Internet-Draft DualQ Coupled AQMs May 2022
De Schepper, et al. Expires 5 November 2022 [Page]
Workgroup:
Transport Area working group (tsvwg)
Internet-Draft:
draft-ietf-tsvwg-aqm-dualq-coupled-23
Published:
Intended Status:
Experimental
Expires:
Authors:
K. De Schepper
Nokia Bell Labs
B. Briscoe, Ed.
Independent
G. White
CableLabs

DualQ Coupled AQMs for Low Latency, Low Loss and Scalable Throughput (L4S)

Abstract

This specification defines a framework for coupling the Active Queue Management (AQM) algorithms in two queues intended for flows with different responses to congestion. This provides a way for the Internet to transition from the scaling problems of standard TCP Reno-friendly ('Classic') congestion controls to the family of 'Scalable' congestion controls. These are designed for consistently very Low queuing Latency, very Low congestion Loss and Scaling of per-flow throughput (L4S) by using Explicit Congestion Notification (ECN) in a modified way. Until the Coupled DualQ, these L4S senders could only be deployed where a clean-slate environment could be arranged, such as in private data centres. The coupling acts like a semi-permeable membrane: isolating the sub-millisecond average queuing delay and zero congestion loss of L4S from Classic latency and loss; but pooling the capacity between any combination of Scalable and Classic flows with roughly equivalent throughput per flow. The DualQ achieves this indirectly, without having to inspect transport layer flow identifiers and without compromising the performance of the Classic traffic, relative to a single queue. The DualQ design has low complexity and requires no configuration for the public Internet.

Status of This Memo

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

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This Internet-Draft will expire on 5 November 2022.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction

This document specifies a framework for DualQ Coupled AQMs, which is the network part of the L4S architecture [I-D.ietf-tsvwg-l4s-arch]. L4S enables both very low queuing latency (sub-millisecond on average) and high throughput at the same time, for ad hoc numbers of capacity-seeking applications all sharing the same capacity.

1.1. Outline of the Problem

Latency is becoming the critical performance factor for many (most?) applications on the public Internet, e.g. interactive Web, Web services, voice, conversational video, interactive video, interactive remote presence, instant messaging, online gaming, remote desktop, cloud-based applications, and video-assisted remote control of machinery and industrial processes. In the developed world, further increases in access network bit-rate offer diminishing returns, whereas latency is still a multi-faceted problem. In the last decade or so, much has been done to reduce propagation time by placing caches or servers closer to users. However, queuing remains a major intermittent component of latency.

Traditionally very low latency has only been available for a few selected low rate applications, that confine their sending rate within a specially carved-off portion of capacity, which is prioritized over other traffic, e.g. Diffserv EF [RFC3246]. Up to now it has not been possible to allow any number of low latency, high throughput applications to seek to fully utilize available capacity, because the capacity-seeking process itself causes too much queuing delay.

To reduce this queuing delay caused by the capacity seeking process, changes either to the network alone or to end-systems alone are in progress. L4S involves a recognition that both approaches are yielding diminishing returns:

  • Recent state-of-the-art active queue management (AQM) in the network, e.g. FQ-CoDel [RFC8290], PIE [RFC8033], Adaptive RED [ARED01] ) has reduced queuing delay for all traffic, not just a select few applications. However, no matter how good the AQM, the capacity-seeking (sawtoothing) rate of TCP-like congestion controls represents a lower limit that will either cause queuing delay to vary or cause the link to be under-utilized. These AQMs are tuned to allow a typical capacity-seeking Reno-friendly flow to induce an average queue that roughly doubles the base RTT, adding 5-15 ms of queuing on average (cf. 500 microseconds with L4S for the same mix of long-running and web traffic). However, for many applications low delay is not useful unless it is consistently low. With these AQMs, 99th percentile queuing delay is 20-30 ms (cf. 2 ms with the same traffic over L4S).
  • Similarly, recent research into using e2e congestion control without needing an AQM in the network (e.g. BBR [I-D.cardwell-iccrg-bbr-congestion-control]) seems to have hit a similar lower limit to queuing delay of about 20ms on average but there are also regular 25ms delay spikes due to bandwidth probes and 60ms spikes due to flow-starts.

L4S learns from the experience of Data Center TCP [RFC8257], which shows the power of complementary changes both in the network and on end-systems. DCTCP teaches us that two small but radical changes to congestion control are needed to cut the two major outstanding causes of queuing delay variability:

  1. Far smaller rate variations (sawteeth) than Reno-friendly congestion controls;
  2. A shift of smoothing and hence smoothing delay from network to sender.

Without the former, a 'Classic' (e.g. Reno-friendly) flow's round trip time (RTT) varies between roughly 1 and 2 times the base RTT between the machines in question. Without the latter a 'Classic' flow's response to changing events is delayed by a worst-case (transcontinental) RTT, which could be hundreds of times the actual smoothing delay needed for the RTT of typical traffic from localized CDNs.

These changes are the two main features of the family of so-called 'Scalable' congestion controls (which includes DCTCP, TCP Prague and SCReAM). Both these changes only reduce delay in combination with a complementary change in the network and they are both only feasible with ECN, not drop, for the signalling:

  1. The smaller sawteeth allow an extremely shallow ECN packet-marking threshold in the queue.
  2. And no smoothing in the network means that every fluctuation of the queue is signalled immediately.

Without ECN, either of these would lead to very high loss levels. But, with ECN, the resulting high marking levels are just signals, not impairments. BBRv2 combines the best of both worlds - it works as a scalable congestion control when ECN is available, but also aims to minimize delay when it isn't.

However, until now, Scalable congestion controls (like DCTCP) did not co-exist well in a shared ECN-capable queue with existing ECN-capable TCP Reno [RFC5681] or Cubic [RFC8312] congestion controls -- Scalable controls are so aggressive that these 'Classic' algorithms would drive themselves to a small capacity share. Therefore, until now, L4S controls could only be deployed where a clean-slate environment could be arranged, such as in private data centres (hence the name DCTCP).

This document specifies a `DualQ Coupled AQM' extension that solves the problem of coexistence between Scalable and Classic flows, without having to inspect flow identifiers. It is not like flow-queuing approaches [RFC8290] that classify packets by flow identifier into separate queues in order to isolate sparse flows from the higher latency in the queues assigned to heavier flows. If a flow needs both low delay and high throughput, having a queue to itself does not isolate it from the harm it causes to itself. In contrast, DualQ Coupled AQMs address the root cause of the latency problem -- they are an enabler for the smooth low latency scalable behaviour of Scalable congestion controls, so that every packet in every flow can potentially enjoy very low latency, then there would be no need to isolate each flow into a separate queue.

1.2. Scope

L4S involves complementary changes in the network and on end-systems:

Network:
A DualQ Coupled AQM (defined in the present document) or a modification to flow-queue AQMs (described in section 4.2.b of the L4S architecture [I-D.ietf-tsvwg-l4s-arch]);
End-system:
A Scalable congestion control (defined in section 4 of the L4S ECN protocol [I-D.ietf-tsvwg-ecn-l4s-id]).
Packet identifier:
The network and end-system parts of L4S can be deployed incrementally, because they both identify L4S packets using the experimentally assigned explicit congestion notification (ECN) codepoints in the IP header: ECT(1) and CE [RFC8311] [I-D.ietf-tsvwg-ecn-l4s-id].

Data Center TCP (DCTCP [RFC8257]) is an example of a Scalable congestion control for controlled environments that has been deployed for some time in Linux, Windows and FreeBSD operating systems. During the progress of this document through the IETF a number of other Scalable congestion controls were implemented, e.g. TCP Prague [I-D.briscoe-iccrg-prague-congestion-control] [PragueLinux], BBRv2 [BBRv2], [I-D.cardwell-iccrg-bbr-congestion-control], QUIC Prague and the L4S variant of SCREAM for real-time media [RFC8298].

The focus of this specification is to enable deployment of the network part of the L4S service. Then, without any management intervention, applications can exploit this new network capability as their operating systems migrate to Scalable congestion controls, which can then evolve while their benefits are being enjoyed by everyone on the Internet.

The DualQ Coupled AQM framework can incorporate any AQM designed for a single queue that generates a statistical or deterministic mark/drop probability driven by the queue dynamics. Pseudocode examples of two different DualQ Coupled AQMs are given in the appendices. In many cases the framework simplifies the basic control algorithm, and requires little extra processing. Therefore it is believed the Coupled AQM would be applicable and easy to deploy in all types of buffers; buffers in cost-reduced mass-market residential equipment; buffers in end-system stacks; buffers in carrier-scale equipment including remote access servers, routers, firewalls and Ethernet switches; buffers in network interface cards, buffers in virtualized network appliances, hypervisors, and so on.

For the public Internet, nearly all the benefit will typically be achieved by deploying the Coupled AQM into either end of the access link between a 'site' and the Internet, which is invariably the bottleneck (see section 6.4 of[I-D.ietf-tsvwg-l4s-arch] about deployment, which also defines the term 'site' to mean a home, an office, a campus or mobile user equipment).

Latency is not the only concern of L4S:

  • The "Low Loss" part of the name denotes that L4S generally achieves zero congestion loss (which would otherwise cause retransmission delays), due to its use of ECN.
  • The "Scalable throughput" part of the name denotes that the per-flow throughput of Scalable congestion controls should scale indefinitely, avoiding the imminent scaling problems with 'TCP-Friendly' congestion control algorithms [RFC3649].

The former is clearly in scope of this AQM document. However, the latter is an outcome of the end-system behaviour, and therefore outside the scope of this AQM document, even though the AQM is an enabler.

The overall L4S architecture [I-D.ietf-tsvwg-l4s-arch] gives more detail, including on wider deployment aspects such as backwards compatibility of Scalable congestion controls in bottlenecks where a DualQ Coupled AQM has not been deployed. The supporting papers [DualPI2Linux], [PI2], [DCttH19] and [PI2param] give the full rationale for the AQM's design, both discursively and in more precise mathematical form, as well as the results of performance evaluations. The main results have been validated independently when using the Prague congestion control [Boru20] (experiments are run using Prague and DCTCP, but only the former are relevant for validation, because Prague fixes a number of problems with the Linux DCTCP code that make it unsuitable for the public Internet).

1.3. Terminology

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

The DualQ Coupled AQM uses two queues for two services. Each of the following terms identifies both the service and the queue that provides the service:

Classic service/queue:
The Classic service is intended for all the congestion control behaviours that co-exist with Reno [RFC5681] (e.g. Reno itself, Cubic [RFC8312], TFRC [RFC5348]).
Low-Latency, Low-Loss Scalable throughput (L4S) service/queue:
The 'L4S' service is intended for traffic from scalable congestion control algorithms, such as TCP Prague [I-D.briscoe-iccrg-prague-congestion-control], which was derived from Data Center TCP [RFC8257]. The L4S service is for more general traffic than just TCP Prague -- it allows the set of congestion controls with similar scaling properties to Prague to evolve, such as the examples listed earlier (Relentless, SCReAM, etc.).
Classic Congestion Control:
A congestion control behaviour that can co-exist with standard TCP Reno [RFC5681] without causing significantly negative impact on its flow rate [RFC5033]. With Classic congestion controls, such as Reno or Cubic, because flow rate has scaled since TCP congestion control was first designed in 1988, it now takes hundreds of round trips (and growing) to recover after a congestion signal (whether a loss or an ECN mark) as shown in the examples in section 5.1 of the L4S architecture [I-D.ietf-tsvwg-l4s-arch] and in [RFC3649]. Therefore control of queuing and utilization becomes very slack, and the slightest disturbances (e.g. from new flows starting) prevent a high rate from being attained.
Scalable Congestion Control:
A congestion control where the average time from one congestion signal to the next (the recovery time) remains invariant as the flow rate scales, all other factors being equal. This maintains the same degree of control over queueing and utilization whatever the flow rate, as well as ensuring that high throughput is robust to disturbances. For instance, DCTCP averages 2 congestion signals per round-trip whatever the flow rate, as do other recently developed scalable congestion controls, e.g. Relentless TCP [Mathis09], TCP Prague [I-D.briscoe-iccrg-prague-congestion-control][PragueLinux], BBRv2 [BBRv2], [I-D.cardwell-iccrg-bbr-congestion-control] and the L4S variant of SCREAM for real-time media [SCReAM][RFC8298]). For the public Internet a Scalable transport has to comply with the requirements in Section 4 of [I-D.ietf-tsvwg-ecn-l4s-id] (aka. the 'Prague L4S requirements').
C:
Abbreviation for Classic, e.g. when used as a subscript.
L:

Abbreviation for L4S, e.g. when used as a subscript.

The terms Classic or L4S can also qualify other nouns, such as 'codepoint', 'identifier', 'classification', 'packet', 'flow'. For example: an L4S packet means a packet with an L4S identifier sent from an L4S congestion control.

Both Classic and L4S services can cope with a proportion of unresponsive or less-responsive traffic as well, but in the L4S case its rate has to be smooth enough or low enough not to build a queue (e.g. DNS, VoIP, game sync datagrams, etc). The DualQ Coupled AQM behaviour is defined to be similar to a single FIFO queue with respect to unresponsive and overload traffic.

Reno-friendly:
The subset of Classic traffic that is friendly to the standard Reno congestion control defined for TCP in [RFC5681]. Reno-friendly is used in place of 'TCP-friendly', given the latter has become imprecise, because the TCP protocol is now used with so many different congestion control behaviours, and Reno is used in non-TCP transports such as QUIC.
Classic ECN:

The original Explicit Congestion Notification (ECN) protocol [RFC3168], which requires ECN signals to be treated the same as drops, both when generated in the network and when responded to by the sender.

For L4S, the names used for the four codepoints of the 2-bit IP-ECN field are unchanged from those defined in [RFC3168]: Not ECT, ECT(0), ECT(1) and CE, where ECT stands for ECN-Capable Transport and CE stands for Congestion Experienced. A packet marked with the CE codepoint is termed 'ECN-marked' or sometimes just 'marked' where the context makes ECN obvious.

1.4. Features

The AQM couples marking and/or dropping from the Classic queue to the L4S queue in such a way that a flow will get roughly the same throughput whichever it uses. Therefore both queues can feed into the full capacity of a link and no rates need to be configured for the queues. The L4S queue enables Scalable congestion controls like DCTCP or TCP Prague to give very low and predictably low latency, without compromising the performance of competing 'Classic' Internet traffic.

Thousands of tests have been conducted in a typical fixed residential broadband setting. Experiments used a range of base round trip delays up to 100ms and link rates up to 200 Mb/s between the data centre and home network, with varying amounts of background traffic in both queues. For every L4S packet, the AQM kept the average queuing delay below 1ms (or 2 packets where serialization delay exceeded 1ms on slower links), with 99th percentile no worse than 2ms. No losses at all were introduced by the L4S AQM. Details of the extensive experiments are available [DualPI2Linux], [PI2], [DCttH19].

