 6.1 of [RFC2330].
 dT:  The time value of the round-trip delay to receive the DNS
    Response, expressed in units of seconds, as a positive value of
    type decimal64 with fraction digits = 9 (see Section 9.3 of
    [RFC6020]) with a resolution of 0.000000001 seconds (1.0 ns), and
    with lossless conversion to/from the 64-bit NTP timestamp as per
    Section 6 of [RFC5905].  This value is undefined when the response
    packet is not received at the Src within a waiting time of
    Tmax seconds.
 RCODE:  The value of the RCODE field in the DNS Response header,
    expressed as a uint64 as specified in Section 9.2 of [RFC6020].
    Non-zero values convey errors in the response, and such replies
    must be analyzed separately from successful requests.
 Logical:  The numeric value of the result is expressed as a Logical
    value, where 1 = Lost and 0 = Received, as a positive value of
    type uint8 (represents integer values between 0 and 255,
    inclusively (see Section 9.2 of [RFC6020]).  Note that for queries
    with outcome 1 = Lost, dT and RCODE will be set to the maximum for
    decimal64 and uint64, respectively.

6.4.3. Metric Units

 RTDNS:  Round-trip delay, dT, is expressed in seconds.
 RLDNS:  The Logical value, where 1 = Lost and 0 = Received.

6.4.4. Calibration

 Section 3.7.3 of [RFC7679] provides a means to quantify the
 systematic and random errors of a time measurement.  Calibration in-
 situ could be enabled with an internal loopback at the Source host
 that includes as much of the measurement system as possible, performs
 address and payload manipulation as needed, and provides some form of
 isolation (e.g., deterministic delay) to avoid send-receive interface
 contention.  Some portion of the random and systematic error can be
 characterized in this way.
 When a measurement controller requests a calibration measurement, the
 loopback is applied and the result is output in the same format as a
 normal measurement, with an additional indication that it is a
 calibration result.
 Both internal loopback calibration and clock synchronization can be
 used to estimate the available accuracy of the Output Metric Units.
 For example, repeated loopback delay measurements will reveal the
 portion of the output result resolution that is the result of system
 noise and is thus inaccurate.

6.5. Administrative Items

6.5.1. Status

 Current

6.5.2. Requester

 RFC 8912

6.5.3. Revision

 1.0

6.5.4. Revision Date

 2021-11-17

6.6. Comments and Remarks

 None

7. UDP Poisson One-Way Delay and Loss Registry Entries

 This section specifies five initial Registry Entries for UDP Poisson
 One-Way Delay and one entry for UDP Poisson One-Way Loss.
 All column entries besides the ID, Name, Description, and Output
 Reference Method categories are the same; thus, this section defines
 six closely related Registry Entries.  As a result, IANA has assigned
 corresponding URLs to each of the Named Metrics.

7.1. Summary

 This category includes multiple indexes to the Registry Entries: the
 element ID and Metric Name.

7.1.1. ID (Identifier)

 IANA has allocated the numeric Identifiers 6-11 for the six Named
 Metric Entries in Section 7.  See Section 7.1.2 for mapping to Names.

7.1.2. Name

 6: 
      OWDelay_Active_IP-UDP-Poisson-
      Payload250B_RFC8912sec7_Seconds_95Percentile
 7:   OWDelay_Active_IP-UDP-Poisson-
      Payload250B_RFC8912sec7_Seconds_Mean
 8:   OWDelay_Active_IP-UDP-Poisson-
      Payload250B_RFC8912sec7_Seconds_Min
 9:   OWDelay_Active_IP-UDP-Poisson-
      Payload250B_RFC8912sec7_Seconds_Max
 10:
      OWDelay_Active_IP-UDP-Poisson-
      Payload250B_RFC8912sec7_Seconds_StdDev
 11:
      OWLoss_Active_IP-UDP-Poisson-
      Payload250B_RFC8912sec7_Percent_LossRatio

7.1.3. URI

 URL: https://www.iana.org/assignments/performance-metrics/
 OWDelay_Active_IP-UDP-Poisson-
 Payload250B_RFC8912sec7_Seconds_95Percentile
 URL: https://www.iana.org/assignments/performance-metrics/
 OWDelay_Active_IP-UDP-Poisson-Payload250B_RFC8912sec7_Seconds_Mean
 URL: https://www.iana.org/assignments/performance-metrics/
 OWDelay_Active_IP-UDP-Poisson-Payload250B_RFC8912sec7_Seconds_Min
 URL: https://www.iana.org/assignments/performance-metrics/
 OWDelay_Active_IP-UDP-Poisson-Payload250B_RFC8912sec7_Seconds_Max
 URL: https://www.iana.org/assignments/performance-metrics/
 OWDelay_Active_IP-UDP-Poisson-Payload250B_RFC8912sec7_Seconds_StdDev
 URL: https://www.iana.org/assignments/performance-metrics/
 OWLoss_Active_IP-UDP-Poisson-
 Payload250B_RFC8912sec7_Percent_LossRatio

7.1.4. Description

 OWDelay:  This metric assesses the delay of a stream of packets
    exchanged between two hosts (or measurement points) and reports
    the <statistic> of one-way delay for all successfully exchanged
    packets based on their conditional delay distribution.
    where <statistic> is one of:
  • 95Percentile
  • Mean
  • Min
  • Max
  • StdDev
 OWLoss:  This metric assesses the loss ratio of a stream of packets
    exchanged between two hosts (which are the two measurement
    points).  The output is the one-way loss ratio for all transmitted
    packets expressed as a percentage.

7.1.5. Change Controller

 IETF

7.1.6. Version (of Registry Format)

 1.0

7.2. Metric Definition

 This category includes columns to prompt the entry of all necessary
 details related to the metric definition, including the RFC reference
 and values of input factors, called "Fixed Parameters".

7.2.1. Reference Definition

 For delay:
    Almes, G., Kalidindi, S., Zekauskas, M., and A.  Morton, Ed., "A
    One-Way Delay Metric for IP Performance Metrics (IPPM)", STD 81,
    RFC 7679, DOI 10.17487/RFC7679, January 2016, <https://www.rfc-
    editor.org/info/rfc7679>.  [RFC7679]
    Morton, A. and E.  Stephan, "Spatial Composition of Metrics", RFC
    6049, DOI 10.17487/RFC6049, January 2011, <https://www.rfc-
    editor.org/info/rfc6049>.  [RFC6049]
    Section 3.4 of [RFC7679] provides the reference definition of the
    singleton (single value) one-way delay metric.  Section 4.4 of
    [RFC7679] provides the reference definition expanded to cover a
    multi-value sample.  Note that terms such as "singleton" and
    "sample" are defined in Section 11 of [RFC2330].
    Only successful packet transfers with finite delay are included in
    the sample, as prescribed in Section 4.1.2 of [RFC6049].
 For loss:
    Almes, G., Kalidindi, S., Zekauskas, M., and A.  Morton, Ed., "A
    One-Way Loss Metric for IP Performance Metrics (IPPM)", STD 82,
    RFC 7680, DOI 10.17487/RFC7680, January 2016, <https://www.rfc-
    editor.org/info/rfc7680>.  [RFC7680]
    Section 2.4 of [RFC7680] provides the reference definition of the
    singleton (single value) one-way Loss metric.  Section 3.4 of
    [RFC7680] provides the reference definition expanded to cover a
    multi-singleton sample.  Note that terms such as "singleton" and
    "sample" are defined in Section 11 of [RFC2330].

7.2.2. Fixed Parameters

 Type-P:
    IPv4 header values:
       DSCP:  Set to 0
       TTL:  Set to 255
       Protocol:  Set to 17 (UDP)
    IPv6 header values:
       DSCP:  Set to 0
       Hop Count:  Set to 255
       Next Header:  Set to 17 (UDP)
       Flow Label:  Set to 0
       Extension Headers:  None
    UDP header values:
       Checksum:  The checksum MUST be calculated and the non-zero
          checksum included in the header
    UDP Payload:  TWAMP-Test packet formats (Section 4.1.2 of
       [RFC5357])
          Security features in use influence the number of Padding
          octets
          250 octets total, including the TWAMP format type, which
          MUST be reported
 Other measurement Parameters:
    Tmax:  A loss threshold waiting time with value 3.0, expressed in
       units of seconds, as a positive value of type decimal64 with
       fraction digits = 4 (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) and with a
       resolution of 0.0001 seconds (0.1 ms), with lossless conversion
       to/from the 32-bit NTP timestamp as per Section 6 of [RFC5905].
 See the Packet Stream Generation section for two additional Fixed
 Parameters.

7.3. Method of Measurement

 This category includes columns for references to relevant sections of
 the RFC(s) and any supplemental information needed to ensure an
 unambiguous method for implementations.

7.3.1. Reference Methods

 The methodology for this metric (equivalent to Type-P-One-way-Delay-
 Poisson-Stream) is defined as in Section 3.6 of [RFC7679] (for
 singletons) and Section 4.6 of [RFC7679] (for samples) using the
 Type-P and Tmax defined in the Fixed Parameters column.
 The reference method distinguishes between long-delayed packets and
 lost packets by implementing a maximum waiting time for packet
 arrival.  Tmax is the waiting time used as the threshold to declare a
 packet lost.  Lost packets SHALL be designated as having undefined
 delay and counted for the OWLoss metric.
 The calculations on the one-way delay SHALL be performed on the
 conditional distribution, conditioned on successful packet arrival
 within Tmax.  Also, when all packet delays are stored, the process
 that calculates the one-way delay value MUST enforce the Tmax
 threshold on stored values before calculations.  See Section 4.1 of
 [RFC3393] for details on the conditional distribution to exclude
 undefined values of delay, and see Section 5 of [RFC6703] for
 background on this analysis choice.
 The reference method requires some way to distinguish between
 different packets in a stream to establish correspondence between
 sending times and receiving times for each successfully arriving
 packet.
 Since a standard measurement protocol is employed [RFC5357], the
 measurement process will determine the sequence numbers or timestamps
 applied to test packets after the Fixed and Runtime Parameters are
 passed to that process.  The measurement protocol dictates the format
 of sequence numbers and timestamps conveyed in the TWAMP-Test packet
 payload.

