GENWiki

Premier IT Outsourcing and Support Services within the UK

User Tools

Site Tools


rfc:rfc8034

Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) G. White Request for Comments: 8034 CableLabs Category: Informational R. Pan ISSN: 2070-1721 Cisco Systems

                                                         February 2017
               Active Queue Management (AQM) Based on
        Proportional Integral Controller Enhanced (PIE) for

Data-Over-Cable Service Interface Specifications (DOCSIS) Cable Modems

Abstract

 Cable modems based on Data-Over-Cable Service Interface
 Specifications (DOCSIS) provide broadband Internet access to over one
 hundred million users worldwide.  In some cases, the cable modem
 connection is the bottleneck (lowest speed) link between the customer
 and the Internet.  As a result, the impact of buffering and
 bufferbloat in the cable modem can have a significant effect on user
 experience.  The CableLabs DOCSIS 3.1 specification introduces
 requirements for cable modems to support an Active Queue Management
 (AQM) algorithm that is intended to alleviate the impact that
 buffering has on latency-sensitive traffic, while preserving bulk
 throughput performance.  In addition, the CableLabs DOCSIS 3.0
 specifications have also been amended to contain similar
 requirements.  This document describes the requirements on AQM that
 apply to DOCSIS equipment, including a description of the
 "DOCSIS-PIE" algorithm that is required on DOCSIS 3.1 cable modems.

Status of This Memo

 This document is not an Internet Standards Track specification; it is
 published for informational purposes.
 This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force
 (IETF).  It represents the consensus of the IETF community.  It has
 received public review and has been approved for publication by the
 Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG).  Not all documents
 approved by the IESG are a candidate for any level of Internet
 Standard; see Section 2 of RFC 7841.
 Information about the current status of this document, any errata,
 and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at
 http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8034.

White & Pan Informational [Page 1] RFC 8034 PIE-Based AQM for DOCSIS Cable Modems February 2017

Copyright Notice

 Copyright (c) 2017 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
 (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of
 publication of this document.  Please review these documents
 carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect
 to this document.  Code Components extracted from this document must
 include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of
 the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as
 described in the Simplified BSD License.

Table of Contents

 1.  Introduction  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   3
 2.  Overview of DOCSIS AQM Requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . .   3
 3.  The DOCSIS MAC Layer and Service Flows  . . . . . . . . . . .   4
 4.  DOCSIS-PIE vs. PIE  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   5
   4.1.  Latency Target  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   5
   4.2.  Departure Rate Estimation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   6
   4.3.  Enhanced Burst Protection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   7
   4.4.  Expanded Auto-Tuning Range  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   7
   4.5.  Trigger for Exponential Decay . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   8
   4.6.  Drop Probability Scaling  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   8
   4.7.  Support for Explicit Congestion Notification  . . . . . .   8
 5.  Implementation Guidance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   9
 6.  Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   9
 7.  References  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  10
   7.1.  Normative References  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  10
   7.2.  Informative References  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  10
 Appendix A.  DOCSIS-PIE Algorithm Definition  . . . . . . . . . .  11
   A.1.  DOCSIS-PIE AQM Constants and Variables  . . . . . . . . .  11
     A.1.1.  Configuration Parameters  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  11
     A.1.2.  Constant Values . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  11
     A.1.3.  Variables . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  12
     A.1.4.  Public/System Functions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  12
   A.2.  DOCSIS-PIE AQM Control Path . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  13
   A.3.  DOCSIS-PIE AQM Data Path  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  15
 Authors' Addresses  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  17

White & Pan Informational [Page 2] RFC 8034 PIE-Based AQM for DOCSIS Cable Modems February 2017

1. Introduction

 A recent resurgence of interest in active queue management, arising
 from a recognition of the inadequacies of drop-tail queuing in the
 presence of loss-based congestion control algorithms, has resulted in
 the development of new algorithms that appear to provide very good
 congestion feedback to current TCP algorithms, while also having
 operational simplicity and low complexity.  One of these algorithms
 has been selected as a requirement for cable modems built according
 to the DOCSIS 3.1 specification [DOCSIS_3.1].  The Data-Over-Cable
 Service Interface Specifications (DOCSIS) define the broadband
 technology deployed worldwide for Ethernet and IP service over hybrid
 fiber-coaxial cable systems.  The most recent revision of the DOCSIS
 technology, version 3.1, was originally published in October 2013 and
 provides support for up to 10 Gbps downstream (toward the customer)
 and 1 Gbps upstream (from the customer) capacity over existing cable
 networks.  Previous versions of the DOCSIS technology did not contain
 requirements for AQM.  This document outlines the high-level AQM
 requirements for DOCSIS systems, discusses some of the salient
 features of the DOCSIS Media Access Control (MAC) layer, and
 describes the DOCSIS-PIE algorithm -- largely by comparing it to its
 progenitor, the PIE algorithm [RFC8033].