In all these experiments, the host was connected to the home network by fixed Ethernet, in order to quantify the queuing delay that can be achieved by a user who cares about delay. It should be emphasized that L4S support at the bottleneck link cannot 'undelay' bursts introduced by another link on the path, for instance by legacy WiFi equipment. However, if L4S support is added to the queue feeding the outgoing WAN link of a home gateway, it would be counterproductive not to also reduce the burstiness of the incoming WiFi. Also, trials of WiFi equipment with an L4S DualQ Coupled AQM on the outgoing WiFi interface are in progress, and early results of an L4S DualQ Coupled AQM in a 5G radio access network testbed with emulated outdoor cell edge radio fading are given in [L4S_5G].

Subjective testing has also been conducted by multiple people all simultaneously using very demanding high bandwidth low latency applications over a single shared access link [L4Sdemo16]. In one application, each user could use finger gestures to pan or zoom their own high definition (HD) sub-window of a larger video scene generated on the fly in 'the cloud' from a football match. Another user wearing VR goggles was remotely receiving a feed from a 360-degree camera in a racing car, again with the sub-window in their field of vision generated on the fly in 'the cloud' dependent on their head movements. Even though other users were also downloading large amounts of L4S and Classic data, playing a gaming benchmark and watchings videos over the same 40Mb/s downstream broadband link, latency was so low that the football picture appeared to stick to the user's finger on the touch pad and the experience fed from the remote camera did not noticeably lag head movements. All the L4S data (even including the downloads) achieved the same very low latency. With an alternative AQM, the video noticeably lagged behind the finger gestures and head movements.

Unlike Diffserv Expedited Forwarding, the L4S queue does not have to be limited to a small proportion of the link capacity in order to achieve low delay. The L4S queue can be filled with a heavy load of capacity-seeking flows (TCP Prague etc.) and still achieve low delay. The L4S queue does not rely on the presence of other traffic in the Classic queue that can be 'overtaken'. It gives low latency to L4S traffic whether or not there is Classic traffic. The tail latency of traffic served by the Classic AQM is sometimes a little better sometimes a little worse, when a proportion of the traffic is L4S.

The two queues are only necessary because:

  • the large variations (sawteeth) of Classic flows need roughly a base RTT of queuing delay to ensure full utilization
  • Scalable flows do not need a queue to keep utilization high, but they cannot keep latency predictably low if they are mixed with Classic traffic,

The L4S queue has latency priority within sub-round trip timescales, but over longer periods the coupling from the Classic to the L4S AQM (explained below) ensures that it does not have bandwidth priority over the Classic queue.

2. DualQ Coupled AQM

There are two main aspects to the approach:

2.1. Coupled AQM

In the 1990s, the `TCP formula' was derived for the relationship between the steady-state congestion window, cwnd, and the drop probability, p of standard Reno congestion control [RFC5681]. To a first order approximation, the steady-state cwnd of Reno is inversely proportional to the square root of p.

The design focuses on Reno as the worst case, because if it does no harm to Reno, it will not harm Cubic or any traffic designed to be friendly to Reno. TCP Cubic implements a Reno-compatibility mode, which is relevant for typical RTTs under 20ms as long as the throughput of a single flow is less than about 350Mb/s. In such cases it can be assumed that Cubic traffic behaves similarly to Reno. The term 'Classic' will be used for the collection of Reno-friendly traffic including Cubic and potentially other experimental congestion controls intended not to significantly impact the flow rate of Reno.

A supporting paper [PI2] includes the derivation of the equivalent rate equation for DCTCP, for which cwnd is inversely proportional to p (not the square root), where in this case p is the ECN marking probability. DCTCP is not the only congestion control that behaves like this, so the term 'Scalable' will be used for all similar congestion control behaviours (see examples in Section 1.2). The term 'L4S' is used for traffic driven by a Scalable congestion control that also complies with the additional 'Prague L4S' requirements [I-D.ietf-tsvwg-ecn-l4s-id].

For safe co-existence, under stationary conditions, a Scalable flow has to run at roughly the same rate as a Reno TCP flow (all other factors being equal). So the drop or marking probability for Classic traffic, p_C has to be distinct from the marking probability for L4S traffic, p_L. The original ECN specification [RFC3168] required these probabilities to be the same, but [RFC8311] updates RFC 3168 to enable experiments in which these probabilities are different.

Also, to remain stable, Classic sources need the network to smooth p_C so it changes relatively slowly. It is hard for a network node to know the RTTs of all the flows, so a Classic AQM adds a worst-case RTT of smoothing delay (about 100-200 ms). In contrast, L4S shifts responsibility for smoothing ECN feedback to the sender, which only delays its response by its own RTT, as well as allowing a more immediate response if necessary.

The Coupled AQM achieves safe coexistence by making the Classic drop probability p_C proportional to the square of the coupled L4S probability p_CL. p_CL is an input to the instantaneous L4S marking probability p_L but it changes as slowly as p_C. This makes the Reno flow rate roughly equal the DCTCP flow rate, because the squaring of p_CL counterbalances the square root of p_C in the 'TCP formula' of Classic Reno congestion control.

Stating this as a formula, the relation between Classic drop probability, p_C, and the coupled L4S probability p_CL needs to take the form:

    p_C = ( p_CL / k )^2                  (1)

where k is the constant of proportionality, which is termed the coupling factor.

2.2. Dual Queue

Classic traffic needs to build a large queue to prevent under-utilization. Therefore a separate queue is provided for L4S traffic, and it is scheduled with priority over the Classic queue. Priority is conditional to prevent starvation of Classic traffic in certain conditions (see Section 2.4).

Nonetheless, coupled marking ensures that giving priority to L4S traffic still leaves the right amount of spare scheduling time for Classic flows to each get equivalent throughput to DCTCP flows (all other factors such as RTT being equal).

2.3. Traffic Classification

Both the Coupled AQM and DualQ mechanisms need an identifier to distinguish L4S (L) and Classic (C) packets. Then the coupling algorithm can achieve coexistence without having to inspect flow identifiers, because it can apply the appropriate marking or dropping probability to all flows of each type. A separate specification [I-D.ietf-tsvwg-ecn-l4s-id] requires the network to treat the ECT(1) and CE codepoints of the ECN field as this identifier. An additional process document has proved necessary to make the ECT(1) codepoint available for experimentation [RFC8311].

For policy reasons, an operator might choose to steer certain packets (e.g. from certain flows or with certain addresses) out of the L queue, even though they identify themselves as L4S by their ECN codepoints. In such cases, the L4S ECN protocol [I-D.ietf-tsvwg-ecn-l4s-id] says that the device "MUST NOT alter the end-to-end L4S ECN identifier", so that it is preserved end-to-end. The aim is that each operator can choose how it treats L4S traffic locally, but an individual operator does not alter the identification of L4S packets, which would prevent other operators downstream from making their own choices on how to treat L4S traffic.

In addition, an operator could use other identifiers to classify certain additional packet types into the L queue that it deems will not risk harm to the L4S service. For instance addresses of specific applications or hosts; specific Diffserv codepoints such as EF (Expedited Forwarding), Voice-Admit or the Non-Queue-Building (NQB) per-hop behaviour; or certain protocols (e.g. ARP, DNS) (see Section 5.4.1 of [I-D.ietf-tsvwg-ecn-l4s-id]). Note that the mechanism only reads these identifiers. [I-D.ietf-tsvwg-ecn-l4s-id] says it "MUST NOT alter these non-ECN identifiers". Thus, the L queue is not solely an L4S queue, it can be considered more generally as a low latency queue.

2.4. Overall DualQ Coupled AQM Structure

Figure 1 shows the overall structure that any DualQ Coupled AQM is likely to have. This schematic is intended to aid understanding of the current designs of DualQ Coupled AQMs. However, it is not intended to preclude other innovative ways of satisfying the normative requirements in Section 2.5 that minimally define a DualQ Coupled AQM. Also, the schematic only illustrates operation under normally expected circumstances; behaviour under overload or with operator-specific classifiers is deferred to Section 2.5.1.1.

The classifier on the left separates incoming traffic between the two queues (L and C). Each queue has its own AQM that determines the likelihood of marking or dropping (p_L and p_C). It has been proved [PI2] that it is preferable to control load with a linear controller, then square the output before applying it as a drop probability to Reno-friendly traffic (because Reno congestion control decreases its load proportional to the square-root of the increase in drop). So, the AQM for Classic traffic needs to be implemented in two stages: i) a base stage that outputs an internal probability p' (pronounced p-prime); and ii) a squaring stage that outputs p_C, where

    p_C = (p')^2.                         (2)

Substituting for p_C in Eqn (1) gives:

    p' = p_CL / k

So the slow-moving input to ECN marking in the L queue (the coupled L4S probability) is:

    p_CL = k*p'.                          (3)

The actual ECN marking probability p_L that is applied to the L queue needs to track the immediate L queue delay under L-only congestion conditions, as well as track p_CL under coupled congestion conditions. So the L queue uses a native AQM that calculates a probability p'_L as a function of the instantaneous L queue delay. And, given the L queue has conditional priority over the C queue, whenever the L queue grows, the AQM ought to apply marking probability p'_L, but p_L ought not to fall below p_CL. This suggests:

    p_L = max(p'_L, p_CL),                (4)

which has also been found to work very well in practice.

The two transformations of p' in equations (2) and (3) implement the required coupling given in equation (1) earlier.

The constant of proportionality or coupling factor, k, in equation (1) determines the ratio between the congestion probabilities (loss or marking) experienced by L4S and Classic traffic. Thus k indirectly determines the ratio between L4S and Classic flow rates, because flows (assuming they are responsive) adjust their rate in response to congestion probability. Appendix C.2 gives guidance on the choice of k and its effect on relative flow rates.

                        _________
                               | |    ,------.
                 L4S (L) queue | |===>| ECN  |
                    ,'| _______|_|    |marker|\
                  <'  |         |     `------'\\
                   //`'         v        ^ p_L \\
                  //       ,-------.     |      \\
                 //        |Native |p'_L |       \\,.
                //         |  L4S  |--->(MAX)    <  |   ___
   ,----------.//          |  AQM  |     ^ p_CL   `\|.'Cond-`.
   |  IP-ECN  |/           `-------'     |          / itional \
==>|Classifier|            ,-------.   (k*p')       [ priority]==>
   |          |\           |  Base |     |          \scheduler/
   `----------'\\          |  AQM  |---->:        ,'|`-.___.-'
                \\         |       |p'   |      <'  |
                 \\        `-------'   (p'^2)    //`'
                  \\            ^        |      //
                   \\,.         |        v p_C //
                   <  | _________     .------.//
                    `\|   |      |    | Drop |/
              Classic (C) |queue |===>|/mark |
                        __|______|    `------'

Figure 1: DualQ Coupled AQM Schematic

Legend: ===> traffic flow; ---> control dependency.

After the AQMs have applied their dropping or marking, the scheduler forwards their packets to the link. Even though the scheduler gives priority to the L queue, it is not as strong as the coupling from the C queue. This is because, as the C queue grows, the base AQM applies more congestion signals to L traffic (as well as C). As L flows reduce their rate in response, they use less than the scheduling share for L traffic. So, because the scheduler is work preserving, it schedules any C traffic in the gaps.

Giving priority to the L queue has the benefit of very low L queue delay, because the L queue is kept empty whenever L traffic is controlled by the coupling. Also there only has to be a coupling in one direction - from Classic to L4S. Priority has to be conditional in some way to prevent the C queue being starved in the short-term (see Section 4.2.2) to give C traffic a means to push in, as explained next. With normal responsive L traffic, the coupled ECN marking gives C traffic the ability to push back against even strict priority, by congestion marking the L traffic to make it yield some space. However, if there is just a small finite set of C packets (e.g. a DNS request or an initial window of data) some Classic AQMs will not induce enough ECN marking in the L queue, no matter how long the small set of C packets waits. Then, if the L queue happens to remain busy, the C traffic would never get a scheduling opportunity from a strict priority scheduler. Ideally the Classic AQM would be designed to increase the coupled marking the longer that C packets have been waiting, but this is not always practical - hence the need for L priority to be conditional. Giving a small weight or limited waiting time for C traffic improves response times for short Classic messages, such as DNS requests, and improves Classic flow startup because immediate capacity is available.

Example DualQ Coupled AQM algorithms called DualPI2 and Curvy RED are given in Appendix A and Appendix B. Either example AQM can be used to couple packet marking and dropping across a dual Q.

DualPI2 uses a Proportional-Integral (PI) controller as the Base AQM. Indeed, this Base AQM with just the squared output and no L4S queue can be used as a drop-in replacement for PIE [RFC8033], in which case it is just called PI2 [PI2]. PI2 is a principled simplification of PIE that is both more responsive and more stable in the face of dynamically varying load.

Curvy RED is derived from RED [RFC2309], except its configuration parameters are delay-based to make them insensitive to link rate and it requires less operations per packet than RED. However, DualPI2 is more responsive and stable over a wider range of RTTs than Curvy RED. As a consequence, at the time of writing, DualPI2 has attracted more development and evaluation attention than Curvy RED, leaving the Curvy RED design not so fully evaluated.

Both AQMs regulate their queue in units of time rather than bytes. As already explained, this ensures configuration can be invariant for different drain rates. With AQMs in a dualQ structure this is particularly important because the drain rate of each queue can vary rapidly as flows for the two queues arrive and depart, even if the combined link rate is constant.

It would be possible to control the queues with other alternative AQMs, as long as the normative requirements (those expressed in capitals) in Section 2.5 are observed.

The two queues could optionally be part of a larger queuing hierarchy, such as the initial example ideas in [I-D.briscoe-tsvwg-l4s-diffserv].

2.5. Normative Requirements for a DualQ Coupled AQM

The following requirements are intended to capture only the essential aspects of a DualQ Coupled AQM. They are intended to be independent of the particular AQMs used for each queue.

2.5.1. Functional Requirements

A Dual Queue Coupled AQM implementation MUST comply with the prerequisite L4S behaviours for any L4S network node (not just a DualQ) as specified in section 5 of [I-D.ietf-tsvwg-ecn-l4s-id]. These primarily concern classification and remarking as briefly summarized in Section 2.3 earlier. But there is also a subsection (5.5) giving guidance on reducing the burstiness of the link technology underlying any L4S AQM.

A Dual Queue Coupled AQM implementation MUST utilize two queues, each with an AQM algorithm.

The AQM algorithm for the low latency (L) queue MUST be able to apply ECN marking to ECN-capable packets.

The scheduler draining the two queues MUST give L4S packets priority over Classic, although priority MUST be bounded in order not to starve Classic traffic (see Section 4.2.2). The scheduler SHOULD be work-conserving, or otherwise close to work-conserving. This is because Classic traffic needs to be able to efficiently fill any space left by L4S traffic even though the scheduler would otherwise allocate it to L4S.