7.3.2. Packet Stream Generation

 This section provides details regarding packet traffic, which is used
 as the basis for measurement.  In IPPM Metrics, this is called the
 "stream"; this stream can easily be described by providing the list
 of stream Parameters.
 Section 11.1.3 of [RFC2330] provides three methods to generate
 Poisson sampling intervals.  The reciprocal of lambda is the average
 packet spacing; thus, the Runtime Parameter is
 Reciprocal_lambda = 1/lambda, in seconds.
 Method 3 SHALL be used.  Where given a start time (Runtime
 Parameter), the subsequent send times are all computed prior to
 measurement by computing the pseudorandom distribution of inter-
 packet send times (truncating the distribution as specified in the
 Parameter Trunc), and the Src sends each packet at the computed
 times.
 Note that Trunc is the upper limit on inter-packet times in the
 Poisson distribution.  A random value greater than Trunc is set equal
 to Trunc instead.
 Reciprocal_lambda:  Average packet interval for Poisson streams,
    expressed in units of seconds, as a positive value of type
    decimal64 with fraction digits = 4 (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020])
    with a resolution of 0.0001 seconds (0.1 ms), and with lossless
    conversion to/from the 32-bit NTP timestamp as per Section 6 of
    [RFC5905].  Reciprocal_lambda = 1 second.
 Trunc:  Upper limit on Poisson distribution, expressed in units of
    seconds, as a positive value of type decimal64 with fraction
    digits = 4 (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) with a resolution of
    0.0001 seconds (0.1 ms), and with lossless conversion to/from the
    32-bit NTP timestamp as per Section 6 of [RFC5905] (values above
    this limit will be clipped and set to the limit value).
    Trunc = 30.0000 seconds.

7.3.3. Traffic Filtering (Observation) Details

 N/A

7.3.4. Sampling Distribution

 N/A

7.3.5. Runtime Parameters and Data Format

 Runtime Parameters are input factors that must be determined,
 configured into the measurement system, and reported with the results
 for the context to be complete.
 Src:  The IP address of the host in the Src Role (format
    ipv4-address-no-zone value for IPv4 or ipv6-address-no-zone value
    for IPv6; see Section 4 of [RFC6991]).
 Dst:  The IP address of the host in the Dst Role (format
    ipv4-address-no-zone value for IPv4 or ipv6-address-no-zone value
    for IPv6; see Section 4 of [RFC6991]).
 T0:  A time, the start of a measurement interval (format "date-time"
    as specified in Section 5.6 of [RFC3339]; see also "date-and-time"
    in Section 3 of [RFC6991]).  The UTC Time Zone is required by
    Section 6.1 of [RFC2330].  When T0 is "all-zeros", a start time is
    unspecified and Tf is to be interpreted as the duration of the
    measurement interval.  The start time is controlled through other
    means.
 Tf:  A time, the end of a measurement interval (format "date-time" as
    specified in Section 5.6 of [RFC3339]; see also "date-and-time" in
    Section 3 of [RFC6991]).  The UTC Time Zone is required by
    Section 6.1 of [RFC2330].  When T0 is "all-zeros", an ending time
    and date is ignored and Tf is interpreted as the duration of the
    measurement interval.

7.3.6. Roles

 Src:  Launches each packet and waits for return transmissions from
    the Dst.  An example is the TWAMP Session-Sender.
 Dst:  Waits for each packet from the Src and sends a return packet to
    the Src.  An example is the TWAMP Session-Reflector.

7.4. Output

 This category specifies all details of the output of measurements
 using the metric.

7.4.1. Type

 Types are discussed in the subsections below.

7.4.2. Reference Definition

 For all output types:
 T0:  The start of a measurement interval (format "date-time" as
    specified in Section 5.6 of [RFC3339]; see also "date-and-time" in
    Section 3 of [RFC6991]).  The UTC Time Zone is required by
    Section 6.1 of [RFC2330].
 Tf:  The end of a measurement interval (format "date-time" as
    specified in Section 5.6 of [RFC3339]; see also "date-and-time" in
    Section 3 of [RFC6991]).  The UTC Time Zone is required by
    Section 6.1 of [RFC2330].
 For LossRatio, the count of lost packets to total packets sent is the
 basis for the loss ratio calculation as per Section 4.1 of [RFC7680].
 For each <statistic> or Percent_LossRatio, one of the following
 subsections applies.

7.4.2.1. Percentile95

 The 95th percentile SHALL be calculated using the conditional
 distribution of all packets with a finite value of one-way delay
 (undefined delays are excluded) -- a single value, as follows:
 See Section 4.1 of [RFC3393] for details on the conditional
 distribution to exclude undefined values of delay, and see Section 5
 of [RFC6703] for background on this analysis choice.
 See Section 4.3 of [RFC3393] for details on the percentile statistic
 (where round-trip delay should be substituted for "ipdv").
 The percentile = 95, meaning that the reported delay, "95Percentile",
 is the smallest value of one-way delay for which the Empirical
 Distribution Function, EDF(95Percentile), is greater than or equal to
 95% of the singleton one-way delay values in the conditional
 distribution.  See Section 11.3 of [RFC2330] for the definition of
 the percentile statistic using the EDF.
 95Percentile:  The time value of the result is expressed in units of
    seconds, as a positive value of type decimal64 with fraction
    digits = 9 (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) with a resolution of
    0.000000001 seconds (1.0 ns), and with lossless conversion to/from
    the 64-bit NTP timestamp as per Section 6 of [RFC5905].

7.4.2.2. Mean

 The mean SHALL be calculated using the conditional distribution of
 all packets with a finite value of one-way delay (undefined delays
 are excluded) -- a single value, as follows:
 See Section 4.1 of [RFC3393] for details on the conditional
 distribution to exclude undefined values of delay, and see Section 5
 of [RFC6703] for background on this analysis choice.
 See Section 4.2.2 of [RFC6049] for details on calculating this
 statistic; see also Section 4.2.3 of [RFC6049].
 Mean:  The time value of the result is expressed in units of seconds,
    as a positive value of type decimal64 with fraction digits = 9
    (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) with a resolution of
    0.000000001 seconds (1.0 ns), and with lossless conversion to/from
    the 64-bit NTP timestamp as per Section 6 of [RFC5905].

7.4.2.3. Min

 The minimum SHALL be calculated using the conditional distribution of
 all packets with a finite value of one-way delay (undefined delays
 are excluded) -- a single value, as follows:
 See Section 4.1 of [RFC3393] for details on the conditional
 distribution to exclude undefined values of delay, and see Section 5
 of [RFC6703] for background on this analysis choice.
 See Section 4.3.2 of [RFC6049] for details on calculating this
 statistic; see also Section 4.3.3 of [RFC6049].
 Min:  The time value of the result is expressed in units of seconds,
    as a positive value of type decimal64 with fraction digits = 9
    (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) with a resolution of
    0.000000001 seconds (1.0 ns), and with lossless conversion to/from
    the 64-bit NTP timestamp as per Section 6 of [RFC5905].

7.4.2.4. Max

 The maximum SHALL be calculated using the conditional distribution of
 all packets with a finite value of one-way delay (undefined delays
 are excluded) -- a single value, as follows:
 See Section 4.1 of [RFC3393] for details on the conditional
 distribution to exclude undefined values of delay, and see Section 5
 of [RFC6703] for background on this analysis choice.
 See Section 4.3.2 of [RFC6049] for a closely related method for
 calculating this statistic; see also Section 4.3.3 of [RFC6049].  The
 formula is as follows:
    Max = (FiniteDelay[j])
    such that for some index, j, where 1 <= j <= N
    FiniteDelay[j] >= FiniteDelay[n] for all n
 Max:  The time value of the result is expressed in units of seconds,
    as a positive value of type decimal64 with fraction digits = 9
    (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) with a resolution of
    0.000000001 seconds (1.0 ns), and with lossless conversion to/from
    the 64-bit NTP timestamp as per Section 6 of [RFC5905].

7.4.2.5. Std_Dev

 The standard deviation (Std_Dev) SHALL be calculated using the
 conditional distribution of all packets with a finite value of
 one-way delay (undefined delays are excluded) -- a single value, as
 follows:
 See Section 4.1 of [RFC3393] for details on the conditional
 distribution to exclude undefined values of delay, and see Section 5
 of [RFC6703] for background on this analysis choice.
 See Section 6.1.4 of [RFC6049] for a closely related method for
 calculating this statistic.  The formula is the classic calculation
 for the standard deviation of a population.
 Define Population Std_Dev_Delay as follows:
                      _                                       _
                     |            N                            |
                     |           ---                           |
                     |     1     \                          2  |
     Std_Dev = SQRT  |  -------   >   (Delay[n] - MeanDelay)   |
                     |    (N)    /                             |
                     |           ---                           |
                     |          n = 1                          |
                     |_                                       _|
 where all packets n = 1 through N have a value for Delay[n],
 MeanDelay is calculated per Section 7.4.2.2, and SQRT[] is the Square
 Root function:
 Std_Dev:  The time value of the result is expressed in units of
    seconds, as a positive value of type decimal64 with fraction
    digits = 9 (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) with a resolution of
    0.000000001 seconds (1.0 ns), and with lossless conversion to/from
    the 64-bit NTP timestamp as per Section 6 of [RFC5905].

7.4.2.6. Percent_LossRatio

 Percent_LossRatio:  The numeric value of the result is expressed in
    units of lost packets to total packets times 100%, as a positive
    value of type decimal64 with fraction digits = 9 (see Section 9.3
    of [RFC6020]) with a resolution of 0.0000000001.

7.4.3. Metric Units

 The <statistic> of one-way delay is expressed in seconds, where
 <statistic> is one of:
  • 95Percentile
  • Mean
  • Min
  • Max
  • StdDev
 The one-way loss ratio is expressed as a percentage of lost packets
 to total packets sent.

7.4.4. Calibration

 Section 3.7.3 of [RFC7679] provides a means to quantify the
 systematic and random errors of a time measurement.  Calibration in-
 situ could be enabled with an internal loopback that includes as much
 of the measurement system as possible, performs address manipulation
 as needed, and provides some form of isolation (e.g., deterministic
 delay) to avoid send-receive interface contention.  Some portion of
 the random and systematic error can be characterized in this way.
 For one-way delay measurements, the error calibration must include an
 assessment of the internal clock synchronization with its external
 reference (this internal clock is supplying timestamps for
 measurement).  In practice, the time offsets [RFC5905] of clocks at
 both the Source and Destination are needed to estimate the systematic
 error due to imperfect clock synchronization (the time offsets
 [RFC5905] are smoothed; thus, the random variation is not usually
 represented in the results).
 time_offset:  The time value of the result is expressed in units of
    seconds, as a signed value of type decimal64 with fraction
    digits = 9 (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) with a resolution of
    0.000000001 seconds (1.0 ns), and with lossless conversion to/from
    the 64-bit NTP timestamp as per Section 6 of [RFC5905].
 When a measurement controller requests a calibration measurement, the
 loopback is applied and the result is output in the same format as a
 normal measurement, with an additional indication that it is a
 calibration result.  In any measurement, the measurement function
 SHOULD report its current estimate of the time offset [RFC5905] as an
 indicator of the degree of synchronization.
 Both internal loopback calibration and clock synchronization can be
 used to estimate the available accuracy of the Output Metric Units.
 For example, repeated loopback delay measurements will reveal the
 portion of the output result resolution that is the result of system
 noise and is thus inaccurate.