2. Overview of DOCSIS AQM Requirements

 CableLabs' DOCSIS 3.1 specification [DOCSIS_3.1] mandates that cable
 modems implement a specific variant of the Proportional Integral
 controller Enhanced (PIE) AQM algorithm [RFC8033].  This specific
 variant is provided for reference in Appendix A, and simulation
 results comparing it to drop-tail queuing and other AQM options are
 given in [CommMag] and [DOCSIS-AQM].  In addition, CableLabs' DOCSIS
 3.0 specification [DOCSIS_3.0] has been amended to recommend that
 cable modems implement the same algorithm.  Both specifications allow
 that cable modems can optionally implement additional algorithms that
 can then be selected for use by the operator via the modem's
 configuration file.
 These requirements on the cable modem apply to upstream transmissions
 (i.e., from the customer to the Internet).
 Both specifications also include requirements (mandatory in DOCSIS
 3.1 and recommended in DOCSIS 3.0) that the Cable Modem Termination
 System (CMTS) implement AQM for downstream traffic; however, no
 specific algorithm is defined for downstream use.

White & Pan Informational [Page 3] RFC 8034 PIE-Based AQM for DOCSIS Cable Modems February 2017

3. The DOCSIS MAC Layer and Service Flows

 The DOCSIS Media Access Control (sub-)layer provides tools for
 configuring differentiated Quality of Service (QoS) for different
 applications by the use of Packet Classifiers and Service Flows.
 Each Service Flow has an associated QoS parameter set that defines
 the treatment of the packets that traverse the Service Flow.  These
 parameters include, for example, Minimum Reserved Traffic Rate,
 Maximum Sustained Traffic Rate, Peak Traffic Rate, Maximum Traffic
 Burst, and Traffic Priority.  Each upstream Service Flow corresponds
 to a queue in the cable modem, and each downstream Service Flow
 corresponds to a queue in the CMTS.  The DOCSIS AQM requirements
 mandate that the CM and CMTS implement the AQM algorithm (and allow
 it to be disabled, if needed) on each Service Flow queue
 independently.
 Packet Classifiers can match packets based upon several fields in the
 packet/frame headers including the Ethernet header, IP header, and
 TCP/UDP header.  Matched packets are then queued in the associated
 Service Flow queue.
 Each cable modem can be configured with multiple Packet Classifiers
 and Service Flows.  The maximum number of such entities that a cable
 modem supports is an implementation decision for the manufacturer,
 but modems typically support 16 or 32 upstream Service Flows and at
 least that many Packet Classifiers.  Similarly, the CMTS supports
 multiple downstream Service Flows and multiple Packet Classifiers per
 cable modem.
 It is typical that upstream and downstream Service Flows used for
 broadband Internet access are configured with a Maximum Sustained
 Traffic Rate.  This QoS parameter rate-shapes the traffic onto the
 DOCSIS link and is the main parameter that defines the service
 offering.  Additionally, it is common that upstream and downstream
 Service Flows are configured with a Maximum Traffic Burst and a Peak
 Traffic Rate.  These parameters allow the service to burst at a
 higher (sometimes significantly higher) rate than is defined in the
 Maximum Sustained Traffic Rate for the amount of bytes configured in
 Maximum Traffic Burst, as long as the long-term average data rate
 remains at or below the Maximum Sustained Traffic Rate.