[I-D.ietf-tsvwg-ecn-l4s-id] defines the meaning of an ECN marking on L4S traffic, relative to drop of Classic traffic. In order to ensure coexistence of Classic and Scalable L4S traffic, it says, "The likelihood that an AQM drops a Not-ECT Classic packet (p_C) MUST be roughly proportional to the square of the likelihood that it would have marked it if it had been an L4S packet (p_L)." The term 'likelihood' is used to allow for marking and dropping to be either probabilistic or deterministic.

For the current specification, this translates into the following requirement. A DualQ Coupled AQM MUST apply ECN marking to traffic in the L queue that is no lower than that derived from the likelihood of drop (or ECN marking) in the Classic queue using Eqn. (1).

The constant of proportionality, k, in Eqn (1) determines the relative flow rates of Classic and L4S flows when the AQM concerned is the bottleneck (all other factors being equal). The L4S ECN protocol [I-D.ietf-tsvwg-ecn-l4s-id] says, "The constant of proportionality (k) does not have to be standardised for interoperability, but a value of 2 is RECOMMENDED."

Assuming Scalable congestion controls for the Internet will be as aggressive as DCTCP, this will ensure their congestion window will be roughly the same as that of a standards track TCP Reno congestion control (Reno) [RFC5681] and other Reno-friendly controls, such as TCP Cubic in its Reno-compatibility mode.

The choice of k is a matter of operator policy, and operators MAY choose a different value using the guidelines in Appendix C.2.

If multiple customers or users share capacity at a bottleneck (e.g. in the Internet access link of a campus network), the operator's choice of k will determine capacity sharing between the flows of different customers. However, on the public Internet, access network operators typically isolate customers from each other with some form of layer-2 multiplexing (OFDM(A) in DOCSIS3.1, CDMA in 3G, SC-FDMA in LTE) or L3 scheduling (WRR in DSL), rather than relying on host congestion controls to share capacity between customers [RFC0970]. In such cases, the choice of k will solely affect relative flow rates within each customer's access capacity, not between customers. Also, k will not affect relative flow rates at any times when all flows are Classic or all flows are L4S, and it will not affect the relative throughput of small flows.

2.5.1.1. Requirements in Unexpected Cases

The flexibility to allow operator-specific classifiers (Section 2.3) leads to the need to specify what the AQM in each queue ought to do with packets that do not carry the ECN field expected for that queue. It is expected that the AQM in each queue will inspect the ECN field to determine what sort of congestion notification to signal, then it will decide whether to apply congestion notification to this particular packet, as follows:

  • If a packet that does not carry an ECT(1) or CE codepoint is classified into the L queue:

    • if the packet is ECT(0), the L AQM SHOULD apply CE-marking using a probability appropriate to Classic congestion control and appropriate to the target delay in the L queue
    • if the packet is Not-ECT, the appropriate action depends on whether some other function is protecting the L queue from misbehaving flows (e.g. per-flow queue protection [I-D.briscoe-docsis-q-protection] or latency policing):

      • If separate queue protection is provided, the L AQM SHOULD ignore the packet and forward it unchanged, meaning it should not calculate whether to apply congestion notification and it should neither drop nor CE-mark the packet (for instance, the operator might classify EF traffic that is unresponsive to drop into the L queue, alongside responsive L4S-ECN traffic)
      • if separate queue protection is not provided, the L AQM SHOULD apply drop using a drop probability appropriate to Classic congestion control and appropriate to the target delay in the L queue
  • If a packet that carries an ECT(1) codepoint is classified into the C queue:

    • the C AQM SHOULD apply CE-marking using the coupled AQM probability p_CL (= k*p').

The above requirements are worded as "SHOULDs", because operator-specific classifiers are for flexibility, by definition. Therefore, alternative actions might be appropriate in the operator's specific circumstances. An example would be where the operator knows that certain legacy traffic marked with one codepoint actually has a congestion response associated with another codepoint.

If the DualQ Coupled AQM has detected overload, it MUST introduce Classic drop to both types of ECN-capable traffic until the overload episode has subsided. Introducing drop if ECN marking is persistently high is recommended by Section 7 of the ECN specification [RFC3168] and Section 4.2.1 of the AQM Recommendations [RFC7567].

2.5.2. Management Requirements

2.5.2.1. Configuration

By default, a DualQ Coupled AQM SHOULD NOT need any configuration for use at a bottleneck on the public Internet [RFC7567]. The following parameters MAY be operator-configurable, e.g. to tune for non-Internet settings:

  • Optional packet classifier(s) to use in addition to the ECN field (see Section 2.3);
  • Expected typical RTT, which can be used to determine the queuing delay of the Classic AQM at its operating point, in order to prevent typical lone flows from under-utilizing capacity. For example:

    • for the PI2 algorithm (Appendix A) the queuing delay target is dependent on the typical RTT;
    • for the Curvy RED algorithm (Appendix B) the queuing delay at the desired operating point of the curvy ramp is configured to encompass a typical RTT;
    • if another Classic AQM was used, it would be likely to need an operating point for the queue based on the typical RTT, and if so it SHOULD be expressed in units of time.

    An operating point that is manually calculated might be directly configurable instead, e.g. for links with large numbers of flows where under-utilization by a single flow would be unlikely.

  • Expected maximum RTT, which can be used to set the stability parameter(s) of the Classic AQM. For example:

    • for the PI2 algorithm (Appendix A), the gain parameters of the PI algorithm depend on the maximum RTT.
    • for the Curvy RED algorithm (Appendix B) the smoothing parameter is chosen to filter out transients in the queue within a maximum RTT.

    Stability parameter(s) that are manually calculated assuming a maximum RTT might be directly configurable instead.

  • Coupling factor, k (see Appendix C.2);
  • A limit to the conditional priority of L4S. This is scheduler-dependent, but it SHOULD be expressed as a relation between the max delay of a C packet and an L packet. For example:

    • for a WRR scheduler a weight ratio between L and C of w:1 means that the maximum delay to a C packet is w times that of an L packet.
    • for a time-shifted FIFO (TS-FIFO) scheduler (see Section 4.2.2) a time-shift of tshift means that the maximum delay to a C packet is tshift greater than that of an L packet. tshift could be expressed as a multiple of the typical RTT rather than as an absolute delay.
  • The maximum Classic ECN marking probability, p_Cmax, before introducing drop.
2.5.2.2. Monitoring

An experimental DualQ Coupled AQM SHOULD allow the operator to monitor each of the following operational statistics on demand, per queue and per configurable sample interval, for performance monitoring and perhaps also for accounting in some cases:

  • Bits forwarded, from which utilization can be calculated;
  • Total packets in the three categories: arrived, presented to the AQM, and forwarded. The difference between the first two will measure any non-AQM tail discard. The difference between the last two will measure proactive AQM discard;
  • ECN packets marked, non-ECN packets dropped, ECN packets dropped, which can be combined with the three total packet counts above to calculate marking and dropping probabilities;
  • Queue delay (not including serialization delay of the head packet or medium acquisition delay) - see further notes below.

    Unlike the other statistics, queue delay cannot be captured in a simple accumulating counter. Therefore the type of queue delay statistics produced (mean, percentiles, etc.) will depend on implementation constraints. To facilitate comparative evaluation of different implementations and approaches, an implementation SHOULD allow mean and 99th percentile queue delay to be derived (per queue per sample interval). A relatively simple way to do this would be to store a coarse-grained histogram of queue delay. This could be done with a small number of bins with configurable edges that represent contiguous ranges of queue delay. Then, over a sample interval, each bin would accumulate a count of the number of packets that had fallen within each range. The maximum queue delay per queue per interval MAY also be recorded, to aid diagnosis of faults and anomalous events.

2.5.2.3. Anomaly Detection

An experimental DualQ Coupled AQM SHOULD asynchronously report the following data about anomalous conditions:

  • Start-time and duration of overload state.

    A hysteresis mechanism SHOULD be used to prevent flapping in and out of overload causing an event storm. For instance, exit from overload state could trigger one report, but also latch a timer. Then, during that time, if the AQM enters and exits overload state any number of times, the duration in overload state is accumulated but no new report is generated until the first time the AQM is out of overload once the timer has expired.

2.5.2.4. Deployment, Coexistence and Scaling

[RFC5706] suggests that deployment, coexistence and scaling should also be covered as management requirements. The raison d'etre of the DualQ Coupled AQM is to enable deployment and coexistence of Scalable congestion controls - as incremental replacements for today's Reno-friendly controls that do not scale with bandwidth-delay product. Therefore there is no need to repeat these motivating issues here given they are already explained in the Introduction and detailed in the L4S architecture [I-D.ietf-tsvwg-l4s-arch].

The descriptions of specific DualQ Coupled AQM algorithms in the appendices cover scaling of their configuration parameters, e.g. with respect to RTT and sampling frequency.

3. IANA Considerations (to be removed by RFC Editor)

This specification contains no IANA considerations.

4. Security Considerations

4.1. Low Delay without Requiring Per-Flow Processing

The L4S architecture [I-D.ietf-tsvwg-l4s-arch] compares the DualQ and per-flow-queuing (FQ) approaches to L4S. The privacy considerations section in that document motivates the DualQ on the grounds that users who want to encrypt application flow identifiers, e.g. in IPSec or other encrypted VPN tunnels, don't have to sacrifice low delay ([RFC8404] encourages avoidance of such privacy compromises).

The security considerations section of the L4S architecture also includes subsections on policing of relative flow-rates (section 8.1) and on policing of flows that cause excessive queuing delay (section 8.2). It explains that the interests of users do not collide in the same way for delay as they do for bandwidth. For someone to get more of the bandwidth of a shared link, someone else necessarily gets less (a 'zero-sum game'), whereas queuing delay can be reduced for everyone, without any need for someone else to lose out. It also explains that, on the current Internet, scheduling usually enforces separation between 'sites' (e.g. households, businesses or mobile users), but it is not common to need to schedule or police individual application flows.

By the above arguments, per-flow policing might not be necessary and in trusted environments it is certainly unlikely to be needed. Therefore, because it is hard to avoid complexity and unintended side-effects with per-flow policing, it needs to be separable from a basic AQM, as an option, under policy control. On this basis, the DualQ Coupled AQM provides low delay without prejudging the question of per-flow policing.

Nonetheless, the interests of users or flows might conflict, e.g. in case of accident or malice. Then per-flow control could be necessary. If flow-rate control is needed, it can be provided as a modular addition to a DualQ. And similarly, if protection against excessive queue delay is needed, a per-flow queue protection option can be added to a DualQ (e.g. [I-D.briscoe-docsis-q-protection]).

4.2. Handling Unresponsive Flows and Overload

In the absence of any per-flow control, it is important that the basic DualQ Coupled AQM gives unresponsive flows no more throughput advantage than a single-queue AQM would, and that it at least handles overload situations. Overload means that incoming load significantly or persistently exceeds output capacity, but it is not intended to be a precise term -- significant and persistent are matters of degree.

A trade-off needs to be made between complexity and the risk of either traffic class harming the other. In overloaded conditions the higher priority L4S service will have to sacrifice some aspect of its performance. Depending on the degree of overload, alternative solutions may relax a different factor: e.g. throughput, delay, drop. These choices need to be made either by the developer or by operator policy, rather than by the IETF. Subsequent subsections discuss aspects relating to handling of different degrees of overload:

  • Unresponsive flows (L and/or C) but not overloaded, i.e. the sum of unresponsive load before adding any responsive traffic is below capacity;

    • This case is handled by the regular Coupled DualQ (Section 2.1) but not discussed there. So below, Section 4.2.1 explains the design goal, and how it is achieved in practice;
  • Unresponsive flows (L and/or C) causing persistent overload, i.e. the sum of unresponsive load even before adding any responsive traffic persistently exceeds capacity;

    • This case is not covered by the regular Coupled DualQ mechanism (Section 2.1) but the last para in Section 2.5.1.1 sets out a requirement to handle the case where ECN-capable traffic could starve non-ECN-capable traffic. Section 4.2.3 below discusses the general options and gives specific examples.
  • Short-term overload that lies between the 'not overloaded' and 'persistently overloaded' cases.

    • For the period before overload is deemed persistent, Section 4.2.2 discusses options for more immediate mechanisms at the scheduler timescale. These prevent short-term starvation of the C queue by making the priority of the L queue conditional, as required in Section 2.5.1.

4.2.1. Unresponsive Traffic without Overload

When one or more L flows and/or C flows are unresponsive, but their total load is within the link capacity so that they do not saturate the coupled marking (below 100%), the goal of a DualQ AQM is to behave no worse than a single-queue AQM.

Tests have shown that this is indeed the case with no additional mechanism beyond the regular Coupled DualQ of Section 2.1 (see the results of 'overload experiments' in [DCttH19]). Perhaps counter-intuitively, whether the unresponsive flow classifies itself into the L or the C queue, the DualQ system behaves as if it has subtracted from the overall link capacity. Then, the coupling shares out the remaining capacity between any competing responsive flows (in either queue). See also Section 4.2.2, which discusses scheduler-specific details.

4.2.2. Avoiding Short-Term Classic Starvation: Sacrifice L4S Throughput or Delay?

Priority of L4S is required to be conditional (see Section 2.4 & Section 2.5.1) to avoid short-term starvation of Classic. Otherwise, as explained in Section 2.4, even a lone responsive L4S flow could temporarily block a small finite set of C packets (e.g. an initial window or DNS request). The blockage would only be brief, but it could be longer for certain AQM implementations that can only increase the congestion signal coupled from the C queue when C packets are actually being dequeued. There is then the question of whether to sacrifice L4S throughput or L4S delay (or some other policy) to make the priority conditional:

Sacrifice L4S throughput:

By using weighted round robin as the conditional priority scheduler, the L4S service can sacrifice some throughput during overload. This can either be thought of as guaranteeing a minimum throughput service for Classic traffic, or as guaranteeing a maximum delay for a packet at the head of the Classic queue.

Cautionary note: a WRR scheduler can only guarantee Classic throughput if Classic sources are sending enough to use it -- congestion signals can undermine scheduling because they determine how much responsive traffic of each class arrives for scheduling in the first place. This is why scheduling is only relied on to handle short-term starvation; until congestion signals build up and the sources react. Even during long-term overload (discussed more fully in Section 4.2.3), it's pragmatic to discard packets from both queues, which again thins the traffic before it reaches the scheduler. This is because a scheduler cannot be relied on to handle long-term overload since the right scheduler weight cannot be known for every scenario.

The scheduling weight of the Classic queue should be small (e.g. 1/16). In most traffic scenarios the scheduler will not interfere and it will not need to, because the coupling mechanism and the end-systems will determine the share of capacity across both queues as if it were a single pool. However, if L4S traffic is over-aggressive or unresponsive, the scheduler weight for Classic traffic will at least be large enough to ensure it does not starve in the short-term.