7.5. Administrative Items

7.5.1. Status

 Current

7.5.2. Requester

 RFC 8912

7.5.3. Revision

 1.0

7.5.4. Revision Date

 2021-11-17

7.6. Comments and Remarks

 None

8. UDP Periodic One-Way Delay and Loss Registry Entries

 This section specifies five initial Registry Entries for UDP Periodic
 One-Way Delay and one entry for UDP Periodic One-Way Loss.
 All column entries besides the ID, Name, Description, and Output
 Reference Method categories are the same; thus, this section defines
 six closely related Registry Entries.  As a result, IANA has assigned
 corresponding URLs to each of the six Named Metrics.

8.1. Summary

 This category includes multiple indexes to the Registry Entries: the
 element ID and Metric Name.

8.1.1. ID (Identifier)

 IANA has allocated the numeric Identifiers 12-17 for the six Named
 Metric Entries in Section 8.  See Section 8.1.2 for mapping to Names.

8.1.2. Name

 12:
      OWDelay_Active_IP-UDP-Periodic20m-
      Payload142B_RFC8912sec8_Seconds_95Percentile
 13:
      OWDelay_Active_IP-UDP-Periodic20m-
      Payload142B_RFC8912sec8_Seconds_Mean
 14:
      OWDelay_Active_IP-UDP-Periodic20m-
      Payload142B_RFC8912sec8_Seconds_Min
 15:
      OWDelay_Active_IP-UDP-Periodic20m-
      Payload142B_RFC8912sec8_Seconds_Max
 16:
      OWDelay_Active_IP-UDP-Periodic20m-
      Payload142B_RFC8912sec8_Seconds_StdDev
 17:
      OWLoss_Active_IP-UDP-Periodic20m-
      Payload142B_RFC8912sec8_Percent_LossRatio

8.1.3. URI

 URL: https://www.iana.org/assignments/performance-metrics/
 OWDelay_Active_IP-UDP-Periodic20m-
 Payload142B_RFC8912sec8_Seconds_95Percentile
 URL: https://www.iana.org/assignments/performance-metrics/
 OWDelay_Active_IP-UDP-Periodic20m-
 Payload142B_RFC8912sec8_Seconds_Mean
 URL: https://www.iana.org/assignments/performance-metrics/
 OWDelay_Active_IP-UDP-Periodic20m-Payload142B_RFC8912sec8_Seconds_Min
 URL: https://www.iana.org/assignments/performance-metrics/
 OWDelay_Active_IP-UDP-Periodic20m-Payload142B_RFC8912sec8_Seconds_Max
 URL: https://www.iana.org/assignments/performance-metrics/
 OWDelay_Active_IP-UDP-Periodic20m-
 Payload142B_RFC8912sec8_Seconds_StdDev
 URL: https://www.iana.org/assignments/performance-metrics/
 OWLoss_Active_IP-UDP-Periodic20m-
 Payload142B_RFC8912sec8_Percent_LossRatio

8.1.4. Description

 OWDelay:  This metric assesses the delay of a stream of packets
    exchanged between two hosts (or measurement points) and reports
    the <statistic> of one-way delay for all successfully exchanged
    packets based on their conditional delay distribution.
    where <statistic> is one of:
  • 95Percentile
  • Mean
  • Min
  • Max
  • StdDev
 OWLoss:  This metric assesses the loss ratio of a stream of packets
    exchanged between two hosts (which are the two measurement
    points).  The output is the one-way loss ratio for all transmitted
    packets expressed as a percentage.

8.1.5. Change Controller

 IETF

8.1.6. Version (of Registry Format)

 1.0

8.2. Metric Definition

 This category includes columns to prompt the entry of all necessary
 details related to the metric definition, including the RFC reference
 and values of input factors, called "Fixed Parameters".

8.2.1. Reference Definition

 For delay:
    Almes, G., Kalidindi, S., Zekauskas, M., and A.  Morton, Ed., "A
    One-Way Delay Metric for IP Performance Metrics (IPPM)", STD 81,
    RFC 7679, DOI 10.17487/RFC7679, January 2016, <https://www.rfc-
    editor.org/info/rfc7679>.  [RFC7679]
    Morton, A. and E.  Stephan, "Spatial Composition of Metrics", RFC
    6049, DOI 10.17487/RFC6049, January 2011, <https://www.rfc-
    editor.org/info/rfc6049>.  [RFC6049]
    Section 3.4 of [RFC7679] provides the reference definition of the
    singleton (single value) one-way delay metric.  Section 4.4 of
    [RFC7679] provides the reference definition expanded to cover a
    multi-value sample.  Note that terms such as "singleton" and
    "sample" are defined in Section 11 of [RFC2330].
    Only successful packet transfers with finite delay are included in
    the sample, as prescribed in Section 4.1.2 of [RFC6049].
 For loss:
    Almes, G., Kalidindi, S., Zekauskas, M., and A.  Morton, Ed., "A
    One-Way Loss Metric for IP Performance Metrics (IPPM)", STD 82,
    RFC 7680, DOI 10.17487/RFC7680, January 2016, <https://www.rfc-
    editor.org/info/rfc7680>.  [RFC7680]
    Section 2.4 of [RFC7680] provides the reference definition of the
    singleton (single value) one-way Loss metric.  Section 3.4 of
    [RFC7680] provides the reference definition expanded to cover a
    multi-singleton sample.  Note that terms such as "singleton" and
    "sample" are defined in Section 11 of [RFC2330].

8.2.2. Fixed Parameters

 Type-P:
    IPv4 header values:
       DSCP:  Set to 0
       TTL:  Set to 255
       Protocol:  Set to 17 (UDP)
    IPv6 header values:
       DSCP:  Set to 0
       Hop Count:  Set to 255
       Next Header:  Set to 17 (UDP)
       Flow Label:  Set to 0
       Extension Headers:  None
    UDP header values:
       Checksum:  The checksum MUST be calculated and the non-zero
          checksum included in the header
    UDP Payload:  TWAMP-Test packet formats (Section 4.1.2 of
       [RFC5357])
          Security features in use influence the number of Padding
          octets
          142 octets total, including the TWAMP format (and format
          type MUST be reported, if used)
 Other measurement Parameters:
    Tmax:  A loss threshold waiting time with value 3.0, expressed in
       units of seconds, as a positive value of type decimal64 with
       fraction digits = 4 (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) and with a
       resolution of 0.0001 seconds (0.1 ms), with lossless conversion
       to/from the 32-bit NTP timestamp as per Section 6 of [RFC5905].
 See the Packet Stream Generation section for three additional Fixed
 Parameters.

8.3. Method of Measurement

 This category includes columns for references to relevant sections of
 the RFC(s) and any supplemental information needed to ensure an
 unambiguous method for implementations.

8.3.1. Reference Methods

 The methodology for this metric (equivalent to Type-P-One-way-Delay-
 Poisson-Stream) is defined as in Section 3.6 of [RFC7679] (for
 singletons) and Section 4.6 of [RFC7679] (for samples) using the
 Type-P and Tmax defined in the Fixed Parameters column.  However, a
 Periodic stream is used, as defined in [RFC3432].
 The reference method distinguishes between long-delayed packets and
 lost packets by implementing a maximum waiting time for packet
 arrival.  Tmax is the waiting time used as the threshold to declare a
 packet lost.  Lost packets SHALL be designated as having undefined
 delay and counted for the OWLoss metric.
 The calculations on the one-way delay SHALL be performed on the
 conditional distribution, conditioned on successful packet arrival
 within Tmax.  Also, when all packet delays are stored, the process
 that calculates the one-way delay value MUST enforce the Tmax
 threshold on stored values before calculations.  See Section 4.1 of
 [RFC3393] for details on the conditional distribution to exclude
 undefined values of delay, and see Section 5 of [RFC6703] for
 background on this analysis choice.
 The reference method requires some way to distinguish between
 different packets in a stream to establish correspondence between
 sending times and receiving times for each successfully arriving
 packet.
 Since a standard measurement protocol is employed [RFC5357], the
 measurement process will determine the sequence numbers or timestamps
 applied to test packets after the Fixed and Runtime Parameters are
 passed to that process.  The measurement protocol dictates the format
 of sequence numbers and timestamps conveyed in the TWAMP-Test packet
 payload.

8.3.2. Packet Stream Generation

 This section provides details regarding packet traffic, which is used
 as the basis for measurement.  In IPPM Metrics, this is called the
 "stream"; this stream can easily be described by providing the list
 of stream Parameters.
 Section 3 of [RFC3432] prescribes the method for generating Periodic
 streams using associated Parameters.
 incT:  The nominal duration of the inter-packet interval, first bit
    to first bit, with value 0.0200, expressed in units of seconds, as
    a positive value of type decimal64 with fraction digits = 4 (see
    Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) and with a resolution of 0.0001 seconds
    (0.1 ms), with lossless conversion to/from the 32-bit NTP
    timestamp as per Section 6 of [RFC5905].
 dT:  The duration of the interval for allowed sample start times,
    with value 1.0000, expressed in units of seconds, as a positive
    value of type decimal64 with fraction digits = 4 (see Section 9.3
    of [RFC6020]) and with a resolution of 0.0001 seconds (0.1 ms),
    with lossless conversion to/from the 32-bit NTP timestamp as per
    Section 6 of [RFC5905].
 T0:  The actual start time of the periodic stream, determined from T0
    and dT.
    Note: An initiation process with a number of control exchanges
    resulting in unpredictable start times (within a time interval)
    may be sufficient to avoid synchronization of periodic streams and
    is a valid replacement for selecting a start time at random from a
    fixed interval.
 These stream Parameters will be specified as Runtime Parameters.

8.3.3. Traffic Filtering (Observation) Details

 N/A

8.3.4. Sampling Distribution

 N/A

8.3.5. Runtime Parameters and Data Format

 Runtime Parameters are input factors that must be determined,
 configured into the measurement system, and reported with the results
 for the context to be complete.
 Src:  The IP address of the host in the Src Role (format
    ipv4-address-no-zone value for IPv4 or ipv6-address-no-zone value
    for IPv6; see Section 4 of [RFC6991]).
 Dst:  The IP address of the host in the Dst Role (format
    ipv4-address-no-zone value for IPv4 or ipv6-address-no-zone value
    for IPv6; see Section 4 of [RFC6991]).
 T0:  A time, the start of a measurement interval (format "date-time"
    as specified in Section 5.6 of [RFC3339]; see also "date-and-time"
    in Section 3 of [RFC6991]).  The UTC Time Zone is required by
    Section 6.1 of [RFC2330].  When T0 is "all-zeros", a start time is
    unspecified and Tf is to be interpreted as the duration of the
    measurement interval.  The start time is controlled through other
    means.
 Tf:  A time, the end of a measurement interval (format "date-time" as
    specified in Section 5.6 of [RFC3339]; see also "date-and-time" in
    Section 3 of [RFC6991]).  The UTC Time Zone is required by
    Section 6.1 of [RFC2330].  When T0 is "all-zeros", an ending time
    and date is ignored and Tf is interpreted as the duration of the
    measurement interval.