White & Pan Informational [Page 4] RFC 8034 PIE-Based AQM for DOCSIS Cable Modems February 2017

 Mathematically, what is enforced is that the traffic placed on the
 DOCSIS link in the time interval (t1,t2) complies with the following
 rate-shaping equations:
    TxBytes(t1,t2) <= (t2-t1)*R/8 + B
    TxBytes(t1,t2) <= (t2-t1)*P/8 + 1522
 for all values t2>t1, where:
    R = Maximum Sustained Traffic Rate (bps)
    P = Peak Traffic Rate (bps)
    B = Maximum Traffic Burst (bytes)
 The result of this configuration is that the link rate available to
 the Service Flow varies based on the pattern of load.  If the load
 that the Service Flow places on the link is less than the Maximum
 Sustained Traffic Rate, the Service Flow "earns" credit that it can
 then use (should the load increase) to burst at the Peak Traffic
 Rate.  This dynamic is important since these rate changes
 (particularly the decrease in data rate once the traffic burst credit
 is exhausted) can induce a step increase in buffering latency.

4. DOCSIS-PIE vs. PIE

 There are a number of differences between the version of the PIE
 algorithm that is mandated for cable modems in the DOCSIS
 specifications and the version described in [RFC8033].  These
 differences are described in the following subsections.

4.1. Latency Target

 The latency target (a.k.a. delay reference) is a key parameter that
 affects, among other things, the trade-off in performance between
 latency-sensitive applications and bulk TCP applications.  Via
 simulation studies, a value of 10 ms was identified as providing a
 good balance of performance.  However, it is recognized that there
 may be service offerings for which this value doesn't provide the
 best performance balance.  As a result, this is provided as a
 configuration parameter that the operator can set independently on
 each upstream Service Flow.  If not explicitly set by the operator,
 the modem will use 10 ms as the default value.

White & Pan Informational [Page 5] RFC 8034 PIE-Based AQM for DOCSIS Cable Modems February 2017

4.2. Departure Rate Estimation

 The PIE algorithm utilizes a departure rate estimator to track
 fluctuations in the egress rate for the queue and to generate a
 smoothed estimate of this rate for use in the drop probability
 calculation.  This estimator may be well suited to many link
 technologies but is not ideal for DOCSIS upstream links for a number
 of reasons.
 First, the bursty nature of the upstream transmissions, in which the
 queue drains at line rate (up to ~100 Mbps for DOCSIS 3.0 and ~1 Gbps
 for DOCSIS 3.1) and then is blocked until the next transmit
 opportunity, results in the potential for inaccuracy in measurement,
 given that the PIE departure rate estimator starts each measurement
 during a transmission burst and ends each measurement during a
 (possibly different) transmission burst.  For example, in the case
 where the start and end of measurement occur within a single burst,
 the PIE estimator will calculate the egress rate to be equal to the
 line rate, rather than the average rate available to the modem.
 Second, the latency introduced by the DOCSIS request-grant mechanism
 can result in some further inaccuracy.  In typical conditions, the
 request-grant mechanism can add between ~4 ms and ~8 ms of latency to
 the forwarding of upstream traffic.  Within that range, the amount of
 additional latency that affects any individual data burst is
 effectively random, being influenced by the arrival time of the burst
 relative to the next request transmit opportunity, among other
 factors.
 Third, in the significant majority of cases, the departure rate,
 while variable, is controlled by the modem itself via the pair of
 token bucket rate-shaping equations described in Section 3.
 Together, these two equations enforce a Maximum Sustained Traffic
 Rate, a Peak Traffic Rate, and a Maximum Traffic Burst size for the
 modem's requested bandwidth.  The implication of this is that the
 modem, in the significant majority of cases, will know precisely what
 the departure rate will be and can predict exactly when transitions
 between the Peak Traffic Rate and Maximum Sustained Traffic Rate will
 occur.  Compare this to the PIE estimator, which would be simply
 reacting to (and smoothing its estimate of) those rate transitions
 after the fact.
 Finally, since the modem is already implementing the dual-token
 bucket traffic shaper, it contains enough internal state to calculate
 predicted queuing delay with a minimum of computations.  Furthermore,
 these computations only need to be run at every drop probability
 update interval, as opposed to the PIE estimator, which runs a
 similar number of computations on each packet dequeue event.

White & Pan Informational [Page 6] RFC 8034 PIE-Based AQM for DOCSIS Cable Modems February 2017

 For these reasons, the DOCSIS-PIE algorithm utilizes the
 configuration and state of the dual-token bucket traffic shaper to
 translate queue depth into predicted queuing delay, rather than
 implementing the departure rate estimator defined in PIE.