Although WRR scheduling is only expected to address short-term overload, there are (somewhat rare) cases when WRR has an effect on capacity shares over longer time-scales. But its effect is minor, and it certainly does no harm. Specifically, in cases where the ratio of L4S to Classic flows (e.g. 19:1) is greater than the ratio of their scheduler weights (e.g. 15:1), the L4S flows will get less than an equal share of the capacity, but only slightly. For instance, with the example numbers given, each L4S flow will get (15/16)/19 = 4.9% when ideally each would get 1/20=5%. In the rather specific case of an unresponsive flow taking up just less than the capacity set aside for L4S (e.g. 14/16 in the above example), using WRR could significantly reduce the capacity left for any responsive L4S flows.

The scheduling weight of the Classic queue should not be too small, otherwise a C packet at the head of the queue could be excessively delayed by a continually busy L queue. For instance if the Classic weight is 1/16, the maximum that a Classic packet at the head of the queue can be delayed by L traffic is the serialization delay of 15 MTU-sized packets.

Sacrifice L4S Delay:

The operator could choose to control overload of the Classic queue by allowing some delay to 'leak' across to the L4S queue. The scheduler can be made to behave like a single First-In First-Out (FIFO) queue with different service times by implementing a very simple conditional priority scheduler that could be called a "time-shifted FIFO" (see the Modifier Earliest Deadline First (MEDF) scheduler [MEDF]). This scheduler adds tshift to the queue delay of the next L4S packet, before comparing it with the queue delay of the next Classic packet, then it selects the packet with the greater adjusted queue delay.

Under regular conditions, this time-shifted FIFO scheduler behaves just like a strict priority scheduler. But under moderate or high overload it prevents starvation of the Classic queue, because the time-shift (tshift) defines the maximum extra queuing delay of Classic packets relative to L4S. This would control milder overload of responsive traffic by introducing delay to defer invoking the overload mechanisms in Section 4.2.3, particularly when close to the maximum congestion signal.

The example implementations in Appendix A and Appendix B could both be implemented with either policy.

4.2.3. L4S ECN Saturation: Introduce Drop or Delay?

This section concerns persistent overload caused by unresponsive L and/or C flows. To keep the throughput of both L4S and Classic flows roughly equal over the full load range, a different control strategy needs to be defined above the point where the L4S AQM persistently saturates to an ECN marking probability of 100% leaving no room to push back the load any harder. L4S ECN marking will saturate first (assuming the coupling factor k>1), even though saturation could be caused by the sum of unresponsive traffic in either or both queues exceeding the link capacity.

The term 'unresponsive' includes cases where a flow becomes temporarily unresponsive, for instance, a real-time flow that takes a while to adapt its rate in response to congestion, or a standard Reno flow that is normally responsive, but above a certain congestion level it will not be able to reduce its congestion window below the allowed minimum of 2 segments [RFC5681], effectively becoming unresponsive. (Note that L4S traffic ought to remain responsive below a window of 2 segments (see the L4S requirements [I-D.ietf-tsvwg-ecn-l4s-id]).

Saturation raises the question of whether to relieve congestion by introducing some drop into the L4S queue or by allowing delay to grow in both queues (which could eventually lead to drop due to buffer exhaustion anyway):

Drop on Saturation:
Persistent saturation can be defined by a maximum threshold for coupled L4S ECN marking (assuming k>1) before saturation starts to make the flow rates of the different traffic types diverge. Above that, the drop probability of Classic traffic is applied to all packets of all traffic types. Then experiments have shown that queueing delay can be kept at the target in any overload situation, including with unresponsive traffic, and no further measures are required (Section 4.2.3.1).
Delay on Saturation:
When L4S marking saturates, instead of introducing L4S drop, the drop and marking probabilities of both queues could be capped. Beyond that, delay will grow either solely in the queue with unresponsive traffic (if WRR is used), or in both queues (if time-shifted FIFO is used). In either case, the higher delay ought to control temporary high congestion. If the overload is more persistent, eventually the combined DualQ will overflow and tail drop will control congestion.

The example implementation in Appendix A solely applies the "drop on saturation" policy. The DOCSIS specification of a DualQ Coupled AQM [DOCSIS3.1] also implements the 'drop on saturation' policy with a very shallow L buffer. However, the addition of DOCSIS per-flow Queue Protection [I-D.briscoe-docsis-q-protection] turns this into 'delay on saturation' by redirecting some packets of the flow(s) most responsible for L queue overload into the C queue, which has a higher delay target. If overload continues, this again becomes 'drop on saturation' as the level of drop in the C queue rises to maintain the target delay of the C queue.

4.2.3.1. Protecting against Overload by Unresponsive ECN-Capable Traffic

Without a specific overload mechanism, unresponsive traffic would have a greater advantage if it were also ECN-capable. The advantage is undetectable at normal low levels of marking. However, it would become significant with the higher levels of marking typical during overload, when it could evade a significant degree of drop. This is an issue whether the ECN-capable traffic is L4S or Classic.

This raises the question of whether and when to introduce drop of ECN-capable traffic, as required by both Section 7 of the ECN spec [RFC3168] and Section 4.2.1 of the AQM recommendations [RFC7567].

As an example, experiments with the DualPI2 AQM (Appendix A) have shown that introducing 'drop on saturation' at 100% coupled L4S marking addresses this problem with unresponsive ECN as well as addressing the saturation problem. At saturation, DualPI2 switches into overload mode, where the base AQM is driven by the max delay of both queues and it introduces probabilistic drop to both queues equally. It leaves only a small range of congestion levels just below saturation where unresponsive traffic gains any advantage from using the ECN capability (relative to being unresponsive without ECN), and the advantage is hardly detectable (see [DualQ-Test] and section IV-E of [DCttH19]. Also overload with an unresponsive ECT(1) flow gets no more bandwidth advantage than with ECT(0).

5. Acknowledgements

Thanks to Anil Agarwal, Sowmini Varadhan's, Gabi Bracha, Nicolas Kuhn, Greg Skinner, Tom Henderson, David Pullen, Mirja Kuehlewind, Gorry Fairhurst, Pete Heist and Ermin Sakic for detailed review comments particularly of the appendices and suggestions on how to make the explanations clearer. Thanks also to Tom Henderson for insights on the choice of schedulers and queue delay measurement techniques.

The early contributions of Koen De Schepper, Bob Briscoe, Olga Bondarenko and Inton Tsang were part-funded by the European Community under its Seventh Framework Programme through the Reducing Internet Transport Latency (RITE) project (ICT-317700). Contributions of Koen De Schepper and Olivier Tilmans were also part-funded by the 5Growth and DAEMON EU H2020 projects. Bob Briscoe's contribution was also part-funded by the Comcast Innovation Fund and the Research Council of Norway through the TimeIn project. The views expressed here are solely those of the authors.

6. Contributors

The following contributed implementations and evaluations that validated and helped to improve this specification:

7. References

7.1. Normative References

[I-D.ietf-tsvwg-ecn-l4s-id]
Schepper, K. D. and B. Briscoe, "Explicit Congestion Notification (ECN) Protocol for Very Low Queuing Delay (L4S)", Work in Progress, Internet-Draft, draft-ietf-tsvwg-ecn-l4s-id-25, , <https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/draft-ietf-tsvwg-ecn-l4s-id-25>.
[RFC2119]
Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, , <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2119>.
[RFC3168]
Ramakrishnan, K., Floyd, S., and D. Black, "The Addition of Explicit Congestion Notification (ECN) to IP", RFC 3168, DOI 10.17487/RFC3168, , <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3168>.
[RFC8311]
Black, D., "Relaxing Restrictions on Explicit Congestion Notification (ECN) Experimentation", RFC 8311, DOI 10.17487/RFC8311, , <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8311>.

7.2. Informative References

[Alizadeh-stability]
Alizadeh, M., Javanmard, A., and B. Prabhakar, "Analysis of DCTCP: Stability, Convergence, and Fairness", ACM SIGMETRICS 2011 , , <https://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=1993753>.
[AQMmetrics]
Kwon, M. and S. Fahmy, "A Comparison of Load-based and Queue- based Active Queue Management Algorithms", Proc. Int'l Soc. for Optical Engineering (SPIE) 4866:35--46 DOI: 10.1117/12.473021, , <https://www.cs.purdue.edu/homes/fahmy/papers/ldc.pdf>.
[ARED01]
Floyd, S., Gummadi, R., and S. Shenker, "Adaptive RED: An Algorithm for Increasing the Robustness of RED's Active Queue Management", ACIRI Technical Report , , <http://www.icir.org/floyd/red.html>.
[BBRv2]
Cardwell, N., "BRTCP BBR v2 Alpha/Preview Release", github repository; Linux congestion control module, <https://github.com/google/bbr/blob/v2alpha/README.md>.
[Boru20]
Boru Oljira, D., Grinnemo, K-J., Brunstrom, A., and J. Taheri, "Validating the Sharing Behavior and Latency Characteristics of the L4S Architecture", ACM CCR 50(2):37--44, , <https://dl.acm.org/doi/abs/10.1145/3402413.3402419>.
[CCcensus19]
Mishra, A., Sun, X., Jain, A., Pande, S., Joshi, R., and B. Leong, "The Great Internet TCP Congestion Control Census", Proc. ACM on Measurement and Analysis of Computing Systems 3(3), , <https://doi.org/10.1145/3366693>.
[CoDel]
Nichols, K. and V. Jacobson, "Controlling Queue Delay", ACM Queue 10(5), , <http://queue.acm.org/issuedetail.cfm?issue=2208917>.
[CRED_Insights]
Briscoe, B., "Insights from Curvy RED (Random Early Detection)", BT Technical Report TR-TUB8-2015-003 arXiv:1904.07339 [cs.NI], , <https://arxiv.org/abs/1904.07339>.
[DCttH19]
De Schepper, K., Bondarenko, O., Tilmans, O., and B. Briscoe, "`Data Centre to the Home': Ultra-Low Latency for All", Updated RITE project Technical Report , , <https://bobbriscoe.net/pubs.html#DCttH_TR>.
[DOCSIS3.1]
CableLabs, "MAC and Upper Layer Protocols Interface (MULPI) Specification, CM-SP-MULPIv3.1", Data-Over-Cable Service Interface Specifications DOCSIS® 3.1 Version i17 or later, , <https://specification-search.cablelabs.com/CM-SP-MULPIv3.1>.
[DualPI2Linux]
Albisser, O., De Schepper, K., Briscoe, B., Tilmans, O., and H. Steen, "DUALPI2 - Low Latency, Low Loss and Scalable (L4S) AQM", Proc. Linux Netdev 0x13 , , <https://www.netdevconf.org/0x13/session.html?talk-DUALPI2-AQM>.
[DualQ-Test]
Steen, H., "Destruction Testing: Ultra-Low Delay using Dual Queue Coupled Active Queue Management", Masters Thesis, Dept of Informatics, Uni Oslo , , <https://www.duo.uio.no/bitstream/handle/10852/57424/thesis-henrste.pdf?sequence=1>.
[Heist21]
Heist, P. and J. Morton, "L4S Tests", github README, , <https://github.com/heistp/l4s-tests/#underutilization-with-bursty-traffic>.
[I-D.briscoe-docsis-q-protection]
Briscoe, B. and G. White, "The DOCSIS(r) Queue Protection Algorithm to Preserve Low Latency", Work in Progress, Internet-Draft, draft-briscoe-docsis-q-protection-03, , <https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/draft-briscoe-docsis-q-protection-03>.
[I-D.briscoe-iccrg-prague-congestion-control]
Schepper, K. D., Tilmans, O., and B. Briscoe, "Prague Congestion Control", Work in Progress, Internet-Draft, draft-briscoe-iccrg-prague-congestion-control-00, , <https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/draft-briscoe-iccrg-prague-congestion-control-00>.
[I-D.briscoe-tsvwg-l4s-diffserv]
Briscoe, B., "Interactions between Low Latency, Low Loss, Scalable Throughput (L4S) and Differentiated Services", Work in Progress, Internet-Draft, draft-briscoe-tsvwg-l4s-diffserv-02, , <https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/draft-briscoe-tsvwg-l4s-diffserv-02>.
[I-D.cardwell-iccrg-bbr-congestion-control]
Cardwell, N., Cheng, Y., Yeganeh, S. H., Swett, I., and V. Jacobson, "BBR Congestion Control", Work in Progress, Internet-Draft, draft-cardwell-iccrg-bbr-congestion-control-02, , <https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/draft-cardwell-iccrg-bbr-congestion-control-02>.
[I-D.ietf-tsvwg-l4s-arch]
Briscoe, B., Schepper, K. D., Bagnulo, M., and G. White, "Low Latency, Low Loss, Scalable Throughput (L4S) Internet Service: Architecture", Work in Progress, Internet-Draft, draft-ietf-tsvwg-l4s-arch-17, , <https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/draft-ietf-tsvwg-l4s-arch-17>.
[L4Sdemo16]
Bondarenko, O., De Schepper, K., Tsang, I., and B. Briscoe, "Ultra-Low Delay for All: Live Experience, Live Analysis", Proc. MMSYS'16 pp33:1--33:4, , <http://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?doid=2910017.2910633 (videos of demos: https://riteproject.eu/dctth/#1511dispatchwg )>.
[L4S_5G]
Willars, P., Wittenmark, E., Ronkainen, H., Östberg, C., Johansson, I., Strand, J., Lédl, P., and D. Schnieders, "Enabling time-critical applications over 5G with rate adaptation", Ericsson - Deutsche Telekom White Paper BNEW-21:025455 Uen, , <https://www.ericsson.com/en/reports-and-papers/white-papers/enabling-time-critical-applications-over-5g-with-rate-adaptation>.
[Labovitz10]
Labovitz, C., Iekel-Johnson, S., McPherson, D., Oberheide, J., and F. Jahanian, "Internet Inter-Domain Traffic", Proc ACM SIGCOMM; ACM CCR 40(4):75--86, , <https://doi.org/10.1145/1851275.1851194>.
[LLD]
White, G., Sundaresan, K., and B. Briscoe, "Low Latency DOCSIS: Technology Overview", CableLabs White Paper , , <https://cablela.bs/low-latency-docsis-technology-overview-february-2019>.
[Mathis09]
Mathis, M., "Relentless Congestion Control", PFLDNeT'09 , , <http://www.hpcc.jp/pfldnet2009/Program_files/1569198525.pdf>.
[MEDF]
Menth, M., Schmid, M., Heiss, H., and T. Reim, "MEDF - a simple scheduling algorithm for two real-time transport service classes with application in the UTRAN", Proc. IEEE Conference on Computer Communications (INFOCOM'03) Vol.2 pp.1116-1122, , <http://infocom2003.ieee-infocom.org/papers/27_04.PDF>.
[PI2]
De Schepper, K., Bondarenko, O., Briscoe, B., and I. Tsang, "PI2: A Linearized AQM for both Classic and Scalable TCP", ACM CoNEXT'16 , , <https://riteproject.files.wordpress.com/2015/10/pi2_conext.pdf>.
[PI2param]
Briscoe, B., "PI2 Parameters", Technical Report TR-BB-2021-001 arXiv:2107.01003 [cs.NI], , <https://arxiv.org/abs/2107.01003>.
[PragueLinux]
Briscoe, B., De Schepper, K., Albisser, O., Misund, J., Tilmans, O., Kühlewind, M., and A.S. Ahmed, "Implementing the `TCP Prague' Requirements for Low Latency Low Loss Scalable Throughput (L4S)", Proc. Linux Netdev 0x13 , , <https://www.netdevconf.org/0x13/session.html?talk-tcp-prague-l4s>.
[RFC0970]
Nagle, J., "On Packet Switches With Infinite Storage", RFC 970, DOI 10.17487/RFC0970, , <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc970>.
[RFC2309]
Braden, B., Clark, D., Crowcroft, J., Davie, B., Deering, S., Estrin, D., Floyd, S., Jacobson, V., Minshall, G., Partridge, C., Peterson, L., Ramakrishnan, K., Shenker, S., Wroclawski, J., and L. Zhang, "Recommendations on Queue Management and Congestion Avoidance in the Internet", RFC 2309, DOI 10.17487/RFC2309, , <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2309>.
[RFC2914]
Floyd, S., "Congestion Control Principles", BCP 41, RFC 2914, DOI 10.17487/RFC2914, , <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2914>.
[RFC3246]
Davie, B., Charny, A., Bennet, J.C.R., Benson, K., Le Boudec, J.Y., Courtney, W., Davari, S., Firoiu, V., and D. Stiliadis, "An Expedited Forwarding PHB (Per-Hop Behavior)", RFC 3246, DOI 10.17487/RFC3246, , <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3246>.
[RFC3649]
Floyd, S., "HighSpeed TCP for Large Congestion Windows", RFC 3649, DOI 10.17487/RFC3649, , <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3649>.
[RFC5033]
Floyd, S. and M. Allman, "Specifying New Congestion Control Algorithms", BCP 133, RFC 5033, DOI 10.17487/RFC5033, , <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5033>.
[RFC5348]
Floyd, S., Handley, M., Padhye, J., and J. Widmer, "TCP Friendly Rate Control (TFRC): Protocol Specification", RFC 5348, DOI 10.17487/RFC5348, , <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5348>.
[RFC5681]
Allman, M., Paxson, V., and E. Blanton, "TCP Congestion Control", RFC 5681, DOI 10.17487/RFC5681, , <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5681>.
[RFC5706]
Harrington, D., "Guidelines for Considering Operations and Management of New Protocols and Protocol Extensions", RFC 5706, DOI 10.17487/RFC5706, , <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5706>.
[RFC7567]
Baker, F., Ed. and G. Fairhurst, Ed., "IETF Recommendations Regarding Active Queue Management", BCP 197, RFC 7567, DOI 10.17487/RFC7567, , <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7567>.
[RFC8033]
Pan, R., Natarajan, P., Baker, F., and G. White, "Proportional Integral Controller Enhanced (PIE): A Lightweight Control Scheme to Address the Bufferbloat Problem", RFC 8033, DOI 10.17487/RFC8033, , <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8033>.
[RFC8034]
White, G. and R. Pan, "Active Queue Management (AQM) Based on Proportional Integral Controller Enhanced PIE) for Data-Over-Cable Service Interface Specifications (DOCSIS) Cable Modems", RFC 8034, DOI 10.17487/RFC8034, , <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8034>.
[RFC8257]
Bensley, S., Thaler, D., Balasubramanian, P., Eggert, L., and G. Judd, "Data Center TCP (DCTCP): TCP Congestion Control for Data Centers", RFC 8257, DOI 10.17487/RFC8257, , <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8257>.
[RFC8290]
Hoeiland-Joergensen, T., McKenney, P., Taht, D., Gettys, J., and E. Dumazet, "The Flow Queue CoDel Packet Scheduler and Active Queue Management Algorithm", RFC 8290, DOI 10.17487/RFC8290, , <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8290>.
[RFC8298]
Johansson, I. and Z. Sarker, "Self-Clocked Rate Adaptation for Multimedia", RFC 8298, DOI 10.17487/RFC8298, , <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8298>.
[RFC8312]
Rhee, I., Xu, L., Ha, S., Zimmermann, A., Eggert, L., and R. Scheffenegger, "CUBIC for Fast Long-Distance Networks", RFC 8312, DOI 10.17487/RFC8312, , <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8312>.
[RFC8404]
Moriarty, K., Ed. and A. Morton, Ed., "Effects of Pervasive Encryption on Operators", RFC 8404, DOI 10.17487/RFC8404, , <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8404>.
[SCReAM]
Johansson, I., "SCReAM", github repository; , <https://github.com/EricssonResearch/scream/blob/master/README.md>.
[SigQ-Dyn]
Briscoe, B., "Rapid Signalling of Queue Dynamics", Technical Report TR-BB-2017-001 arXiv:1904.07044 [cs.NI], , <https://arxiv.org/abs/1904.07044>.