8.3.6. Roles

 Src:  Launches each packet and waits for return transmissions from
    the Dst.  An example is the TWAMP Session-Sender.
 Dst:  Waits for each packet from the Src and sends a return packet to
    the Src.  An example is the TWAMP Session-Reflector.

8.4. Output

 This category specifies all details of the output of measurements
 using the metric.

8.4.1. Type

 Latency and Loss Types are discussed in the subsections below.

8.4.2. Reference Definition

 For all output types:
 T0:  The start of a measurement interval (format "date-time" as
    specified in Section 5.6 of [RFC3339]; see also "date-and-time" in
    Section 3 of [RFC6991]).  The UTC Time Zone is required by
    Section 6.1 of [RFC2330].
 Tf:  The end of a measurement interval (format "date-time" as
    specified in Section 5.6 of [RFC3339]; see also "date-and-time" in
    Section 3 of [RFC6991]).  The UTC Time Zone is required by
    Section 6.1 of [RFC2330].
 For LossRatio, the count of lost packets to total packets sent is the
 basis for the loss ratio calculation as per Section 4.1 of [RFC7680].
 For each <statistic> or Percent_LossRatio, one of the following
 subsections applies.

8.4.2.1. Percentile95

 The 95th percentile SHALL be calculated using the conditional
 distribution of all packets with a finite value of one-way delay
 (undefined delays are excluded) -- a single value, as follows:
 See Section 4.1 of [RFC3393] for details on the conditional
 distribution to exclude undefined values of delay, and see Section 5
 of [RFC6703] for background on this analysis choice.
 See Section 4.3 of [RFC3393] for details on the percentile statistic
 (where round-trip delay should be substituted for "ipdv").
 The percentile = 95, meaning that the reported delay, "95Percentile",
 is the smallest value of one-way delay for which the Empirical
 Distribution Function, EDF(95Percentile), is greater than or equal to
 95% of the singleton one-way delay values in the conditional
 distribution.  See Section 11.3 of [RFC2330] for the definition of
 the percentile statistic using the EDF.
 95Percentile:  The time value of the result is expressed in units of
    seconds, as a positive value of type decimal64 with fraction
    digits = 9 (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) with a resolution of
    0.000000001 seconds (1.0 ns), and with lossless conversion to/from
    the 64-bit NTP timestamp as per Section 6 of [RFC5905].

8.4.2.2. Mean

 The mean SHALL be calculated using the conditional distribution of
 all packets with a finite value of one-way delay (undefined delays
 are excluded) -- a single value, as follows:
 See Section 4.1 of [RFC3393] for details on the conditional
 distribution to exclude undefined values of delay, and see Section 5
 of [RFC6703] for background on this analysis choice.
 See Section 4.2.2 of [RFC6049] for details on calculating this
 statistic; see also Section 4.2.3 of [RFC6049].
 Mean:  The time value of the result is expressed in units of seconds,
    as a positive value of type decimal64 with fraction digits = 9
    (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) with a resolution of
    0.000000001 seconds (1.0 ns), and with lossless conversion to/from
    the 64-bit NTP timestamp as per Section 6 of [RFC5905].

8.4.2.3. Min

 The minimum SHALL be calculated using the conditional distribution of
 all packets with a finite value of one-way delay (undefined delays
 are excluded) -- a single value, as follows:
 See Section 4.1 of [RFC3393] for details on the conditional
 distribution to exclude undefined values of delay, and see Section 5
 of [RFC6703] for background on this analysis choice.
 See Section 4.3.2 of [RFC6049] for details on calculating this
 statistic; see also Section 4.3.3 of [RFC6049].
 Min:  The time value of the result is expressed in units of seconds,
    as a positive value of type decimal64 with fraction digits = 9
    (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) with a resolution of
    0.000000001 seconds (1.0 ns), and with lossless conversion to/from
    the 64-bit NTP timestamp as per Section 6 of [RFC5905].

8.4.2.4. Max

 The maximum SHALL be calculated using the conditional distribution of
 all packets with a finite value of one-way delay (undefined delays
 are excluded) -- a single value, as follows:
 See Section 4.1 of [RFC3393] for details on the conditional
 distribution to exclude undefined values of delay, and see Section 5
 of [RFC6703] for background on this analysis choice.
 See Section 4.3.2 of [RFC6049] for a closely related method for
 calculating this statistic; see also Section 4.3.3 of [RFC6049].  The
 formula is as follows:
    Max = (FiniteDelay[j])
    such that for some index, j, where 1 <= j <= N
    FiniteDelay[j] >= FiniteDelay[n] for all n
 Max:  The time value of the result is expressed in units of seconds,
    as a positive value of type decimal64 with fraction digits = 9
    (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) with a resolution of
    0.000000001 seconds (1.0 ns), and with lossless conversion to/from
    the 64-bit NTP timestamp as per Section 6 of [RFC5905].

8.4.2.5. Std_Dev

 Std_Dev SHALL be calculated using the conditional distribution of all
 packets with a finite value of one-way delay (undefined delays are
 excluded) -- a single value, as follows:
 See Section 4.1 of [RFC3393] for details on the conditional
 distribution to exclude undefined values of delay, and see Section 5
 of [RFC6703] for background on this analysis choice.
 See Section 6.1.4 of [RFC6049] for a closely related method for
 calculating this statistic.  The formula is the classic calculation
 for the standard deviation of a population.
 Define Population Std_Dev_Delay as follows:
                      _                                       _
                     |            N                            |
                     |           ---                           |
                     |     1     \                          2  |
     Std_Dev = SQRT  |  -------   >   (Delay[n] - MeanDelay)   |
                     |    (N)    /                             |
                     |           ---                           |
                     |          n = 1                          |
                     |_                                       _|
 where all packets n = 1 through N have a value for Delay[n],
 MeanDelay is calculated per Section 8.4.2.2, and SQRT[] is the Square
 Root function:
 Std_Dev:  The time value of the result is expressed in units of
    seconds, as a positive value of type decimal64 with fraction
    digits = 9 (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) with a resolution of
    0.000000001 seconds (1.0 ns), and with lossless conversion to/from
    the 64-bit NTP timestamp as per Section 6 of [RFC5905].

8.4.2.6. Percent_LossRatio

 Percent_LossRatio:  The numeric value of the result is expressed in
    units of lost packets to total packets times 100%, as a positive
    value of type decimal64 with fraction digits = 9 (see Section 9.3
    of [RFC6020] with a resolution of 0.0000000001.

8.4.3. Metric Units

 The <statistic> of one-way delay is expressed in seconds, where
 <statistic> is one of:
  • 95Percentile
  • Mean
  • Min
  • Max
  • StdDev
 The one-way loss ratio is expressed as a percentage of lost packets
 to total packets sent.

8.4.4. Calibration

 Section 3.7.3 of [RFC7679] provides a means to quantify the
 systematic and random errors of a time measurement.  Calibration in-
 situ could be enabled with an internal loopback that includes as much
 of the measurement system as possible, performs address manipulation
 as needed, and provides some form of isolation (e.g., deterministic
 delay) to avoid send-receive interface contention.  Some portion of
 the random and systematic error can be characterized in this way.
 For one-way delay measurements, the error calibration must include an
 assessment of the internal clock synchronization with its external
 reference (this internal clock is supplying timestamps for
 measurement).  In practice, the time offsets [RFC5905] of clocks at
 both the Source and Destination are needed to estimate the systematic
 error due to imperfect clock synchronization (the time offsets
 [RFC5905] are smoothed; thus, the random variation is not usually
 represented in the results).
 time_offset:  The time value of the result is expressed in units of
    seconds, as a signed value of type decimal64 with fraction
    digits = 9 (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) with a resolution of
    0.000000001 seconds (1.0 ns), and with lossless conversion to/from
    the 64-bit NTP timestamp as per Section 6 of [RFC5905].
 When a measurement controller requests a calibration measurement, the
 loopback is applied and the result is output in the same format as a
 normal measurement, with an additional indication that it is a
 calibration result.  In any measurement, the measurement function
 SHOULD report its current estimate of the time offset [RFC5905] as an
 indicator of the degree of synchronization.
 Both internal loopback calibration and clock synchronization can be
 used to estimate the available accuracy of the Output Metric Units.
 For example, repeated loopback delay measurements will reveal the
 portion of the output result resolution that is the result of system
 noise and is thus inaccurate.

8.5. Administrative Items

8.5.1. Status

 Current

8.5.2. Requester

 RFC 8912

8.5.3. Revision

 1.0

8.5.4. Revision Date

 2021-11-17

8.6. Comments and Remarks

 None

9. ICMP Round-Trip Latency and Loss Registry Entries

 This section specifies three initial Registry Entries for ICMP
 Round-Trip Latency and another entry for the ICMP Round-Trip Loss
 Ratio.
 All column entries besides the ID, Name, Description, and Output
 Reference Method categories are the same; thus, this section defines
 four closely related Registry Entries.  As a result, IANA has
 assigned corresponding URLs to each of the four Named Metrics.

9.1. Summary

 This category includes multiple indexes to the Registry Entries: the
 element ID and Metric Name.

9.1.1. ID (Identifier)

 IANA has allocated the numeric Identifiers 18-21 for the four Named
 Metric Entries in Section 9.  See Section 9.1.2 for mapping to Names.

9.1.2. Name

 18:  RTDelay_Active_IP-ICMP-SendOnRcv_RFC8912sec9_Seconds_Mean
 19:  RTDelay_Active_IP-ICMP-SendOnRcv_RFC8912sec9_Seconds_Min
 20:  RTDelay_Active_IP-ICMP-SendOnRcv_RFC8912sec9_Seconds_Max
 21:  RTLoss_Active_IP-ICMP-SendOnRcv_RFC8912sec9_Percent_LossRatio

9.1.3. URI

 URL: https://www.iana.org/assignments/performance-metrics/
 RTDelay_Active_IP-ICMP-SendOnRcv_RFC8912sec9_Seconds_Mean
 URL: https://www.iana.org/assignments/performance-metrics/
 RTDelay_Active_IP-ICMP-SendOnRcv_RFC8912sec9_Seconds_Min
 URL: https://www.iana.org/assignments/performance-metrics/
 RTDelay_Active_IP-ICMP-SendOnRcv_RFC8912sec9_Seconds_Max
 URL: https://www.iana.org/assignments/performance-metrics/
 RTLoss_Active_IP-ICMP-SendOnRcv_RFC8912sec9_Percent_LossRatio

9.1.4. Description

 RTDelay:  This metric assesses the delay of a stream of ICMP packets
    exchanged between two hosts (which are the two measurement
    points).  The output is the round-trip delay for all successfully
    exchanged packets expressed as the <statistic> of their
    conditional delay distribution, where <statistic> is one of:
  • Mean
  • Min
  • Max
 RTLoss:  This metric assesses the loss ratio of a stream of ICMP
    packets exchanged between two hosts (which are the two measurement
    points).  The output is the round-trip loss ratio for all
    transmitted packets expressed as a percentage.