4.3. Enhanced Burst Protection

 The PIE algorithm [RFC8033] has two states: INACTIVE and ACTIVE.
 During the INACTIVE state, AQM packet drops are suppressed.  The
 algorithm transitions to the ACTIVE state when the queue exceeds 1/3
 of the buffer size.  Upon transition to the ACTIVE state, PIE
 includes a burst protection feature in which the AQM packet drops are
 suppressed for the first 150 ms.  Since DOCSIS-PIE is predominantly
 deployed on consumer broadband connections, a more sophisticated
 burst protection was developed to provide better performance in the
 presence of a single TCP session.
 Where the PIE algorithm has two states, DOCSIS-PIE has three.  The
 INACTIVE and ACTIVE states in DOCSIS-PIE are identical to those
 states in PIE.  The QUIESCENT state is a transitional state between
 INACTIVE and ACTIVE.  The DOCSIS-PIE algorithm transitions from
 INACTIVE to QUIESCENT when the queue exceeds 1/3 of the buffer size.
 In the QUIESCENT state, packet drops are immediately enabled, and
 upon the first packet drop, the algorithm transitions to the ACTIVE
 state (where drop probability is reset to zero for the 150 ms
 duration of the burst protection as in PIE).  From the ACTIVE state,
 the algorithm transitions to QUIESCENT if the drop probability has
 decayed to zero and the queuing latency has been less than half of
 the LATENCY_TARGET for two update intervals.  The algorithm then
 fully resets to the INACTIVE state if this "quiet" condition exists
 for the duration of the BURST_RESET_TIMEOUT (1 second).  One end
 result of the addition of the QUIESCENT state is that a single packet
 drop can occur relatively early on during an initial burst, whereas
 all drops would be suppressed for at least 150 ms of the burst
 duration in PIE.  The other end result is that if traffic stops and
 then resumes within 1 second, DOCSIS-PIE can directly drop a single
 packet and then re-enter burst protection, whereas PIE would require
 that the buffer exceed 1/3 full.

4.4. Expanded Auto-Tuning Range

 The PIE algorithm scales the Proportional and Integral coefficients
 based on the current drop probability.  The DOCSIS-PIE algorithm
 extends this scaling to cover values of drop probability greater than
 1, which can occur as a result of the drop probability scaling
 function described in Section 4.6.  As an example, if a flood of non-
 responsive 64-byte packets were to arrive at a rate that is twice the

White & Pan Informational [Page 7] RFC 8034 PIE-Based AQM for DOCSIS Cable Modems February 2017

 departure rate, the DOCSIS-PIE steady-state condition would be to
 drop 50% of these packets, which implies that drop probability would
 have the value of 8.00.

4.5. Trigger for Exponential Decay

 The PIE algorithm includes a mechanism by which the drop probability
 is allowed to decay exponentially (rather than linearly) when it is
 detected that the buffer is empty.  In the DOCSIS case, recently
 arrived packets may reside in the buffer due to the request-grant
 latency even if the link is effectively idle.  As a result, the
 buffer may not be identically empty in the situations for which the
 exponential decay is intended.  To compensate for this, we trigger
 exponential decay when the buffer occupancy is less than 5 ms * Peak
 Traffic Rate.

4.6. Drop Probability Scaling

 The DOCSIS-PIE algorithm scales the calculated drop probability based
 on the ratio of the packet size to a constant value of 1024 bytes
 (representing approximate average packet size).  While [RFC7567] in
 general recommends against this type of scaling, we note that DOCSIS-
 PIE is expected to be used predominantly to manage upstream queues in
 residential broadband deployments, where we believe the benefits
 outweigh the disadvantages.  As a safeguard to prevent a flood of
 small packets from starving flows that use larger packets, DOCSIS-PIE
 limits the scaled probability to a defined maximum value of 0.85.

4.7. Support for Explicit Congestion Notification

 DOCSIS-PIE does not include support for Explicit Congestion
 Notification (ECN).  Cable modems are essentially IEEE 802.1d
 Ethernet bridges and so are not designed to modify IP header fields.
 Additionally, the packet-processing pipeline in a cable modem is
 commonly implemented in hardware.  As a result, introducing support
 for ECN would engender a significant redesign of cable modem data
 path hardware, and would be difficult or impossible to modify in the
 future.  At the time of the development of DOCSIS-PIE, which
 coincided with the development of modem chip designs, the benefits of
 ECN marking relative to packet drop were considered to be relatively
 minor; there was considerable discussion about differential treatment
 of ECN-capable packets in the AQM drop/mark decision, and there were
 some initial suggestions that a new ECN approach was needed.  Due to
 this uncertainty, we chose not to include support for ECN.