Appendix A. Example DualQ Coupled PI2 Algorithm

As a first concrete example, the pseudocode below gives the DualPI2 algorithm. DualPI2 follows the structure of the DualQ Coupled AQM framework in Figure 1. A simple ramp function (configured in units of queuing time) with unsmoothed ECN marking is used for the Native L4S AQM. The ramp can also be configured as a step function. The PI2 algorithm [PI2] is used for the Classic AQM. PI2 is an improved variant of the PIE AQM [RFC8033].

The pseudocode will be introduced in two passes. The first pass explains the core concepts, deferring handling of edge-cases like overload to the second pass. To aid comparison, line numbers are kept in step between the two passes by using letter suffixes where the longer code needs extra lines.

All variables are assumed to be floating point in their basic units (size in bytes, time in seconds, rates in bytes/second, alpha and beta in Hz, and probabilities from 0 to 1. Constants expressed in k (kilo), M (mega), G (giga), u (micro), m (milli) , %, ... are assumed to be converted to their appropriate multiple or fraction to represent the basic units. A real implementation that wants to use integer values needs to handle appropriate scaling factors and allow accordingly appropriate resolution of its integer types (including temporary internal values during calculations).

A full open source implementation for Linux is available at: https://github.com/L4STeam/sch_dualpi2_upstream and explained in [DualPI2Linux]. The specification of the DualQ Coupled AQM for DOCSIS cable modems and CMTSs is available in [DOCSIS3.1] and explained in [LLD].

A.1. Pass #1: Core Concepts

The pseudocode manipulates three main structures of variables: the packet (pkt), the L4S queue (lq) and the Classic queue (cq). The pseudocode consists of the following six functions:

  • The initialization function dualpi2_params_init(...) (Figure 2) that sets parameter defaults (the API for setting non-default values is omitted for brevity)
  • The enqueue function dualpi2_enqueue(lq, cq, pkt) (Figure 3)
  • The dequeue function dualpi2_dequeue(lq, cq, pkt) (Figure 4)
  • The recurrence function recur(q, likelihood) for de-randomized ECN marking (shown at the end of Figure 4).
  • The L4S AQM function laqm(qdelay) (Figure 5) used to calculate the ECN-marking probability for the L4S queue
  • The base AQM function that implements the PI algorithm dualpi2_update(lq, cq) (Figure 6) used to regularly update the base probability (p'), which is squared for the Classic AQM as well as being coupled across to the L4S queue.

It also uses the following functions that are not shown in full here:

  • scheduler(), which selects between the head packets of the two queues; the choice of scheduler technology is discussed later;
  • cq.byt() or lq.byt() returns the current length (aka. backlog) of the relevant queue in bytes;
  • cq.len() or lq.len() returns the current length of the relevant queue in packets;
  • cq.time() or lq.time() returns the current queuing delay (aka. sojourn time or service time) of the relevant queue in units of time (see Note a);
  • mark(pkt) and drop(pkt) for ECN-marking and dropping a packet;

In experiments so far (building on experiments with PIE) on broadband access links ranging from 4 Mb/s to 200 Mb/s with base RTTs from 5 ms to 100 ms, DualPI2 achieves good results with the default parameters in Figure 2. The parameters are categorised by whether they relate to the Base PI2 AQM, the L4S AQM or the framework coupling them together. Constants and variables derived from these parameters are also included at the end of each category. Each parameter is explained as it is encountered in the walk-through of the pseudocode below, and the rationale for the chosen defaults are given so that sensible values can be used in scenarios other than the regular public Internet.

1:  dualpi2_params_init(...) {         % Set input parameter defaults
2:    % DualQ Coupled framework parameters
5:    limit = MAX_LINK_RATE * 250 ms               % Dual buffer size
3:    k = 2                                         % Coupling factor
4:    % NOT SHOWN % scheduler-dependent weight or equival't parameter
6:
7:    % PI2 Classic AQM parameters
8:    target = 15 ms                             % Queue delay target
9:    RTT_max = 100 ms                      % Worst case RTT expected
10:   % PI2 constants derived from above PI2 parameters
11:   p_Cmax = min(1/k^2, 1)             % Max Classic drop/mark prob
12:   Tupdate = min(target, RTT_max/3)        % PI sampling interval
13:   alpha = 0.1 * Tupdate / RTT_max^2      % PI integral gain in Hz
14:   beta = 0.3 / RTT_max               % PI proportional gain in Hz
15:
16:   % L4S ramp AQM parameters
17:   minTh = 800 us        % L4S min marking threshold in time units
18:   range = 400 us                % Range of L4S ramp in time units
19:   Th_len = 1 pkt           % Min L4S marking threshold in packets
20:   % L4S constants
21:   p_Lmax = 1                               % Max L4S marking prob
22: }
Figure 2: Example Header Pseudocode for DualQ Coupled PI2 AQM

The overall goal of the code is to apply the marking and dropping probabilities for L4S and Classic traffic (p_L and p_C). These are derived from the underlying base probabilities p'_L and p' driven respectively by the traffic in the L and C queues. The marking probability for the L queue (p_L) depends on both the base probability in its own queue (p'_L) and a probability called p_CL, which is coupled across from p' in the C queue (see Section 2.4 for the derivation of the specific equations and dependencies).

The probabilities p_CL and p_C are derived in lines 4 and 5 of the dualpi2_update() function (Figure 6) then used in the dualpi2_dequeue() function where p_L is also derived from p_CL at line 6 (Figure 4). The code walk-through below builds up to explaining that part of the code eventually, but it starts from packet arrival.

1:  dualpi2_enqueue(lq, cq, pkt) { % Test limit and classify lq or cq
2:    if ( lq.byt() + cq.byt() + MTU > limit)
3:      drop(pkt)                     % drop packet if buffer is full
4:    timestamp(pkt)                  % attach arrival time to packet
5:    % Packet classifier
6:    if ( ecn(pkt) modulo 2 == 1 )         % ECN bits = ECT(1) or CE
7:      lq.enqueue(pkt)
8:    else                             % ECN bits = not-ECT or ECT(0)
9:      cq.enqueue(pkt)
10: }
Figure 3: Example Enqueue Pseudocode for DualQ Coupled PI2 AQM
1:  dualpi2_dequeue(lq, cq, pkt) {     % Couples L4S & Classic queues
2:    while ( lq.byt() + cq.byt() > 0 ) {
3:      if ( scheduler() == lq ) {
4:        lq.dequeue(pkt)                      % Scheduler chooses lq
5:        p'_L = laqm(lq.time())                        % Native LAQM
6:        p_L = max(p'_L, p_CL)                  % Combining function
7:        if ( recur(lq, p_L) )                      % Linear marking
8:          mark(pkt)
9:      } else {
10:       cq.dequeue(pkt)                      % Scheduler chooses cq
11:       if ( recur(cq, p_C) ) {            % probability p_C = p'^2
12:         if ( ecn(pkt) == 0 ) {           % if ECN field = not-ECT
13:           drop(pkt)                                % squared drop
14:           continue        % continue to the top of the while loop
15:         }
16:         mark(pkt)                                  % squared mark
17:       }
18:     }
19:     return(pkt)                      % return the packet and stop
20:   }
21:   return(NULL)                             % no packet to dequeue
22: }

23: recur(q, likelihood) {   % Returns TRUE with a certain likelihood
24:   q.count += likelihood
25:   if (q.count > 1) {
26:     q.count -= 1
27:     return TRUE
28:   }
29:   return FALSE
30: }
Figure 4: Example Dequeue Pseudocode for DualQ Coupled PI2 AQM

When packets arrive, first a common queue limit is checked as shown in line 2 of the enqueuing pseudocode in Figure 3. This assumes a shared buffer for the two queues (Note b discusses the merits of separate buffers). In order to avoid any bias against larger packets, 1 MTU of space is always allowed and the limit is deliberately tested before enqueue.

If limit is not exceeded, the packet is timestamped in line 4. This assumes that queue delay is measured using the sojourn time technique (see Note a for alternatives).

At lines 5-9, the packet is classified and enqueued to the Classic or L4S queue dependent on the least significant bit of the ECN field in the IP header (line 6). Packets with a codepoint having an LSB of 0 (Not-ECT and ECT(0)) will be enqueued in the Classic queue. Otherwise, ECT(1) and CE packets will be enqueued in the L4S queue. Optional additional packet classification flexibility is omitted for brevity (see the L4S ECN protocol [I-D.ietf-tsvwg-ecn-l4s-id]).

The dequeue pseudocode (Figure 4) is repeatedly called whenever the lower layer is ready to forward a packet. It schedules one packet for dequeuing (or zero if the queue is empty) then returns control to the caller, so that it does not block while that packet is being forwarded. While making this dequeue decision, it also makes the necessary AQM decisions on dropping or marking. The alternative of applying the AQMs at enqueue would shift some processing from the critical time when each packet is dequeued. However, it would also add a whole queue of delay to the control signals, making the control loop sloppier (for a typical RTT it would double the Classic queue's feedback delay).

All the dequeue code is contained within a large while loop so that if it decides to drop a packet, it will continue until it selects a packet to schedule. Line 3 of the dequeue pseudocode is where the scheduler chooses between the L4S queue (lq) and the Classic queue (cq). Detailed implementation of the scheduler is not shown (see discussion later).

  • If an L4S packet is scheduled, in lines 7 and 8 the packet is ECN-marked with likelihood p_L. The recur() function at the end of Figure 4 is used, which is preferred over random marking because it avoids delay due to randomization when interpreting congestion signals, but it still desynchronizes the saw-teeth of the flows. Line 6 calculates p_L as the maximum of the coupled L4S probability p_CL and the probability from the native L4S AQM p'_L. This implements the max() function shown in Figure 1 to couple the outputs of the two AQMs together. Of the two probabilities input to p_L in line 6:

    • p'_L is calculated per packet in line 5 by the laqm() function (see Figure 5),
    • Whereas p_CL is maintained by the dualpi2_update() function which runs every Tupdate (Tupdate is set in line 12 of Figure 2).
  • If a Classic packet is scheduled, lines 10 to 17 drop or mark the packet with probability p_C.