9.1.5. Change Controller

 IETF

9.1.6. Version (of Registry Format)

 1.0

9.2. Metric Definition

 This category includes columns to prompt the entry of all necessary
 details related to the metric definition, including the RFC reference
 and values of input factors, called "Fixed Parameters".

9.2.1. Reference Definition

 For delay:
    Almes, G., Kalidindi, S., and M.  Zekauskas, "A Round-trip Delay
    Metric for IPPM", RFC 2681, DOI 10.17487/RFC2681, September 1999,
    <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2681>.  [RFC2681]
    Section 2.4 of [RFC2681] provides the reference definition of the
    singleton (single value) round-trip delay metric.  Section 3.4 of
    [RFC2681] provides the reference definition expanded to cover a
    multi-singleton sample.  Note that terms such as "singleton" and
    "sample" are defined in Section 11 of [RFC2330].
    Note that although the definition of round-trip delay between the
    Source (Src) and the Destination (Dst) as provided in Section 2.4
    of [RFC2681] is directionally ambiguous in the text, this metric
    tightens the definition further to recognize that the host in the
    Src Role will send the first packet to the host in the Dst Role
    and will ultimately receive the corresponding return packet from
    the Dst (when neither is lost).
    Finally, note that the variable "dT" is used in [RFC2681] to refer
    to the value of round-trip delay in metric definitions and
    methods.  The variable "dT" has been reused in other IPPM
    literature to refer to different quantities and cannot be used as
    a global variable name.
 For loss:
    Morton, A., "Round-Trip Packet Loss Metrics", RFC 6673, DOI
    10.17487/RFC6673, August 2012, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/
    rfc6673>.  [RFC6673]
 Both Delay and Loss metrics employ a maximum waiting time for
 received packets, so the count of lost packets to total packets sent
 is the basis for the loss ratio calculation as per Section 6.1 of
 [RFC6673].

9.2.2. Fixed Parameters

 Type-P as defined in Section 13 of [RFC2330]:
    IPv4 header values:
       DSCP:  Set to 0
       TTL:  Set to 255
       Protocol:  Set to 01 (ICMP)
    IPv6 header values:
       DSCP:  Set to 0
       Hop Count:  Set to 255
       Next Header:  Set to 128 decimal (ICMP)
       Flow Label:  Set to 0
       Extension Headers:  None
    ICMP header values:
       Type:  8 (Echo Request)
       Code:  0
       Checksum:  The checksum MUST be calculated and the non-zero
          checksum included in the header
       (Identifier and sequence number set at runtime)
    ICMP Payload:
       Total of 32 bytes of random information, constant per test
 Other measurement Parameters:
    Tmax:  A loss threshold waiting time with value 3.0, expressed in
       units of seconds, as a positive value of type decimal64 with
       fraction digits = 4 (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) and with a
       resolution of 0.0001 seconds (0.1 ms), with lossless conversion
       to/from the 32-bit NTP timestamp as per Section 6 of [RFC5905].

9.3. Method of Measurement

 This category includes columns for references to relevant sections of
 the RFC(s) and any supplemental information needed to ensure an
 unambiguous method for implementations.

9.3.1. Reference Methods

 The methodology for this metric (equivalent to Type-P-Round-trip-
 Delay-Poisson-Stream) is defined as in Section 2.6 of [RFC2681] (for
 singletons) and Section 3.6 of [RFC2681] (for samples) using the
 Type-P and Tmax defined in the Fixed Parameters column.
 The reference method distinguishes between long-delayed packets and
 lost packets by implementing a maximum waiting time for packet
 arrival.  Tmax is the waiting time used as the threshold to declare a
 packet lost.  Lost packets SHALL be designated as having undefined
 delay and counted for the RTLoss metric.
 The calculations on the delay (RTD) SHALL be performed on the
 conditional distribution, conditioned on successful packet arrival
 within Tmax.  Also, when all packet delays are stored, the process
 that calculates the RTD value MUST enforce the Tmax threshold on
 stored values before calculations.  See Section 4.1 of [RFC3393] for
 details on the conditional distribution to exclude undefined values
 of delay, and see Section 5 of [RFC6703] for background on this
 analysis choice.
 The reference method requires some way to distinguish between
 different packets in a stream to establish correspondence between
 sending times and receiving times for each successfully arriving
 packet.  Sequence numbers or other send-order identification MUST be
 retained at the Src or included with each packet to disambiguate
 packet reordering if it occurs.
 The measurement process will determine the sequence numbers applied
 to test packets after the Fixed and Runtime Parameters are passed to
 that process.  The ICMP measurement process and protocol will dictate
 the format of sequence numbers and other Identifiers.
 Refer to Section 4.4 of [RFC6673] for an expanded discussion of the
 instruction to "send a Type-P packet back to the Src as quickly as
 possible" in Section 2.6 of [RFC2681].  Section 8 of [RFC6673]
 presents additional requirements that MUST be included in the Method
 of Measurement for this metric.

9.3.2. Packet Stream Generation

 This section provides details regarding packet traffic, which is used
 as the basis for measurement.  In IPPM Metrics, this is called the
 "stream"; this stream can easily be described by providing the list
 of stream Parameters.
 The ICMP metrics use a sending discipline called "SendOnRcv" or Send
 On Receive.  This is a modification of Section 3 of [RFC3432], which
 prescribes the method for generating Periodic streams using
 associated Parameters as defined below for this description:
 incT:  The nominal duration of the inter-packet interval, first bit
    to first bit.
 dT:  The duration of the interval for allowed sample start times.
 The incT stream Parameter will be specified as a Runtime Parameter,
 and dT is not used in SendOnRcv.
 A SendOnRcv sender behaves exactly like a Periodic stream generator
 while all reply packets arrive with RTD < incT, and the inter-packet
 interval will be constant.
 If a reply packet arrives with RTD >= incT, then the inter-packet
 interval for the next sending time is nominally RTD.
 If a reply packet fails to arrive within Tmax, then the inter-packet
 interval for the next sending time is nominally Tmax.
 If an immediate Send On Reply arrival is desired, then set incT = 0.

9.3.3. Traffic Filtering (Observation) Details

 N/A

9.3.4. Sampling Distribution

 N/A

9.3.5. Runtime Parameters and Data Format

 Runtime Parameters are input factors that must be determined,
 configured into the measurement system, and reported with the results
 for the context to be complete.
 Src:  The IP address of the host in the Src Role (format
    ipv4-address-no-zone value for IPv4 or ipv6-address-no-zone value
    for IPv6; see Section 4 of [RFC6991]).
 Dst:  The IP address of the host in the Dst Role (format
    ipv4-address-no-zone value for IPv4 or ipv6-address-no-zone value
    for IPv6; see Section 4 of [RFC6991]).
 incT:  The nominal duration of the inter-packet interval, first bit
    to first bit, expressed in units of seconds, as a positive value
    of type decimal64 with fraction digits = 4 (see Section 9.3 of
    [RFC6020]) and with a resolution of 0.0001 seconds (0.1 ms).
 T0:  A time, the start of a measurement interval (format "date-time"
    as specified in Section 5.6 of [RFC3339]; see also "date-and-time"
    in Section 3 of [RFC6991]).  The UTC Time Zone is required by
    Section 6.1 of [RFC2330].  When T0 is "all-zeros", a start time is
    unspecified and Tf is to be interpreted as the duration of the
    measurement interval.  The start time is controlled through other
    means.
 Count:  The total count of ICMP Echo Requests to send, formatted as a
    uint16, as per Section 9.2 of [RFC6020].
 See the Packet Stream Generation section for additional Runtime
 Parameters.

9.3.6. Roles

 Src:  Launches each packet and waits for return transmissions from
    the Dst.
 Dst:  Waits for each packet from the Src and sends a return packet to
    the Src (ICMP Echo Reply, Type 0).

9.4. Output

 This category specifies all details of the output of measurements
 using the metric.

9.4.1. Type

 Latency and Loss Types are discussed in the subsections below.

9.4.2. Reference Definition

 For all output types:
 T0:  The start of a measurement interval (format "date-time" as
    specified in Section 5.6 of [RFC3339]; see also "date-and-time" in
    Section 3 of [RFC6991]).  The UTC Time Zone is required by
    Section 6.1 of [RFC2330].
 Tf:  The end of a measurement interval (format "date-time" as
    specified in Section 5.6 of [RFC3339]; see also "date-and-time" in
    Section 3 of [RFC6991]).  The UTC Time Zone is required by
    Section 6.1 of [RFC2330].
 TotalCount:  The count of packets actually sent by the Src to the Dst
    during the measurement interval.
 For each <statistic> or Percent_LossRatio, one of the following
 subsections applies.

9.4.2.1. Mean

 The mean SHALL be calculated using the conditional distribution of
 all packets with a finite value of round-trip delay (undefined delays
 are excluded) -- a single value, as follows:
 See Section 4.1 of [RFC3393] for details on the conditional
 distribution to exclude undefined values of delay, and see Section 5
 of [RFC6703] for background on this analysis choice.
 See Section 4.2.2 of [RFC6049] for details on calculating this
 statistic; see also Section 4.2.3 of [RFC6049].
 Mean:  The time value of the result is expressed in units of seconds,
    as a positive value of type decimal64 with fraction digits = 9
    (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) with a resolution of
    0.000000001 seconds (1.0 ns), and with lossless conversion to/from
    the 64-bit NTP timestamp as per Section 6 of [RFC5905].

9.4.2.2. Min

 The minimum SHALL be calculated using the conditional distribution of
 all packets with a finite value of round-trip delay (undefined delays
 are excluded) -- a single value, as follows:
 See Section 4.1 of [RFC3393] for details on the conditional
 distribution to exclude undefined values of delay, and see Section 5
 of [RFC6703] for background on this analysis choice.
 See Section 4.3.2 of [RFC6049] for details on calculating this
 statistic; see also Section 4.3.3 of [RFC6049].
 Min:  The time value of the result is expressed in units of seconds,
    as a positive value of type decimal64 with fraction digits = 9
    (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) with a resolution of
    0.000000001 seconds (1.0 ns), and with lossless conversion to/from
    the 64-bit NTP timestamp as per Section 6 of [RFC5905].