White & Pan Informational [Page 8] RFC 8034 PIE-Based AQM for DOCSIS Cable Modems February 2017

5. Implementation Guidance

 The AQM space is an evolving one, and it is expected that continued
 research in this field may result in improved algorithms in the
 future.
 As part of defining the DOCSIS-PIE algorithm, we split the pseudocode
 definition into two components: a "data path" component and a
 "control path" component.  The control path component contains the
 packet drop probability update functionality, whereas the data path
 component contains the per-packet operations, including the drop
 decision logic.
 It is understood that some aspects of the cable modem implementation
 may be done in hardware, particularly functions that handle packet
 processing.
 While the DOCSIS specifications don't mandate the internal
 implementation details of the cable modem, modem implementers are
 strongly advised against implementing the control path functionality
 in hardware.  The intent of this advice is to retain the possibility
 that future improvements in AQM algorithms can be accommodated via
 software updates to deployed devices.

6. Security Considerations

 This document describes an active queue management algorithm based on
 [RFC8033] for implementation in DOCSIS cable modem devices.  This
 algorithm introduces no specific security exposures.

White & Pan Informational [Page 9] RFC 8034 PIE-Based AQM for DOCSIS Cable Modems February 2017

7. References

7.1. Normative References

 [RFC8033]  Pan, R., Natarajan, P., Baker, F., and G. White,
            "Proportional Integral Controller Enhanced (PIE): A
            Lightweight Control Scheme to Address the Bufferbloat
            Problem", RFC 8033, DOI 10.17487/RFC8033, February 2017,
            <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8033>.

7.2. Informative References

 [CommMag]  White, G., "Active queue management in DOCSIS 3.1
            networks", IEEE Communications Magazine vol. 53, no. 3,
            pp. 126-132, DOI 10.1109/MCOM.2015.7060493, March 2015.
 [DOCSIS-AQM]
            White, G., "Active Queue Management in DOCSIS 3.x Cable
            Modems", May 2014, <http://www.cablelabs.com/
            wp-content/uploads/2014/06/DOCSIS-AQM_May2014.pdf>.
 [DOCSIS_3.0]
            CableLabs, "MAC and Upper Layer Protocols Interface
            Specification", DOCSIS 3.0, January 2017,
            <https://apps.cablelabs.com/specification/
            CM-SP-MULPIv3.0>.
 [DOCSIS_3.1]
            CableLabs, "MAC and Upper Layer Protocols Interface
            Specification", DOCSIS 3.1, January 2017,
            <https://apps.cablelabs.com/specification/
            CM-SP-MULPIv3.1>.
 [RFC7567]  Baker, F., Ed. and G. Fairhurst, Ed., "IETF
            Recommendations Regarding Active Queue Management",
            BCP 197, RFC 7567, DOI 10.17487/RFC7567, July 2015,
            <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7567>.

White & Pan Informational [Page 10] RFC 8034 PIE-Based AQM for DOCSIS Cable Modems February 2017

Appendix A. DOCSIS-PIE Algorithm Definition

 PIE defines two functions organized here into two design blocks:
 1.  Control path block -- a periodically running algorithm that
     calculates a drop probability based on the estimated queuing
     latency and queuing latency trend.
 2.  Data path block, a function that occurs on each packet enqueue
     that implements a per-packet drop decision based on the drop
     probability.
 It is desirable to have the ability to update the control path block
 based on operational experience with PIE deployments.

A.1. DOCSIS-PIE AQM Constants and Variables

A.1.1. Configuration Parameters

 o  LATENCY_TARGET.  AQM Latency Target for this Service Flow
 o  PEAK_RATE.  Service Flow configured Peak Traffic Rate, expressed
    in bytes/second
 o  MSR.  Service Flow configured Maximum Sustained Traffic Rate,
    expressed in bytes/second
 o  BUFFER_SIZE.  The size (in bytes) of the buffer for this Service
    Flow