The Native L4S AQM algorithm (Figure 5) is a ramp function, similar to the RED algorithm, but simplified as follows:

  • The extent of the ramp is defined in units of queuing delay, not bytes, so that configuration remains invariant as the queue departure rate varies.
  • It uses instantaneous queueing delay, which avoids the complexity of smoothing, but also avoids embedding a worst-case RTT of smoothing delay in the network (see Section 2.1).
  • The ramp rises linearly directly from 0 to 1, not to an intermediate value of p'_L as RED would, because there is no need to keep ECN marking probability low.
  • Marking does not have to be randomized. Determinism is used instead of randomness; to reduce the delay necessary to smooth out the noise of randomness from the signal.

The ramp function requires two configuration parameters, the minimum threshold (minTh) and the width of the ramp (range), both in units of queuing time, as shown in lines 17 & 18 of the initialization function in Figure 2. The ramp function can be configured as a step (see Note c).

Although the DCTCP paper [Alizadeh-stability] recommends an ECN marking threshold of 0.17*RTT_typ, it also shows that the threshold can be much shallower with hardly any worse under-utilization of the link (because the amplitude of DCTCP's sawteeth is so small). Based on extensive experiments, for the public Internet the default minimum ECN marking threshold (target) in Figure 2 is considered a good compromise, even though it is significantly smaller fraction of RTT_typ.

1:  laqm(qdelay) {               % Returns native L4S AQM probability
2:    if (qdelay >= maxTh)
3:      return 1
4:    else if (qdelay > minTh)
5:      return (qdelay - minTh)/range  % Divide could use a bit-shift
6:    else
7:      return 0
8:  }
Figure 5: Example Pseudocode for the Native L4S AQM

1:  dualpi2_update(lq, cq) {                % Update p' every Tupdate
2:    curq = cq.time()  % use queuing time of first-in Classic packet
3:    p' = p' + alpha * (curq - target) + beta * (curq - prevq)
4:    p_CL = k * p'  % Coupled L4S prob = base prob * coupling factor
5:    p_C = p'^2                       % Classic prob = (base prob)^2
6:    prevq = curq
7:  }
Figure 6: Example PI-Update Pseudocode for DualQ Coupled PI2 AQM

(Clamping p' within the range [0,1] omitted for clarity - see text)

The coupled marking probability, p_CL depends on the base probability (p'), which is kept up to date by the core PI algorithm in Figure 6 executed every Tupdate.

Note that p' solely depends on the queuing time in the Classic queue. In line 2, the current queuing delay (curq) is evaluated from how long the head packet was in the Classic queue (cq). The function cq.time() (not shown) subtracts the time stamped at enqueue from the current time (see Note a) and implicitly takes the current queuing delay as 0 if the queue is empty.

The algorithm centres on line 3, which is a classical Proportional-Integral (PI) controller that alters p' dependent on: a) the error between the current queuing delay (curq) and the target queuing delay, 'target'; and b) the change in queuing delay since the last sample. The name 'PI' represents the fact that the second factor (how fast the queue is growing) is Proportional to load while the first is the Integral of the load (so it removes any standing queue in excess of the target).

The target parameter can be set based on local knowledge, but the aim is for the default to be a good compromise for anywhere in the intended deployment environment -- the public Internet. According to [PI2param], the target queuing delay on line 9 of Figure 2 is related to the typical base RTT worldwide, RTT_typ, by two factors: target = RTT_typ * g * f. Below we summarize the rationale behind these factors and introduce a further adjustment. The two factors ensure that, in a large proportion of cases (say 90%), the sawtooth variations in RTT of a single flow will fit within the buffer without underutilizing the link. Frankly, these factors are educated guesses, but with the emphasis closer to 'educated' than to 'guess' (see [PI2param] for full background):

  • RTT_typ is taken as 25 ms. This is based on an average CDN latency measured in each country weighted by the number of Internet users in that country to produce an overall weighted average for the Internet [PI2param]. Countries were ranked by number of Internet users, and once 90% of Internet users were covered, smaller countries were excluded to avoid unrepresentatively small sample sizes. Also, importantly, the data for the average CDN latency in China (with the largest number of Internet users) has been removed, because the CDN latency was a significant outlier and, on reflection, the experimental technique seemed inappropriate to the CDN market in China.
  • g is taken as 0.38. The factor g is a geometry factor that characterizes the shape of the sawteeth of prevalent Classic congestion controllers. The geometry factor is the fraction of the amplitude of the sawtooth variability in queue delay that lies below the AQM's target. For instance, at low bit rate, the geometry factor of standard Reno is 0.5, but at higher rates it tends to just under 1. According to the census of congestion controllers conducted by Mishra et al in Jul-Oct 2019 [CCcensus19], most Classic TCP traffic uses Cubic. And, according to the analysis in [PI2param], if running over a PI2 AQM, a large proportion of this Cubic traffic would be in its Reno-Friendly mode, which has a geometry factor of ~0.39 (all known implementations). The rest of the Cubic traffic would be in true Cubic mode, which has a geometry factor of ~0.36. Without modelling the sawtooth profiles from all the other less prevalent congestion controllers, we estimate a 7:3 weighted average of these two, resulting in an average geometry factor of 0.38.
  • f is taken as 2. The factor f is a safety factor that increases the target queue to allow for the distribution of RTT_typ around its mean. Otherwise the target queue would only avoid underutilization for those users below the mean. It also provides a safety margin for the proportion of paths in use that span beyond the distance between a user and their local CDN. Currently no data is available on the variance of queue delay around the mean in each region, so there is plenty of room for this guess to become more educated.
  • [PI2param] recommends target = RTT_typ * g * f = 25ms * 0.38 * 2 = 19 ms. However a further adjustment is warranted, because target is moving year on year. The paper is based on data collected in 2019, and it mentions evidence from speedtest.net that suggests RTT_typ reduced by 17% (fixed) or 12% (mobile) between 2020 and 2021. Therefore we recommend a default of target = 15 ms at the time of writing (2021).

Operators can always use the data and discussion in [PI2param] to configure a more appropriate target for their environment. For instance, an operator might wish to question the assumptions called out in that paper, such as the goal of no underutilization for a large majority of single flow transfers (given many large transfers use multiple flows to avoid the scaling limitations of Classic flows).

The two 'gain factors' in line 3 of Figure 6, alpha and beta, respectively weight how strongly each of the two elements (Integral and Proportional) alters p'. They are in units of 'per second of delay' or Hz, because they transform differences in queueing delay into changes in probability (assuming probability has a value from 0 to 1).

Alpha and beta determine how much p' ought to change after each update interval (Tupdate). For smaller Tupdate, p' should change by the same amount per second, but in finer more frequent steps. So alpha depends on Tupdate (see line 13 of the initialization function in Figure 2). It is best to update p' as frequently as possible, but Tupdate will probably be constrained by hardware performance. As shown in line 13, the update interval should be frequent enough to update at least once in the time taken for the target queue to drain ('target') as long as it updates at least three times per maximum RTT. Tupdate defaults to 16 ms in the reference Linux implementation because it has to be rounded to a multiple of 4 ms. For link rates from 4 to 200 Mb/s and a maximum RTT of 100ms, it has been verified through extensive testing that Tupdate=16ms (as also recommended in the PIE spec [RFC8033]) is sufficient.

The choice of alpha and beta also determines the AQM's stable operating range. The AQM ought to change p' as fast as possible in response to changes in load without over-compensating and therefore causing oscillations in the queue. Therefore, the values of alpha and beta also depend on the RTT of the expected worst-case flow (RTT_max).

The maximum RTT of a PI controller (RTT_max in line 10 of Figure 2) is not an absolute maximum, but more instability (more queue variability) sets in for long-running flows with an RTT above this value. The propagation delay half way round the planet and back in glass fibre is 200 ms. However, hardly any traffic traverses such extreme paths and, since the significant consolidation of Internet traffic between 2007 and 2009 [Labovitz10], a high and growing proportion of all Internet traffic (roughly two-thirds at the time of writing) has been served from content distribution networks (CDNs) or 'cloud' services distributed close to end-users. The Internet might change again, but for now, designing for a maximum RTT of 100ms is a good compromise between faster queue control at low RTT and some instability on the occasions when a longer path is necessary.

Recommended derivations of the gain constants alpha and beta can be approximated for Reno over a PI2 AQM as: alpha = 0.1 * Tupdate / RTT_max^2; beta = 0.3 / RTT_max, as shown in lines 14 & 15 of Figure 2. These are derived from the stability analysis in [PI2]. For the default values of Tupdate=16 ms and RTT_max = 100 ms, they result in alpha = 0.16; beta = 3.2 (discrepancies are due to rounding). These defaults have been verified with a wide range of link rates, target delays and a range of traffic models with mixed and similar RTTs, short and long flows, etc.

In corner cases, p' can overflow the range [0,1] so the resulting value of p' has to be bounded (omitted from the pseudocode). Then, as already explained, the coupled and Classic probabilities are derived from the new p' in lines 4 and 5 of Figure 6 as p_CL = k*p' and p_C = p'^2.

Because the coupled L4S marking probability (p_CL) is factored up by k, the dynamic gain parameters alpha and beta are also inherently factored up by k for the L4S queue. So, the effective gain factor for the L4S queue is k*alpha (with defaults alpha = 0.16 Hz and k=2, effective L4S alpha = 0.32 Hz).

Unlike in PIE [RFC8033], alpha and beta do not need to be tuned every Tupdate dependent on p'. Instead, in PI2, alpha and beta are independent of p' because the squaring applied to Classic traffic tunes them inherently. This is explained in [PI2], which also explains why this more principled approach removes the need for most of the heuristics that had to be added to PIE.

Nonetheless, an implementer might wish to add selected details to either AQM. For instance the Linux reference DualPI2 implementation includes the following (not shown in the pseudocode above):

  • Classic and coupled marking or dropping (i.e. based on p_C and p_CL from the PI controller) is not applied to a packet if the aggregate queue length in bytes is < 2 MTU (prior to enqueuing the packet or dequeuing it, depending on whether the AQM is configured to be applied at enqueue or dequeue);
  • In the WRR scheduler, the 'credit' indicating which queue should transmit is only changed if there are packets in both queues (i.e. if there is actual resource contention). This means that a properly paced L flow might never be delayed by the WRR. The WRR credit is reset in favour of the L queue when the link is idle.

An implementer might also wish to add other heuristics, e.g. burst protection [RFC8033] or enhanced burst protection [RFC8034].

Notes:

  1. The drain rate of the queue can vary if it is scheduled relative to other queues, or to cater for fluctuations in a wireless medium. To auto-adjust to changes in drain rate, the queue needs to be measured in time, not bytes or packets [AQMmetrics], [CoDel]. Queuing delay could be measured directly by storing a per-packet time-stamp as each packet is enqueued, and subtracting this from the system time when the packet is dequeued. If time-stamping is not easy to introduce with certain hardware, queuing delay could be predicted indirectly by dividing the size of the queue by the predicted departure rate, which might be known precisely for some link technologies (see for example in DOCSIS PIE [RFC8034]).
  2. Line 2 of the dualpi2_enqueue() function (Figure 3) assumes an implementation where lq and cq share common buffer memory. An alternative implementation could use separate buffers for each queue, in which case the arriving packet would have to be classified first to determine which buffer to check for available space. The choice is a trade off; a shared buffer can use less memory whereas separate buffers isolate the L4S queue from tail-drop due to large bursts of Classic traffic (e.g. a Classic Reno TCP during slow-start over a long RTT).
  3. There has been some concern that using the step function of DCTCP for the Native L4S AQM requires end-systems to smooth the signal for an unnecessarily large number of round trips to ensure sufficient fidelity. A ramp is no worse than a step in initial experiments with existing DCTCP. Therefore, it is recommended that a ramp is configured in place of a step, which will allow congestion control algorithms to investigate faster smoothing algorithms.

    A ramp is more general that a step, because an operator can effectively turn the ramp into a step function, as used by DCTCP, by setting the range to zero. There will not be a divide by zero problem at line 5 of Figure 5 because, if minTh is equal to maxTh, the condition for this ramp calculation cannot arise.

A.2. Pass #2: Edge-Case Details

This section takes a second pass through the pseudocode adding details of two edge-cases: low link rate and overload. Figure 7 repeats the dequeue function of Figure 4, but with details of both edge-cases added. Similarly Figure 8 repeats the core PI algorithm of Figure 6, but with overload details added. The initialization, enqueue, L4S AQM and recur functions are unchanged.

The link rate can be so low that it takes a single packet queue longer to serialize than the threshold delay at which ECN marking starts to be applied in the L queue. Therefore, a minimum marking threshold parameter in units of packets rather than time is necessary (Th_len, default 1 packet in line 19 of Figure 2) to ensure that the ramp does not trigger excessive marking on slow links. Where an implementation knows the link rate, it can set up this minimum at the time it is configured. For instance, it would divide 1 MTU by the link rate to convert it into a serialization time, then if the lower threshold of the Native L AQM ramp was lower than this serialization time, it could increase the thresholds to shift the bottom of the ramp to 2 MTU. This is the approach used in DOCSIS [DOCSIS3.1], because the configured link rate is dedicated to the DualQ.

The pseudocode given here applies where the link rate is unknown, which is more common for software implementations that might be deployed in scenarios where the link is shared with other queues. In lines 5a to 5d in Figure 7 the native L4S marking probability, p'_L, is zeroed if the queue is only 1 packet (in the default configuration).

Linux implementation note:

  • In Linux, the check that the queue exceeds Th_len before marking with the native L4S AQM is actually at enqueue, not dequeue, otherwise it would exempt the last packet of a burst from being marked. The result of the check is conveyed from enqueue to the dequeue function via a boolean in the packet metadata.

Persistent overload is deemed to have occurred when Classic drop/marking probability reaches p_Cmax. Above this point, the Classic drop probability is applied to both L and C queues, irrespective of whether any packet is ECN-capable. ECT packets that are not dropped can still be ECN-marked.

In line 10 of the initialization function (Figure 2), the maximum Classic drop probability p_Cmax = min(1/k^2, 1) or 1/4 for the default coupling factor k=2. In practice, 25% has been found to be a good threshold to preserve fairness between ECN capable and non ECN capable traffic. This protects the queues against both temporary overload from responsive flows and more persistent overload from any unresponsive traffic that falsely claims to be responsive to ECN.