9.4.2.3. Max

 The maximum SHALL be calculated using the conditional distribution of
 all packets with a finite value of round-trip delay (undefined delays
 are excluded) -- a single value, as follows:
 See Section 4.1 of [RFC3393] for details on the conditional
 distribution to exclude undefined values of delay, and see Section 5
 of [RFC6703] for background on this analysis choice.
 See Section 4.3.2 of [RFC6049] for a closely related method for
 calculating this statistic; see also Section 4.3.3 of [RFC6049].  The
 formula is as follows:
    Max = (FiniteDelay[j])
    such that for some index, j, where 1 <= j <= N
    FiniteDelay[j] >= FiniteDelay[n] for all n
 Max:  The time value of the result is expressed in units of seconds,
    as a positive value of type decimal64 with fraction digits = 9
    (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) with a resolution of
    0.000000001 seconds (1.0 ns), and with lossless conversion to/from
    the 64-bit NTP timestamp as per Section 6 of [RFC5905].

9.4.2.4. Percent_LossRatio

 For LossRatio, the count of lost packets to total packets sent is the
 basis for the loss ratio calculation as per Section 4.1 of [RFC7680].
 Percent_LossRatio:  The numeric value of the result is expressed in
    units of lost packets to total packets times 100%, as a positive
    value of type decimal64 with fraction digits = 9 (see Section 9.3
    of [RFC6020]) with a resolution of 0.0000000001.

9.4.3. Metric Units

 The <statistic> of round-trip delay is expressed in seconds, where
 <statistic> is one of:
  • Mean
  • Min
  • Max
 The round-trip loss ratio is expressed as a percentage of lost
 packets to total packets sent.

9.4.4. Calibration

 Section 3.7.3 of [RFC7679] provides a means to quantify the
 systematic and random errors of a time measurement.  Calibration in-
 situ could be enabled with an internal loopback at the Source host
 that includes as much of the measurement system as possible, performs
 address manipulation as needed, and provides some form of isolation
 (e.g., deterministic delay) to avoid send-receive interface
 contention.  Some portion of the random and systematic error can be
 characterized in this way.
 When a measurement controller requests a calibration measurement, the
 loopback is applied and the result is output in the same format as a
 normal measurement, with an additional indication that it is a
 calibration result.
 Both internal loopback calibration and clock synchronization can be
 used to estimate the available accuracy of the Output Metric Units.
 For example, repeated loopback delay measurements will reveal the
 portion of the output result resolution that is the result of system
 noise and is thus inaccurate.

9.5. Administrative Items

9.5.1. Status

 Current

9.5.2. Requester

 RFC 8912

9.5.3. Revision

 1.0

9.5.4. Revision Date

 2021-11-17

9.6. Comments and Remarks

 None

10. TCP Round-Trip Delay and Loss Registry Entries

 This section specifies four initial Registry Entries for the Passive
 assessment of TCP Round-Trip Delay (RTD) and another entry for the
 TCP Round-Trip Loss Count.
 All column entries besides the ID, Name, Description, and Output
 Reference Method categories are the same; thus, this section defines
 four closely related Registry Entries.  As a result, IANA has
 assigned corresponding URLs to each of the four Named Metrics.

10.1. Summary

 This category includes multiple indexes to the Registry Entries: the
 element ID and Metric Name.

10.1.1. ID (Identifier)

 IANA has allocated the numeric Identifiers 22-26 for the five Named
 Metric Entries in Section 10.  See Section 10.1.2 for mapping to
 Names.

10.1.2. Name

 22:  RTDelay_Passive_IP-TCP_RFC8912sec10_Seconds_Mean
 23:  RTDelay_Passive_IP-TCP_RFC8912sec10_Seconds_Min
 24:  RTDelay_Passive_IP-TCP_RFC8912sec10_Seconds_Max
 25:  RTDelay_Passive_IP-TCP-HS_RFC8912sec10_Seconds_Singleton
 Note that a midpoint observer only has the opportunity to compose a
 single RTDelay on the TCP handshake.
 26:  RTLoss_Passive_IP-TCP_RFC8912sec10_Packet_Count

10.1.3. URI

 URL: https://www.iana.org/assignments/performance-metrics/
 RTDelay_Passive_IP-TCP_RFC8912sec10_Seconds_Mean
 URL: https://www.iana.org/assignments/performance-metrics/
 RTDelay_Passive_IP-TCP_RFC8912sec10_Seconds_Min
 URL: https://www.iana.org/assignments/performance-metrics/
 RTDelay_Passive_IP-TCP_RFC8912sec10_Seconds_Max
 URL: https://www.iana.org/assignments/performance-metrics/
 RTDelay_Passive_IP-TCP-HS_RFC8912sec10_Seconds_Singleton
 URL: https://www.iana.org/assignments/performance-metrics/
 RTLoss_Passive_IP-TCP_RFC8912sec10_Packet_Count

10.1.4. Description

 RTDelay:  This metric assesses the round-trip delay of TCP packets
    constituting a single connection, exchanged between two hosts.  We
    consider the measurement of round-trip delay based on a single
    Observation Point (OP) [RFC7011] somewhere in the network.  The
    output is the round-trip delay for all successfully exchanged
    packets expressed as the <statistic> of their conditional delay
    distribution, where <statistic> is one of:
  • Mean
  • Min
  • Max
 RTDelay Singleton:  This metric assesses the round-trip delay of TCP
    packets initiating a single connection (or 3-way handshake),
    exchanged between two hosts.  We consider the measurement of
    round-trip delay based on a single Observation Point (OP)
    [RFC7011] somewhere in the network.  The output is the single
    measurement of Round-trip delay, or Singleton.
 RTLoss:  This metric assesses the estimated loss count for TCP
    packets constituting a single connection, exchanged between two
    hosts.  We consider the measurement of round-trip delay based on a
    single OP [RFC7011] somewhere in the network.  The output is the
    estimated loss count for the measurement interval.

10.1.5. Change Controller

 IETF

10.1.6. Version (of Registry Format)

 1.0

10.2. Metric Definition

 This category includes columns to prompt the entry of all necessary
 details related to the metric definition, including the RFC reference
 and values of input factors, called "Fixed Parameters".

10.2.1. Reference Definition

 Almes, G., Kalidindi, S., and M.  Zekauskas, "A Round-trip Delay
 Metric for IPPM", RFC 2681, DOI 10.17487/RFC2681, September 1999,
 <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2681>.  [RFC2681]
 Although there is no RFC that describes Passive Measurement of round-
 trip delay, the parallel definition for Active Measurement is
 provided in [RFC2681].
 This metric definition uses the term "wire time" as defined in
 Section 10.2 of [RFC2330], and the terms "singleton" and "sample" as
 defined in Section 11 of [RFC2330].  (Section 2.4 of [RFC2681]
 provides the reference definition of the singleton (single value)
 round-trip delay metric.  Section 3.4 of [RFC2681] provides the
 reference definition expanded to cover a multi-singleton sample.)
 With the OP [RFC7011] typically located between the hosts
 participating in the TCP connection, the round-trip delay metric
 requires two individual measurements between the OP and each host,
 such that the Spatial Composition [RFC6049] of the measurements
 yields a round-trip delay singleton (we are extending the composition
 of one-way subpath delays to subpath round-trip delay).
 Using the direction of TCP SYN transmission to anchor the
 nomenclature, host A sends the SYN, and host B replies with SYN-ACK
 during connection establishment.  The direction of SYN transfer is
 considered the Forward direction of transmission, from A through the
 OP to B (the Reverse direction is B through the OP to A).
 Traffic Filters reduce the packet streams at the OP to a Qualified
 bidirectional flow of packets.
 In the definitions below, Corresponding Packets are transferred in
 different directions and convey a common value in a TCP header field
 that establishes correspondence (to the extent possible).  Examples
 may be found in the TCP timestamp fields.
 For a real number, RTD_fwd, >> the round-trip delay in the Forward
 direction from the OP to host B at time T' is RTD_fwd << it is
 REQUIRED that the OP observed a Qualified Packet to host B at wire
 time T', that host B received that packet and sent a Corresponding
 Packet back to host A, and the OP observed the Corresponding Packet
 at wire time T' + RTD_fwd.
 For a real number, RTD_rev, >> the round-trip delay in the Reverse
 direction from the OP to host A at time T'' is RTD_rev << it is
 REQUIRED that the OP observed a Qualified Packet to host A at wire
 time T'', that host A received that packet and sent a Corresponding
 Packet back to host B, and that the OP observed the Corresponding
 Packet at wire time T'' + RTD_rev.
 Ideally, the packet sent from host B to host A in both definitions
 above SHOULD be the same packet (or, when measuring RTD_rev first,
 the packet from host A to host B in both definitions should be the
 same).
 The REQUIRED Composition Function for a singleton of round-trip delay
 at time T (where T is the earliest of T' and T'' above) is:
 RTDelay = RTD_fwd + RTD_rev
 Note that when the OP is located at host A or host B, one of the
 terms composing RTDelay will be zero or negligible.
 Using the abbreviation HS to refer to the TCP handshake: when the
 Qualified and Corresponding Packets are a TCP-SYN and a TCP-SYN-ACK,
 RTD_fwd == RTD_HS_fwd.
 When the Qualified and Corresponding Packets are a TCP-SYN-ACK and a
 TCP-ACK, RTD_rev == RTD_HS_rev.
 The REQUIRED Composition Function for a singleton of round-trip delay
 for the connection handshake is:
 RTDelay_HS = RTD_HS_fwd + RTD_HS_rev
 The definition of round-trip loss count uses the nomenclature
 developed above, based on observation of the TCP header sequence
 numbers and storing the sequence number gaps observed.  Packet losses
 can be inferred from:
 Out-of-order segments:  TCP segments are transmitted with
    monotonically increasing sequence numbers, but these segments may
    be received out of order.  Section 3 of [RFC4737] describes the
    notion of "next expected" sequence numbers, which can be adapted
    to TCP segments (for the purpose of detecting reordered packets).
    Observation of out-of-order segments indicates loss on the path
    prior to the OP and creates a gap.
 Duplicate segments:  Section 2 of [RFC5560] defines identical packets
    and is suitable for evaluation of TCP packets to detect
    duplication.  Observation of a segment duplicates a segment
    previously observed (and thus no corresponding observed segment
    gap) indicates loss on the path following the OP (e.g., the
    segment overlaps part of the octet stream already observed at the
    OP).
 Each observation of an out-of-order or duplicate segment infers a
 singleton of loss, but the composition of round-trip loss counts will
 be conducted over a measurement interval that is synonymous with a
 single TCP connection.
 With the above observations in the Forward direction over a
 measurement interval, the count of out-of-order and duplicate
 segments is defined as RTL_fwd.  Comparable observations in the
 Reverse direction are defined as RTL_rev.
 For a measurement interval (corresponding to a single TCP connection)
 T0 to Tf, the REQUIRED Composition Function for the two single-
 direction counts of inferred loss is:
 RTLoss = RTL_fwd + RTL_rev

10.2.2. Fixed Parameters

 Traffic Filters:
    IPv4 header values:
       DSCP:  Set to 0
       Protocol:  Set to 06 (TCP)
    IPv6 header values:
       DSCP:  Set to 0
       Hop Count:  Set to 255
       Next Header:  Set to 6 (TCP)
       Flow Label:  Set to 0
       Extension Headers:  None
    TCP header values:
       Flags:  ACK, SYN, FIN, set as required
       Timestamps Option (TSopt):  Set.  See Section 3.2 of [RFC7323]

10.3. Method of Measurement

 This category includes columns for references to relevant sections of
 the RFC(s) and any supplemental information needed to ensure an
 unambiguous method for implementations.