A.1.2. Constant Values

 o  A = 0.25, B = 2.5.  Weights in the drop probability calculation
 o  INTERVAL = 16 ms.  Update interval for drop probability
 o  BURST_RESET_TIMEOUT = 1 second
 o  MAX_BURST = 142 ms (150 ms - 8 ms (update error))
 o  MEAN_PKTSIZE = 1024 bytes
 o  MIN_PKTSIZE = 64 bytes
 o  PROB_LOW = 0.85
 o  PROB_HIGH = 8.5

White & Pan Informational [Page 11] RFC 8034 PIE-Based AQM for DOCSIS Cable Modems February 2017

 o  LATENCY_LOW = 5 ms
 o  LATENCY_HIGH = 200 ms

A.1.3. Variables

 o  drop_prob_. The current packet drop probability
 o  accu_prob_. Accumulated drop probability since last drop
 o  qdelay_old_. The previous queue delay estimate
 o  burst_allowance_. Countdown for burst protection, initialize to 0
 o  burst_reset_. Counter to reset burst
 o  aqm_state_. AQM activity state encoding 3 states:
       INACTIVE - Queue staying below 1/3 full, suppress AQM drops
       QUIESCENT - Transition state
       ACTIVE - Normal AQM drops (after burst protection period)
 o  queue_. Holds the pending packets

A.1.4. Public/System Functions

 o  drop(packet).  Drops/discards a packet
 o  random().  Returns a uniform random value in the range 0 ~ 1
 o  queue_.is_full().  Returns true if queue_ is full
 o  queue_.byte_length().  Returns current queue_ length in bytes,
    including all MAC PDU bytes without DOCSIS MAC overhead
 o  queue_.enque(packet).  Adds packet to tail of queue_
 o  msrtokens().  Returns current token credits (in bytes) from the
    Maximum Sustained Traffic Rate token bucket
 o  packet.size().  Returns size of packet

White & Pan Informational [Page 12] RFC 8034 PIE-Based AQM for DOCSIS Cable Modems February 2017

A.2. DOCSIS-PIE AQM Control Path

 The DOCSIS-PIE control path performs the following:
 o  Calls control_path_init() at Service Flow creation
 o  Calls calculate_drop_prob() at a regular INTERVAL (16 ms)
 ================
 //  Initialization function
 control_path_init() {
     drop_prob_ = 0;
     qdelay_old_ = 0;
     burst_reset_ = 0;
     aqm_state_ = INACTIVE;
 }
 //  Background update, occurs every INTERVAL
 calculate_drop_prob() {
     if (queue_.byte_length() <= msrtokens()) {
         qdelay = queue_.byte_length() / PEAK_RATE;
     } else {
         qdelay = ((queue_.byte_length() - msrtokens()) / MSR \
                   +  msrtokens() / PEAK_RATE);
     }
     if (burst_allowance_ > 0) {
         drop_prob_ = 0;
         burst_allowance_ = max(0, burst_allowance_ - INTERVAL);
     } else {
         p = A * (qdelay - LATENCY_TARGET) + \
             B * (qdelay - qdelay_old_);
         // Since A=0.25 & B=2.5, can be implemented
         // with shift and add
         if (drop_prob_ < 0.000001) {
             p /= 2048;
         } else if (drop_prob_ < 0.00001) {
             p /= 512;
         } else if (drop_prob_ < 0.0001) {
             p /= 128;
         } else if (drop_prob_ < 0.001) {
             p /= 32;
         } else if (drop_prob_ < 0.01) {
             p /= 8;

White & Pan Informational [Page 13] RFC 8034 PIE-Based AQM for DOCSIS Cable Modems February 2017

         } else if (drop_prob_ < 0.1) {
             p /= 2;
         } else if (drop_prob_ < 1) {
             p /= 0.5;
         } else if (drop_prob_ < 10) {
             p /= 0.125;
         } else {
             p /= 0.03125;
         }
         if ((drop_prob_ >= 0.1) && (p > 0.02)) {
             p = 0.02;
         }
         drop_prob_ += p;
         /* some special cases */
         if (qdelay < LATENCY_LOW && qdelay_old_ < LATENCY_LOW) {
             drop_prob_ *= 0.98;    // exponential decay
         } else if (qdelay > LATENCY_HIGH) {
             drop_prob_ += 0.02;   // ramp up quickly
         }
         drop_prob_ = max(0, drop_prob_);
         drop_prob_ = min(drop_prob_, \
                      PROB_LOW * MEAN_PKTSIZE/MIN_PKTSIZE);
     }
     // Check if all is quiet
     quiet = (qdelay < 0.5 * LATENCY_TARGET)
             && (qdelay_old_ < 0.5 * LATENCY_TARGET)
             && (drop_prob_ == 0)
             && (burst_allowance_ == 0);
     // Update AQM state based on quiet or !quiet
     if ((aqm_state_ == ACTIVE) && quiet) {
         aqm_state_ = QUIESCENT;
         burst_reset_ = 0;
     } else if (aqm_state_ == QUIESCENT) {
         if (quiet) {
             burst_reset_ += INTERVAL ;
             if (burst_reset_ > BURST_RESET_TIMEOUT) {
                 burst_reset_ = 0;
                 aqm_state_ = INACTIVE;
             }
         } else {
             burst_reset_ = 0;
         }
     }