When the Classic ECN marking probability reaches the p_Cmax threshold (1/k^2), the marking probability coupled to the L4S queue, p_CL will always be 100% for any k (by equation (1) in Section 2). So, for readability, the constant p_Lmax is defined as 1 in line 22 of the initialization function (Figure 2). This is intended to ensure that the L4S queue starts to introduce dropping once ECN-marking saturates at 100% and can rise no further. The 'Prague L4S' requirements [I-D.ietf-tsvwg-ecn-l4s-id] state that, when an L4S congestion control detects a drop, it falls back to a response that coexists with 'Classic' Reno congestion control. So it is correct that, when the L4S queue drops packets, it drops them proportional to p'^2, as if they are Classic packets.

The two queues each test for overload in lines 4b and 12b of the dequeue function (Figure 7). Lines 8c to 8g drop L4S packets with probability p'^2. Lines 8h to 8i mark the remaining packets with probability p_CL. Given p_Lmax = 1, all remaining packets will be marked because, to have reached the else block at line 8b, p_CL >= 1.

Line 2a in the core PI algorithm (Figure 8) deals with overload of the L4S queue when there is little or no Classic traffic. This is necessary, because the core PI algorithm maintains the appropriate drop probability to regulate overload, but it depends on the length of the Classic queue. If there is little or no Classic queue the naive PI update function in Figure 6 would drop nothing, even if the L4S queue were overloaded - so tail drop would have to take over (lines 2 and 3 of Figure 3).

Instead, line 2a of the full PI update function in Figure 8 ensures that the base PI AQM in line 3 is driven by whichever of the two queue delays is greater, but line 3 still always uses the same Classic target (default 15 ms). If L queue delay is greater just because there is little or no Classic traffic, normally it will still be well below the base AQM target. This is because L4S traffic is also governed by the shallow threshold of its own native AQM (lines 5 and 6 of the dequeue algorithm in Figure 7). So the base AQM will be driven to zero and not contribute. However, if the L queue is overloaded by traffic that is unresponsive to its marking, the max() in line 2 enables the L queue to smoothly take over driving the base AQM into overload mode even if there is little or no Classic traffic. Then the base AQM will keep the L queue to the Classic target (default 15 ms) by shedding L packets.

1:  dualpi2_dequeue(lq, cq, pkt) {     % Couples L4S & Classic queues
2:    while ( lq.byt() + cq.byt() > 0 ) {
3:      if ( scheduler() == lq ) {
4a:       lq.dequeue(pkt)                             % L4S scheduled
4b:       if ( p_CL < p_Lmax ) {      % Check for overload saturation
5a:         if (lq.len()>Th_len)                   % >1 packet queued
5b:           p'_L = laqm(lq.time())                    % Native LAQM
5c:         else
5d:           p'_L = 0                 % Suppress marking 1 pkt queue
6:          p_L = max(p'_L, p_CL)                % Combining function
7:          if ( recur(lq, p_L)                       %Linear marking
8a:           mark(pkt)
8b:       } else {                              % overload saturation
8c:         if ( recur(lq, p_C) ) {          % probability p_C = p'^2
8e:           drop(pkt)      % revert to Classic drop due to overload
8f:           continue        % continue to the top of the while loop
8g:         }
8h:         if ( recur(lq, p_CL) )        % probability p_CL = k * p'
8i:           mark(pkt)         % linear marking of remaining packets
8j:       }
9:      } else {
10:       cq.dequeue(pkt)                         % Classic scheduled
11:       if ( recur(cq, p_C) ) {            % probability p_C = p'^2
12a:        if ( (ecn(pkt) == 0)                % ECN field = not-ECT
12b:             OR (p_C >= p_Cmax) ) {       % Overload disables ECN
13:           drop(pkt)                     % squared drop, redo loop
14:           continue        % continue to the top of the while loop
15:         }
16:         mark(pkt)                                  % squared mark
17:       }
18:     }
19:     return(pkt)                      % return the packet and stop
20:   }
21:   return(NULL)                             % no packet to dequeue
22: }
Figure 7: Example Dequeue Pseudocode for DualQ Coupled PI2 AQM (Including Code for Edge-Cases)
1:  dualpi2_update(lq, cq) {                % Update p' every Tupdate
2a:   curq = max(cq.time(), lq.time())    % use greatest queuing time
3:    p' = p' + alpha * (curq - target) + beta * (curq - prevq)
4:    p_CL = p' * k  % Coupled L4S prob = base prob * coupling factor
5:    p_C = p'^2                       % Classic prob = (base prob)^2
6:    prevq = curq
7:  }
Figure 8: Example PI-Update Pseudocode for DualQ Coupled PI2 AQM (Including Overload Code)

The choice of scheduler technology is critical to overload protection (see Section 4.2.2).

  • A well-understood weighted scheduler such as weighted round robin (WRR) is recommended. As long as the scheduler weight for Classic is small (e.g. 1/16), its exact value is unimportant because it does not normally determine capacity shares. The weight is only important to prevent unresponsive L4S traffic starving Classic traffic in the short term (see Section 4.2.2). This is because capacity sharing between the queues is normally determined by the coupled congestion signal, which overrides the scheduler, by making L4S sources leave roughly equal per-flow capacity available for Classic flows.
  • Alternatively, a time-shifted FIFO (TS-FIFO) could be used. It works by selecting the head packet that has waited the longest, biased against the Classic traffic by a time-shift of tshift. To implement time-shifted FIFO, the scheduler() function in line 3 of the dequeue code would simply be implemented as the scheduler() function at the bottom of Figure 10 in Appendix B. For the public Internet a good value for tshift is 50ms. For private networks with smaller diameter, about 4*target would be reasonable. TS-FIFO is a very simple scheduler, but complexity might need to be added to address some deficiencies (which is why it is not recommended over WRR):

    • TS-FIFO does not fully isolate latency in the L4S queue from uncontrolled bursts in the Classic queue;
    • TS-FIFO is only appropriate if time-stamping of packets is feasible;
    • Even if time-stamping is supported, the sojourn time of the head packet is always stale. For instance, if a burst arrives at an empty queue, the sojourn time only fully measures the burst's delay when its last packet is dequeued, even though the queue knew about the burst from the start - so it could have signalled congestion earlier. To remedy this, each head packet can be marked when it is dequeued based on the expected delay of the tail packet behind it, as explained below, rather than based on the head packet's own delay due to the packets in front of it. [Heist21] identifies a specific scenario where bursty traffic significantly hits utilization of the L queue. If this effect proves to be more widely applicable, it is believed that using the delay behind the head would improve performance.

      The delay behind the head can be implemented by dividing the backlog at dequeue by the link rate or equivalently multiplying the backlog by the delay per unit of backlog. The implementation details will depend on whether the link rate is known; if it is not, a moving average of the delay per unit backlog can be maintained. This delay consists of serialization as well as media acquisition for shared media. So the details will depend strongly on the specific link technology, This approach should be less sensitive to timing errors and cost less in operations and memory than the otherwise equivalent 'scaled sojourn time' metric, which is the sojourn time of a packet scaled by the ratio of the queue sizes when the packet departed and arrived [SigQ-Dyn].

  • A strict priority scheduler would be inappropriate as discussed in Section 4.2.2.

Appendix B. Example DualQ Coupled Curvy RED Algorithm

As another example of a DualQ Coupled AQM algorithm, the pseudocode below gives the Curvy RED based algorithm. Although the AQM was designed to be efficient in integer arithmetic, to aid understanding it is first given using floating point arithmetic (Figure 10). Then, one possible optimization for integer arithmetic is given, also in pseudocode (Figure 11). To aid comparison, the line numbers are kept in step between the two by using letter suffixes where the longer code needs extra lines.

B.1. Curvy RED in Pseudocode

The pseudocode manipulates three main structures of variables: the packet (pkt), the L4S queue (lq) and the Classic queue (cq) and consists of the following five functions:

  • The initialization function cred_params_init(...) (Figure 2) that sets parameter defaults (the API for setting non-default values is omitted for brevity);
  • The dequeue function cred_dequeue(lq, cq, pkt) (Figure 4);
  • The scheduling function scheduler(), which selects between the head packets of the two queues.

It also uses the following functions that are either shown elsewhere, or not shown in full here:

  • The enqueue function, which is identical to that used for DualPI2, dualpi2_enqueue(lq, cq, pkt) in Figure 3;
  • mark(pkt) and drop(pkt) for ECN-marking and dropping a packet;
  • cq.byt() or lq.byt() returns the current length (aka. backlog) of the relevant queue in bytes;
  • cq.time() or lq.time() returns the current queuing delay (aka. sojourn time or service time) of the relevant queue in units of time (see Note a in Appendix A.1).

Because Curvy RED was evaluated before DualPI2, certain improvements introduced for DualPI2 were not evaluated for Curvy RED. In the pseudocode below, the straightforward improvements have been added on the assumption they will provide similar benefits, but that has not been proven experimentally. They are: i) a conditional priority scheduler instead of strict priority ii) a time-based threshold for the native L4S AQM; iii) ECN support for the Classic AQM. A recent evaluation has proved that a minimum ECN-marking threshold (minTh) greatly improves performance, so this is also included in the pseudocode.

Overload protection has not been added to the Curvy RED pseudocode below so as not to detract from the main features. It would be added in exactly the same way as in Appendix A.2 for the DualPI2 pseudocode. The native L4S AQM uses a step threshold, but a ramp like that described for DualPI2 could be used instead. The scheduler uses the simple TS-FIFO algorithm, but it could be replaced with WRR.

The Curvy RED algorithm has not been maintained or evaluated to the same degree as the DualPI2 algorithm. In initial experiments on broadband access links ranging from 4 Mb/s to 200 Mb/s with base RTTs from 5 ms to 100 ms, Curvy RED achieved good results with the default parameters in Figure 9.

The parameters are categorised by whether they relate to the Classic AQM, the L4S AQM or the framework coupling them together. Constants and variables derived from these parameters are also included at the end of each category. These are the raw input parameters for the algorithm. A configuration front-end could accept more meaningful parameters (e.g. RTT_max and RTT_typ) and convert them into these raw parameters, as has been done for DualPI2 in Appendix A. Where necessary, parameters are explained further in the walk-through of the pseudocode below.

1:  cred_params_init(...) {            % Set input parameter defaults
2:    % DualQ Coupled framework parameters
3:    limit = MAX_LINK_RATE * 250 ms               % Dual buffer size
4:    k' = 1                        % Coupling factor as a power of 2
5:    tshift = 50 ms                % Time shift of TS-FIFO scheduler
6:    % Constants derived from Classic AQM parameters
7:    k = 2^k'                    % Coupling factor from Equation (1)
6:
7:    % Classic AQM parameters
8:    g_C = 5            % EWMA smoothing parameter as a power of 1/2
9:    S_C = -1          % Classic ramp scaling factor as a power of 2
10:   minTh = 500 ms    % No Classic drop/mark below this queue delay
11:   % Constants derived from Classic AQM parameters
12:   gamma = 2^(-g_C)                     % EWMA smoothing parameter
13:   range_C = 2^S_C                         % Range of Classic ramp
14:
15:   % L4S AQM parameters
16:   T = 1 ms             % Queue delay threshold for native L4S AQM
17:   % Constants derived from above parameters
18:   S_L = S_C - k'        % L4S ramp scaling factor as a power of 2
19:   range_L = 2^S_L                             % Range of L4S ramp
20: }
Figure 9: Example Header Pseudocode for DualQ Coupled Curvy RED AQM
1:  cred_dequeue(lq, cq, pkt) {       % Couples L4S & Classic queues
2:    while ( lq.byt() + cq.byt() > 0 ) {
3:      if ( scheduler() == lq ) {
4:        lq.dequeue(pkt)                            % L4S scheduled
5a:       p_CL = (Q_C - minTh) / range_L
5b:       if (  ( lq.time() > T )
5c:          OR ( p_CL > maxrand(U) ) )
6:          mark(pkt)
7:      } else {
8:        cq.dequeue(pkt)                        % Classic scheduled
9a:       Q_C = gamma * cq.time() + (1-gamma) * Q_C % Classic Q EWMA
10a:      sqrt_p_C = (Q_C - minTh) / range_C
10b:      if ( sqrt_p_C > maxrand(2*U) ) {
11:         if ( (ecn(pkt) == 0)  {            % ECN field = not-ECT
12:           drop(pkt)                    % Squared drop, redo loop
13:           continue       % continue to the top of the while loop
14:         }
15:         mark(pkt)
16:       }
17:     }
18:     return(pkt)                % return the packet and stop here
19:   }
20:   return(NULL)                            % no packet to dequeue
21: }

22: maxrand(u) {                % return the max of u random numbers
23:   maxr=0
24:   while (u-- > 0)
25:     maxr = max(maxr, rand())                   % 0 <= rand() < 1
26:   return(maxr)
27: }

28: scheduler() {
29:   if ( lq.time() + tshift >= cq.time() )
30:     return lq;
31:   else
32:     return cq;
33: }
Figure 10: Example Dequeue Pseudocode for DualQ Coupled Curvy RED AQM

The dequeue pseudocode (Figure 10) is repeatedly called whenever the lower layer is ready to forward a packet. It schedules one packet for dequeuing (or zero if the queue is empty) then returns control to the caller, so that it does not block while that packet is being forwarded. While making this dequeue decision, it also makes the necessary AQM decisions on dropping or marking. The alternative of applying the AQMs at enqueue would shift some processing from the critical time when each packet is dequeued. However, it would also add a whole queue of delay to the control signals, making the control loop very sloppy.

The code is written assuming the AQMs are applied on dequeue (Note 1). All the dequeue code is contained within a large while loop so that if it decides to drop a packet, it will continue until it selects a packet to schedule. If both queues are empty, the routine returns NULL at line 20. Line 3 of the dequeue pseudocode is where the conditional priority scheduler chooses between the L4S queue (lq) and the Classic queue (cq). The time-shifted FIFO scheduler is shown at lines 28-33, which would be suitable if simplicity is paramount (see Note 2).

Within each queue, the decision whether to forward, drop or mark is taken as follows (to simplify the explanation, it is assumed that U=1):

L4S:

If the test at line 3 determines there is an L4S packet to dequeue, the tests at lines 5b and 5c determine whether to mark it. The first is a simple test of whether the L4S queue delay (lq.time()) is greater than a step threshold T (Note 3). The second test is similar to the random ECN marking in RED, but with the following differences: i) marking depends on queuing time, not bytes, in order to scale for any link rate without being reconfigured; ii) marking of the L4S queue depends on a logical OR of two tests; one against its own queuing time and one against the queuing time of the other (Classic) queue; iii) the tests are against the instantaneous queuing time of the L4S queue, but a smoothed average of the other (Classic) queue; iv) the queue is compared with the maximum of U random numbers (but if U=1, this is the same as the single random number used in RED).