10.3.1. Reference Methods

 The foundational methodology for this metric is defined in Section 4
 of [RFC7323] using the Timestamps option with modifications that
 allow application at a mid-path OP [RFC7011].  Further details and
 applicable heuristics were derived from [Strowes] and [Trammell-14].
 The Traffic Filter at the OP is configured to observe a single TCP
 connection.  When the SYN/SYN-ACK/ACK handshake occurs, it offers the
 first opportunity to measure both RTD_fwd (on the SYN to SYN-ACK
 pair) and RTD_rev (on the SYN-ACK to ACK pair).  Label this singleton
 of RTDelay as RTDelay_HS (composed using the Forward and Reverse
 measurement pair).  RTDelay_HS SHALL be treated separately from other
 RTDelays on data-bearing packets and their ACKs.  The RTDelay_HS
 value MAY be used as a consistency check on the composed values of
 RTDelay for payload-bearing packets.
 For payload-bearing packets, the OP measures the time interval
 between observation of a packet with sequence number "s" and the
 corresponding ACK with the same sequence number.  When the payload is
 transferred from host A to host B, the observed interval is RTD_fwd.
 For payload-bearing packets, each observation of an out-of-order or
 duplicate segment infers a loss count, but the composition of round-
 trip loss counts will be conducted over a measurement interval that
 is synonymous with a single TCP connection.
 Because many data transfers are unidirectional (say, in the Forward
 direction from host A to host B), it is necessary to use pure ACK
 packets with Timestamp (TSval) and packets with the Timestamp value
 echo to perform a RTD_rev measurement.  The time interval between
 observation of the ACK from B to A, and the Corresponding Packet with
 a Timestamp Echo Reply (TSecr) field [RFC7323], is the RTD_rev.
 Delay Measurement Filtering Heuristics:
  • If data payloads were transferred in both Forward and Reverse

directions, then the Round-Trip Time Measurement rule in

    Section 4.1 of [RFC7323] could be applied.  This rule essentially
    excludes any measurement using a packet unless it makes progress
    in the transfer (advances the left edge of the send window,
    consistent with [Strowes]).
  • A different heuristic from [Trammell-14] is to exclude any RTD_rev

that is larger than previously observed values. This would tend

    to exclude Reverse measurements taken when the application has no
    data ready to send, because considerable time could be added to
    RTD_rev from this source of error.
  • Note that the above heuristic assumes that host A is sending data.

Host A expecting a download would mean that this heuristic should

    be applied to RTD_fwd.
  • The statistic calculations to summarize the delay (RTDelay) SHALL

be performed on the conditional distribution, conditioned on

    successful Forward and Reverse measurements that follow the
    heuristics.
 Method for Inferring Loss:
  • The OP tracks sequence numbers and stores gaps for each direction

of transmission, as well as the next expected sequence number as

    discussed in [Trammell-14] and [RFC4737].  Loss is inferred from
    out-of-order segments and duplicate segments.
 Loss Measurement Filtering Heuristics:
  • [Trammell-14] adds a window of evaluation based on the RTDelay.
  • Distinguish reordered packets from out-of-order segments due to

loss, because the sequence number gap is filled during the same

    RTDelay window.  Segments detected as reordered according to
    [RFC4737] MUST reduce the loss count inferred from out-of-order
    segments.
  • Spurious (unneeded) retransmissions (observed as duplicates) can

also be reduced in this way, as described in [Trammell-14].

 Sources of Error:
  • The principal source of RTDelay error is the host processing time

to return a packet that defines the termination of a time

    interval.  The heuristics above intend to mitigate these errors by
    excluding measurements where host processing time is a significant
    part of RTD_fwd or RTD_rev.
  • A key source of RTLoss error is observation loss, as described in

Section 3 of [Trammell-14].

10.3.2. Packet Stream Generation

 N/A

10.3.3. Traffic Filtering (Observation) Details

 The Fixed Parameters above give a portion of the Traffic Filter.
 Other aspects will be supplied as Runtime Parameters (below).

10.3.4. Sampling Distribution

 This metric requires a complete sample of all packets that qualify
 according to the Traffic Filter criteria.

10.3.5. Runtime Parameters and Data Format

 Runtime Parameters are input factors that must be determined,
 configured into the measurement system, and reported with the results
 for the context to be complete.
 Src:  The IP address of the host in the host A Role (format
    ipv4-address-no-zone value for IPv4 or ipv6-address-no-zone value
    for IPv6; see Section 4 of [RFC6991]).
 Dst:  The IP address of the host in the host B Role (format
    ipv4-address-no-zone value for IPv4 or ipv6-address-no-zone value
    for IPv6; see Section 4 of [RFC6991]).
 T0:  A time, the start of a measurement interval (format "date-time"
    as specified in Section 5.6 of [RFC3339]; see also "date-and-time"
    in Section 3 of [RFC6991]).  The UTC Time Zone is required by
    Section 6.1 of [RFC2330].  When T0 is "all-zeros", a start time is
    unspecified and Tf is to be interpreted as the duration of the
    measurement interval.  The start time is controlled through other
    means.
 Tf:  Optionally, the end of a measurement interval (format
    "date-time" as specified in Section 5.6 of [RFC3339]; see also
    "date-and-time" in Section 3 of [RFC6991]), or the duration (see
    T0).  The UTC Time Zone is required by Section 6.1 of [RFC2330].
    Alternatively, the end of the measurement interval MAY be
    controlled by the measured connection, where the second pair of
    FIN and ACK packets exchanged between host A and host B
    effectively ends the interval.
 TTL or Hop Limit:  Set at desired value.

10.3.6. Roles

 host A:  Launches the SYN packet to open the connection.  The Role of
    "host A" is synonymous with the IP address used at host A.
 host B:  Replies with the SYN-ACK packet to open the connection.  The
    Role of "host B" is synonymous with the IP address used at host B.

10.4. Output

 This category specifies all details of the output of measurements
 using the metric.

10.4.1. Type

 RTDelay Types are discussed in the subsections below.
 For RTLoss: The count of lost packets.

10.4.2. Reference Definition

 For all output types:
 T0:  The start of a measurement interval (format "date-time" as
    specified in Section 5.6 of [RFC3339]; see also "date-and-time" in
    Section 3 of [RFC6991]).  The UTC Time Zone is required by
    Section 6.1 of [RFC2330].
 Tf:  The end of a measurement interval (format "date-time" as
    specified in Section 5.6 of [RFC3339]; see also "date-and-time" in
    Section 3 of [RFC6991]).  The UTC Time Zone is required by
    Section 6.1 of [RFC2330].  The end of the measurement interval MAY
    be controlled by the measured connection, where the second pair of
    FIN and ACK packets exchanged between host A and host B
    effectively ends the interval.
 RTDelay_Passive_IP-TCP-HS:  The round-trip delay of the handshake is
    a Singleton.
 RTLoss:  The count of lost packets.
 For each <statistic>, Singleton, or Loss Count, one of the following
 subsections applies.

10.4.2.1. Mean

 The mean SHALL be calculated using the conditional distribution of
 all packets with a finite value of round-trip delay (undefined delays
 are excluded) -- a single value, as follows:
 See Section 4.1 of [RFC3393] for details on the conditional
 distribution to exclude undefined values of delay, and see Section 5
 of [RFC6703] for background on this analysis choice.
 See Section 4.2.2 of [RFC6049] for details on calculating this
 statistic; see also Section 4.2.3 of [RFC6049].
 Mean:  The time value of the result is expressed in units of seconds,
    as a positive value of type decimal64 with fraction digits = 9
    (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) with a resolution of
    0.000000001 seconds (1.0 ns), and with lossless conversion to/from
    the 64-bit NTP timestamp as per Section 6 of [RFC5905].

10.4.2.2. Min

 The minimum SHALL be calculated using the conditional distribution of
 all packets with a finite value of round-trip delay (undefined delays
 are excluded) -- a single value, as follows:
 See Section 4.1 of [RFC3393] for details on the conditional
 distribution to exclude undefined values of delay, and see Section 5
 of [RFC6703] for background on this analysis choice.
 See Section 4.3.2 of [RFC6049] for details on calculating this
 statistic; see also Section 4.3.3 of [RFC6049].
 Min:  The time value of the result is expressed in units of seconds,
    as a positive value of type decimal64 with fraction digits = 9
    (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) with a resolution of
    0.000000001 seconds (1.0 ns), and with lossless conversion to/from
    the 64-bit NTP timestamp as per Section 6 of [RFC5905].

10.4.2.3. Max

 The maximum SHALL be calculated using the conditional distribution of
 all packets with a finite value of round-trip delay (undefined delays
 are excluded) -- a single value, as follows:
 See Section 4.1 of [RFC3393] for details on the conditional
 distribution to exclude undefined values of delay, and see Section 5
 of [RFC6703] for background on this analysis choice.
 See Section 4.3.2 of [RFC6049] for a closely related method for
 calculating this statistic; see also Section 4.3.3 of [RFC6049].  The
 formula is as follows:
    Max = (FiniteDelay[j])
    such that for some index, j, where 1 <= j <= N
    FiniteDelay[j] >= FiniteDelay[n] for all n
 Max:  The time value of the result is expressed in units of seconds,
    as a positive value of type decimal64 with fraction digits = 9
    (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) with a resolution of
    0.000000001 seconds (1.0 ns), and with lossless conversion to/from
    the 64-bit NTP timestamp as per Section 6 of [RFC5905].

10.4.2.4. Singleton

 The singleton SHALL be calculated using the successful RTD_fwd (on
 the SYN to SYN-ACK pair) and RTD_rev (on the SYN-ACK to ACK pair),
 see Section 10.3.1.
 The singleton time value of the result is expressed in units of
 seconds, as a positive value of type decimal64 with fraction digits =
 9 (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) with resolution of 0.000000001
 seconds (1.0 ns), and with lossless conversion to/from the 64-bit NTP
 timestamp as per Section 6 of [RFC5905].