White & Pan Informational [Page 14] RFC 8034 PIE-Based AQM for DOCSIS Cable Modems February 2017

     qdelay_old_ = qdelay;
 }

A.3. DOCSIS-PIE AQM Data Path

 The DOCSIS-PIE data path performs the following:
 o  Calls enque() in response to an incoming packet from the CMCI
 ================
 enque(packet) {
     if (queue_.is_full()) {
         drop(packet);
         accu_prob_ = 0;
     } else if (drop_early(packet, queue_.byte_length())) {
         drop(packet);
     } else {
         queue_.enque(packet);
     }
 }
 ////////////////
 drop_early(packet, queue_length) {
     // if still in burst protection, suppress AQM drops
     if (burst_allowance_ > 0) {
         return FALSE;
     }
     // if drop_prob_ goes to zero, clear accu_prob_
     if (drop_prob_ == 0) {
         accu_prob_ = 0;
     }
     if (aqm_state_ == INACTIVE) {
         if (queue_.byte_length() < BUFFER_SIZE/3) {
             // if queue is still small, stay in
             // INACTIVE state and suppress AQM drops
             return FALSE;
         } else {
             // otherwise transition to QUIESCENT state
             aqm_state_ = QUIESCENT;
         }
     }

White & Pan Informational [Page 15] RFC 8034 PIE-Based AQM for DOCSIS Cable Modems February 2017

     //The CM can quantize packet.size to 64, 128, 256, 512, 768,
     // 1024, 1280, 1536, 2048 in the calculation below
     p1 = drop_prob_ * packet.size() / MEAN_PKTSIZE;
     p1 = min(p1, PROB_LOW);
     accu_prob_ += p1;
     // Suppress AQM drops in certain situations
     if ( (qdelay_old_ < 0.5 * LATENCY_TARGET && drop_prob_ < 0.2)
           || (queue_.byte_length() <= 2 * MEAN_PKTSIZE) ) {
         return FALSE;
     }
     if (accu_prob_ < PROB_LOW) {  // avoid dropping too fast due
          return FALSE;            // to bad luck of coin tosses...
     } else if (accu_prob_ >= PROB_HIGH) { // ...and avoid dropping
         drop = TRUE;                      // too slowly
     } else {                        //Random drop
         double u = random();        // 0 ~ 1
         if (u > p1)
            return FALSE;
         else
             drop = TRUE;
     }
     // At this point, drop == TRUE, so packet will be dropped.
     // Reset accu_prob_
     accu_prob_ = 0;
     // If in QUIESCENT state, packet drop triggers
     // ACTIVE state and start of burst protection
     if (aqm_state_ == QUIESCENT) {
         aqm_state_ = ACTIVE;
         burst_allowance_ = MAX_BURST;
     }
     return TRUE;
 }

White & Pan Informational [Page 16] RFC 8034 PIE-Based AQM for DOCSIS Cable Modems February 2017

Authors' Addresses

 Greg White
 CableLabs
 858 Coal Creek Circle
 Louisville, CO  80027-9750
 United States of America
 Email: g.white@cablelabs.com
 Rong Pan
 Cisco Systems
 510 McCarthy Blvd
 Milpitas, CA  95134
 United States of America
 Email: ropan@cisco.com

White & Pan Informational [Page 17]

/data/webs/external/dokuwiki/data/pages/rfc/rfc8034.txt · Last modified: 2017/03/01 01:04 by 127.0.0.1

Donate Powered by PHP Valid HTML5 Valid CSS Driven by DokuWiki