10.4.2.5. Loss Counts

 RTLoss_Passive_IP-TCP_RFC8912sec10_Packet_Count: The count of lost
 packets.
 Observation of an out-of-order segment or duplicate segment infers a
 loss count, after application of the Definitions of Section 10.2.1
 and the Loss Measurement Filtering Heuristics of Section 10.3.1.  The
 composition of round-trip loss counts will be conducted over a
 measurement interval that is synonymous with a single TCP connection.
 For a measurement interval (corresponding to a single TCP connection)
 T0 to Tf, the REQUIRED Composition Function for the two single-
 direction counts of inferred loss is:
 RTLoss = RTL_fwd + RTL_rev
 Packet count:  The numeric value of the result is expressed in units
    of lost packets, as a positive value of type uint64 (represents
    integer values between 0 and 18446744073709551615, inclusively
    (see Section 9.2 of [RFC6020]).

10.4.3. Metric Units

 The <statistic> of round-trip delay is expressed in seconds, where
 <statistic> is one of:
  • Mean
  • Min
  • Max
 The round-trip delay of the TCP handshake singleton is expressed in
 seconds.
 The round-trip loss count is expressed as a number of packets.

10.4.4. Calibration

 Passive Measurements at an OP could be calibrated against an Active
 Measurement (with loss emulation) at host A or host B, where the
 Active Measurement represents the ground truth.

10.5. Administrative Items

10.5.1. Status

 Current

10.5.2. Requester

 RFC 8912

10.5.3. Revision

 1.0

10.5.4. Revision Date

 2021-11-17

10.6. Comments and Remarks

 None

11. Security Considerations

 These Registry Entries represent no known implications for Internet
 security.  With the exception of [RFC1035], each RFC referenced above
 contains a Security Considerations section.  Further, the Large-scale
 Measurement of Broadband Performance (LMAP) framework [RFC7594]
 provides both security and privacy considerations for measurements.
 There are potential privacy considerations for observed traffic,
 particularly for Passive Metrics as discussed in Section 10.  An
 attacker that knows that its TCP connection is being measured can
 modify its behavior to skew the measurement results.

12. IANA Considerations

 IANA has populated the Performance Metrics Registry defined in
 [RFC8911] with the values defined in Sections 4 through 10.
 See the IANA Considerations section of [RFC8911] for additional
 considerations.

13. References

13.1. Normative References

 [RFC1035]  Mockapetris, P., "Domain names - implementation and
            specification", STD 13, RFC 1035, DOI 10.17487/RFC1035,
            November 1987, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc1035>.
 [RFC2119]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
            Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, March 1997,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2119>.
 [RFC2330]  Paxson, V., Almes, G., Mahdavi, J., and M. Mathis,
            "Framework for IP Performance Metrics", RFC 2330,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC2330, May 1998,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2330>.
 [RFC2681]  Almes, G., Kalidindi, S., and M. Zekauskas, "A Round-trip
            Delay Metric for IPPM", RFC 2681, DOI 10.17487/RFC2681,
            September 1999, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2681>.
 [RFC3339]  Klyne, G. and C. Newman, "Date and Time on the Internet:
            Timestamps", RFC 3339, DOI 10.17487/RFC3339, July 2002,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3339>.
 [RFC3393]  Demichelis, C. and P. Chimento, "IP Packet Delay Variation
            Metric for IP Performance Metrics (IPPM)", RFC 3393,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC3393, November 2002,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3393>.
 [RFC3432]  Raisanen, V., Grotefeld, G., and A. Morton, "Network
            performance measurement with periodic streams", RFC 3432,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC3432, November 2002,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3432>.
 [RFC4737]  Morton, A., Ciavattone, L., Ramachandran, G., Shalunov,
            S., and J. Perser, "Packet Reordering Metrics", RFC 4737,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC4737, November 2006,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4737>.
 [RFC5357]  Hedayat, K., Krzanowski, R., Morton, A., Yum, K., and J.
            Babiarz, "A Two-Way Active Measurement Protocol (TWAMP)",
            RFC 5357, DOI 10.17487/RFC5357, October 2008,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5357>.
 [RFC5481]  Morton, A. and B. Claise, "Packet Delay Variation
            Applicability Statement", RFC 5481, DOI 10.17487/RFC5481,
            March 2009, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5481>.
 [RFC5560]  Uijterwaal, H., "A One-Way Packet Duplication Metric",
            RFC 5560, DOI 10.17487/RFC5560, May 2009,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5560>.
 [RFC5905]  Mills, D., Martin, J., Ed., Burbank, J., and W. Kasch,
            "Network Time Protocol Version 4: Protocol and Algorithms
            Specification", RFC 5905, DOI 10.17487/RFC5905, June 2010,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5905>.
 [RFC6020]  Bjorklund, M., Ed., "YANG - A Data Modeling Language for
            the Network Configuration Protocol (NETCONF)", RFC 6020,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC6020, October 2010,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6020>.
 [RFC6049]  Morton, A. and E. Stephan, "Spatial Composition of
            Metrics", RFC 6049, DOI 10.17487/RFC6049, January 2011,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6049>.
 [RFC6673]  Morton, A., "Round-Trip Packet Loss Metrics", RFC 6673,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC6673, August 2012,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6673>.
 [RFC6991]  Schoenwaelder, J., Ed., "Common YANG Data Types",
            RFC 6991, DOI 10.17487/RFC6991, July 2013,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6991>.
 [RFC7011]  Claise, B., Ed., Trammell, B., Ed., and P. Aitken,
            "Specification of the IP Flow Information Export (IPFIX)
            Protocol for the Exchange of Flow Information", STD 77,
            RFC 7011, DOI 10.17487/RFC7011, September 2013,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7011>.
 [RFC7323]  Borman, D., Braden, B., Jacobson, V., and R.
            Scheffenegger, Ed., "TCP Extensions for High Performance",
            RFC 7323, DOI 10.17487/RFC7323, September 2014,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7323>.
 [RFC7679]  Almes, G., Kalidindi, S., Zekauskas, M., and A. Morton,
            Ed., "A One-Way Delay Metric for IP Performance Metrics
            (IPPM)", STD 81, RFC 7679, DOI 10.17487/RFC7679, January
            2016, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7679>.
 [RFC7680]  Almes, G., Kalidindi, S., Zekauskas, M., and A. Morton,
            Ed., "A One-Way Loss Metric for IP Performance Metrics
            (IPPM)", STD 82, RFC 7680, DOI 10.17487/RFC7680, January
            2016, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7680>.
 [RFC8174]  Leiba, B., "Ambiguity of Uppercase vs Lowercase in RFC
            2119 Key Words", BCP 14, RFC 8174, DOI 10.17487/RFC8174,
            May 2017, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8174>.
 [RFC8911]  Bagnulo, M., Claise, B., Eardley, P., Morton, A., and A.
            Akhter, "Registry for Performance Metrics", RFC 8911,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC8911, November 2021,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8911>.
 [Strowes]  Strowes, S., "Passively Measuring TCP Round-Trip Times",
            Communications of the ACM, Vol. 56 No. 10, Pages 57-64,
            DOI 10.1145/2507771.2507781, October 2013,
            <https://dl.acm.org/doi/10.1145/2507771.2507781>.
 [Trammell-14]
            Trammell, B., Gugelmann, D., and N. Brownlee, "Inline Data
            Integrity Signals for Passive Measurement", In: Dainotti
            A., Mahanti A., Uhlig S. (eds) Traffic Monitoring and
            Analysis.  TMA 2014.  Lecture Notes in Computer Science,
            vol 8406.  Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg,
            DOI 10.1007/978-3-642-54999-1_2, March 2014,
            <https://link.springer.com/
            chapter/10.1007/978-3-642-54999-1_2>.

13.2. Informative References

 [RFC1242]  Bradner, S., "Benchmarking Terminology for Network
            Interconnection Devices", RFC 1242, DOI 10.17487/RFC1242,
            July 1991, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc1242>.
 [RFC6390]  Clark, A. and B. Claise, "Guidelines for Considering New
            Performance Metric Development", BCP 170, RFC 6390,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC6390, October 2011,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6390>.
 [RFC6703]  Morton, A., Ramachandran, G., and G. Maguluri, "Reporting
            IP Network Performance Metrics: Different Points of View",
            RFC 6703, DOI 10.17487/RFC6703, August 2012,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6703>.
 [RFC7594]  Eardley, P., Morton, A., Bagnulo, M., Burbridge, T.,
            Aitken, P., and A. Akhter, "A Framework for Large-Scale
            Measurement of Broadband Performance (LMAP)", RFC 7594,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC7594, September 2015,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7594>.
 [RFC8126]  Cotton, M., Leiba, B., and T. Narten, "Guidelines for
            Writing an IANA Considerations Section in RFCs", BCP 26,
            RFC 8126, DOI 10.17487/RFC8126, June 2017,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8126>.

Acknowledgments

 The authors thank Brian Trammell for suggesting the term "Runtime
 Parameters", which led to the distinction between Runtime and Fixed
 Parameters implemented in this memo, for identifying the IP Flow
 Information Export (IPFIX) metric with Flow Key as an example, for
 suggesting the Passive TCP RTD Metric and supporting references, and
 for many other productive suggestions.  Thanks to Peter Koch, who
 provided several useful suggestions for disambiguating successive DNS
 queries in the DNS Response time metric.
 The authors also acknowledge the constructive reviews and helpful
 suggestions from Barbara Stark, Juergen Schoenwaelder, Tim Carey,
 Yaakov Stein, and participants in the LMAP Working Group.  Thanks to
 Michelle Cotton for her early IANA reviews, and to Amanda Baber for
 answering questions related to the presentation of the Registry and
 accessibility of the complete template via URL.

Authors' Addresses

 Al Morton
 AT&T Labs
 200 Laurel Avenue South
 Middletown, NJ 07748
 United States of America
 Phone: +1 732 420 1571
 Email: acmorton@att.com
 Marcelo Bagnulo
 Universidad Carlos III de Madrid
 Av. Universidad 30
 28911 Leganes Madrid
 Spain
 Phone: 34 91 6249500
 Email: marcelo@it.uc3m.es
 URI:   http://www.it.uc3m.es
 Philip Eardley
 BT
 Adastral Park, Martlesham Heath
 Ipswich
 United Kingdom
 Email: philip.eardley@bt.com
 Kevin D'Souza
 AT&T Labs
 200 Laurel Avenue South
 Middletown, NJ 07748
 United States of America
 Phone: +1 732 420 2514
 Email: kld@att.com
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