Specifically, in line 5a the coupled marking probability p_CL is set to the amount by which the averaged Classic queueing delay Q_C exceeds the minimum queuing delay threshold (minTh) all divided by the L4S scaling parameter range_L. range_L represents the queuing delay (in seconds) added to minTh at which marking probability would hit 100%. Then in line 5c (if U=1) the result is compared with a uniformly distributed random number between 0 and 1, which ensures that, over range_L, marking probability will linearly increase with queueing time.

Classic:

If the scheduler at line 3 chooses to dequeue a Classic packet and jumps to line 7, the test at line 10b determines whether to drop or mark it. But before that, line 9a updates Q_C, which is an exponentially weighted moving average (Note 4) of the queuing time of the Classic queue, where cq.time() is the current instantaneous queueing time of the packet at the head of the Classic queue (zero if empty) and gamma is the EWMA constant (default 1/32, see line 12 of the initialization function).

Lines 10a and 10b implement the Classic AQM. In line 10a the averaged queuing time Q_C is divided by the Classic scaling parameter range_C, in the same way that queuing time was scaled for L4S marking. This scaled queuing time will be squared to compute Classic drop probability so, before it is squared, it is effectively the square root of the drop probability, hence it is given the variable name sqrt_p_C. The squaring is done by comparing it with the maximum out of two random numbers (assuming U=1). Comparing it with the maximum out of two is the same as the logical `AND' of two tests, which ensures drop probability rises with the square of queuing time.

The AQM functions in each queue (lines 5c & 10b) are two cases of a new generalization of RED called Curvy RED, motivated as follows. When the performance of this AQM was compared with FQ-CoDel and PIE, their goal of holding queuing delay to a fixed target seemed misguided [CRED_Insights]. As the number of flows increases, if the AQM does not allow host congestion controllers to increase queuing delay, it has to introduce abnormally high levels of loss. Then loss rather than queuing becomes the dominant cause of delay for short flows, due to timeouts and tail losses.

Curvy RED constrains delay with a softened target that allows some increase in delay as load increases. This is achieved by increasing drop probability on a convex curve relative to queue growth (the square curve in the Classic queue, if U=1). Like RED, the curve hugs the zero axis while the queue is shallow. Then, as load increases, it introduces a growing barrier to higher delay. But, unlike RED, it requires only two parameters, not three. The disadvantage of Curvy RED (compared to a PI controller for example) is that it is not adapted to a wide range of RTTs. Curvy RED can be used as is when the RTT range to be supported is limited, otherwise an adaptation mechanism is needed.

From our limited experiments with Curvy RED so far, recommended values of these parameters are: S_C = -1; g_C = 5; T = 5 * MTU at the link rate (about 1ms at 60Mb/s) for the range of base RTTs typical on the public Internet. [CRED_Insights] explains why these parameters are applicable whatever rate link this AQM implementation is deployed on and how the parameters would need to be adjusted for a scenario with a different range of RTTs (e.g. a data centre). The setting of k depends on policy (see Section 2.5 and Appendix C.2 respectively for its recommended setting and guidance on alternatives).

There is also a cUrviness parameter, U, which is a small positive integer. It is likely to take the same hard-coded value for all implementations, once experiments have determined a good value. Only U=1 has been used in experiments so far, but results might be even better with U=2 or higher.

Notes:

  1. The alternative of applying the AQMs at enqueue would shift some processing from the critical time when each packet is dequeued. However, it would also add a whole queue of delay to the control signals, making the control loop sloppier (for a typical RTT it would double the Classic queue's feedback delay). On a platform where packet timestamping is feasible, e.g. Linux, it is also easiest to apply the AQMs at dequeue because that is where queuing time is also measured.
  2. WRR better isolates the L4S queue from large delay bursts in the Classic queue, but it is slightly less simple than TS-FIFO. If WRR were used, a low default Classic weight (e.g. 1/16) would need to be configured in place of the time shift in line 5 of the initialization function (Figure 9).
  3. A step function is shown for simplicity. A ramp function (see Figure 5 and the discussion around it in Appendix A.1) is recommended, because it is more general than a step and has the potential to enable L4S congestion controls to converge more rapidly.
  4. An EWMA is only one possible way to filter bursts; other more adaptive smoothing methods could be valid and it might be appropriate to decrease the EWMA faster than it increases, e.g. by using the minimum of the smoothed and instantaneous queue delays, min(Q_C, qc.time()).

B.2. Efficient Implementation of Curvy RED

Although code optimization depends on the platform, the following notes explain where the design of Curvy RED was particularly motivated by efficient implementation.

The Classic AQM at line 10b calls maxrand(2*U), which gives twice as much curviness as the call to maxrand(U) in the marking function at line 5c. This is the trick that implements the square rule in equation (1) (Section 2.1). This is based on the fact that, given a number X from 1 to 6, the probability that two dice throws will both be less than X is the square of the probability that one throw will be less than X. So, when U=1, the L4S marking function is linear and the Classic dropping function is squared. If U=2, L4S would be a square function and Classic would be quartic. And so on.

The maxrand(u) function in lines 16-21 simply generates u random numbers and returns the maximum. Typically, maxrand(u) could be run in parallel out of band. For instance, if U=1, the Classic queue would require the maximum of two random numbers. So, instead of calling maxrand(2*U) in-band, the maximum of every pair of values from a pseudorandom number generator could be generated out-of-band, and held in a buffer ready for the Classic queue to consume.

1:  cred_dequeue(lq, cq, pkt) {       % Couples L4S & Classic queues
2:    while ( lq.byt() + cq.byt() > 0 ) {
3:      if ( scheduler() == lq ) {
4:        lq.dequeue(pkt)                            % L4S scheduled
5:        if ((lq.time() > T) OR (Q_C >> (S_L-2) > maxrand(U)))
6:          mark(pkt)
7:      } else {
8:        cq.dequeue(pkt)                        % Classic scheduled
9:        Q_C += (qc.ns() - Q_C) >> g_C             % Classic Q EWMA
10:       if ( (Q_C >> (S_C-2) ) > maxrand(2*U) ) {
11:         if ( (ecn(pkt) == 0)  {            % ECN field = not-ECT
12:           drop(pkt)                    % Squared drop, redo loop
13:           continue       % continue to the top of the while loop
14:         }
15:         mark(pkt)
16:       }
17:     }
18:     return(pkt)                % return the packet and stop here
19:   }
20:   return(NULL)                            % no packet to dequeue
21: }
Figure 11: Optimised Example Dequeue Pseudocode for Coupled DualQ AQM using Integer Arithmetic

The two ranges, range_L and range_C are expressed as powers of 2 so that division can be implemented as a right bit-shift (>>) in lines 5 and 10 of the integer variant of the pseudocode (Figure 11).

For the integer variant of the pseudocode, an integer version of the rand() function used at line 25 of the maxrand(function) in Figure 10 would be arranged to return an integer in the range 0 <= maxrand() < 2^32 (not shown). This would scale up all the floating point probabilities in the range [0,1] by 2^32.

Queuing delays are also scaled up by 2^32, but in two stages: i) In line 9 queuing time qc.ns() is returned in integer nanoseconds, making the value about 2^30 times larger than when the units were seconds, ii) then in lines 5 and 10 an adjustment of -2 to the right bit-shift multiplies the result by 2^2, to complete the scaling by 2^32.

In line 8 of the initialization function, the EWMA constant gamma is represented as an integer power of 2, g_C, so that in line 9 of the integer code the division needed to weight the moving average can be implemented by a right bit-shift (>> g_C).

Appendix C. Choice of Coupling Factor, k

C.1. RTT-Dependence

Where Classic flows compete for the same capacity, their relative flow rates depend not only on the congestion probability, but also on their end-to-end RTT (= base RTT + queue delay). The rates of Reno [RFC5681] flows competing over an AQM are roughly inversely proportional to their RTTs. Cubic exhibits similar RTT-dependence when in Reno-compatibility mode, but it is less RTT-dependent otherwise.

Until the early experiments with the DualQ Coupled AQM, the importance of the reasonably large Classic queue in mitigating RTT-dependence when the base RTT is low had not been appreciated. Appendix A.1.6 of the L4S ECN protocol [I-D.ietf-tsvwg-ecn-l4s-id] uses numerical examples to explain why bloated buffers had concealed the RTT-dependence of Classic congestion controls before that time. Then it explains why, the more that queuing delays have reduced, the more that RTT-dependence has surfaced as a potential starvation problem for long RTT flows, when competing against very short RTT flows.

Given that congestion control on end-systems is voluntary, there is no reason why it has to be voluntarily RTT-dependent. The RTT-dependence of existing Classic traffic cannot be 'undeployed'. Therefore, [I-D.ietf-tsvwg-ecn-l4s-id] requires L4S congestion controls to be significantly less RTT-dependent than the standard Reno congestion control [RFC5681], at least at low RTT. Then RTT-dependence ought to be no worse than it is with appropriately sized Classic buffers. Following this approach means there is no need for network devices to address RTT-dependence, although there would be no harm if they did, which per-flow queuing inherently does.

C.2. Guidance on Controlling Throughput Equivalence

The coupling factor, k, determines the balance between L4S and Classic flow rates (see Section 2.5.2.1 and equation (1)).

For the public Internet, a coupling factor of k=2 is recommended, and justified below. For scenarios other than the public Internet, a good coupling factor can be derived by plugging the appropriate numbers into the same working.

To summarize the maths below, from equation (7) it can be seen that choosing k=1.64 would theoretically make L4S throughput roughly the same as Classic, if their actual end-to-end RTTs were the same. However, even if the base RTTs are the same, the actual RTTs are unlikely to be the same, because Classic traffic needs a fairly large queue to avoid under-utilization and excess drop. Whereas L4S does not.

Therefore, to determine the appropriate coupling factor policy, the operator needs to decide at what base RTT it wants L4S and Classic flows to have roughly equal throughput, once the effect of the additional Classic queue on Classic throughput has been taken into account. With this approach, a network operator can determine a good coupling factor without knowing the precise L4S algorithm for reducing RTT-dependence - or even in the absence of any algorithm.

The following additional terminology will be used, with appropriate subscripts:

r:
Packet rate [pkt/s]
R:
RTT [s/round]
p:
ECN marking probability []

On the Classic side, we consider Reno as the most sensitive and therefore worst-case Classic congestion control. We will also consider Cubic in its Reno-friendly mode ('CReno'), as the most prevalent congestion control, according to the references and analysis in [PI2param]. In either case, the Classic packet rate in steady state is given by the well-known square root formula for Reno congestion control:

    r_C = 1.22 / (R_C * p_C^0.5)          (5)

On the L4S side, we consider the Prague congestion control [I-D.briscoe-iccrg-prague-congestion-control] as the reference for steady-state dependence on congestion. Prague conforms to the same equation as DCTCP, but we do not use the equation derived in the DCTCP paper, which is only appropriate for step marking. The coupled marking, p_CL, is the appropriate one when considering throughput equivalence with Classic flows. Unlike step marking, coupled markings are inherently spaced out, so we use the formula for DCTCP packet rate with probabilistic marking derived in Appendix A of [PI2]. We use the equation without RTT-independence enabled, which will be explained later.

    r_L = 2 / (R_L * p_CL)                (6)

For packet rate equivalence, we equate the two packet rates and rearrange into the same form as Equation (1), so the two can be equated and simplified to produce a formula for a theoretical coupling factor, which we shall call k*:

    r_c = r_L
=>  p_C = (p_CL/1.64 * R_L/R_C)^2

    p_C = ( p_CL / k )^2                  (1)

    k* = 1.64 * (R_C / R_L)               (7)

We say that this coupling factor is theoretical, because it is in terms of two RTTs, which raises two practical questions: i) for multiple flows with different RTTs, the RTT for each traffic class would have to be derived from the RTTs of all the flows in that class (actually the harmonic mean would be needed); ii) a network node cannot easily know the RTT of any of the flows anyway.

RTT-dependence is caused by window-based congestion control, so it ought to be reversed there, not in the network. Therefore, we use a fixed coupling factor in the network, and reduce RTT-dependence in L4S senders. We cannot expect Classic senders to all be updated to reduce their RTT-dependence. But solely addressing the problem in L4S senders at least makes RTT-dependence no worse - not just between L4S senders, but also between L4S and Classic senders.

Traditionally, throughput equivalence has been defined for flows under comparable conditions, including with the same base RTT [RFC2914]. So if we assume the same base RTT, R_b, for comparable flows, we can put both R_C and R_L in terms of R_b.

We can approximate the L4S RTT to be hardly greater than the base RTT, i.e. R_L ~= R_b. And we can replace R_C with (R_b + q_C), where the Classic queue, q_C, depends on the target queue delay that the operator has configured for the Classic AQM.

Taking PI2 as an example Classic AQM, it seems that we could just take R_C = R_b + target (recommended 15 ms by default in Appendix A.1). However, target is roughly the queue depth reached by the tips of the sawteeth of a congestion control, not the average [PI2param]. That is R_max = R_b + target.

The position of the average in relation to the max depends on the amplitude and geometry of the sawteeth. We consider two examples: Reno [RFC5681], as the most sensitive worst-case, and Cubic [RFC8312] in its Reno-friendly mode ('CReno') as the most prevalent congestion control algorithm on the Internet according to the references in [PI2param]. Both are AIMD, so we will generalize using b as the multiplicative decrease factor (b_r = 0.5 for Reno, b_c = 0.7 for CReno). Then:

  R_C  = (R_max + b*R_max) / 2
       = R_max * (1+b)/2

R_reno = 0.75 * (R_b + target);     R_creno = 0.85 * (R_b + target).
                                                                 (8)

Plugging all this into equation (7) we get a fixed coupling factor for each:

k_reno = 1.64*0.75*(R_b+target)/R_b
       = 1.23*(1 + target/R_b);     k_creno = 1.39 * (1 + target/R_b)

An operator can then choose the base RTT at which it wants throughput to be equivalent. For instance, if we recommend that the operator chooses R_b = 25 ms, as a typical base RTT between Internet users and CDNs [PI2param], then these coupling factors become:

k_reno = 1.23 * (1 + 15/25)        k_creno  = 1.39 * (1 + 15/25)
       = 1.97                               = 2.22
       ~= 2                                 ~= 2                  (9)

The approximation is relevant to any of the above example DualQ Coupled algorithms, which use a coupling factor that is an integer power of 2 to aid efficient implementation. It also fits best to the worst case (Reno).

To check the outcome of this coupling factor, we can express the ratio of L4S to Classic throughput by substituting from their rate equations (5) and (6), then also substituting for p_C in terms of p_CL, using equation (1) with k=2 as just determined for the Internet:

r_L / r_C  = 2 (R_C * p_C^0.5) / 1.22 (R_L * p_CL)
           = (R_C * p_CL) / (1.22 * R_L * p_CL)
           = R_C / (1.22 * R_L)                                  (10)

As an example, we can then consider single competing CReno and Prague flows, by expressing both their RTTs in (10) in terms of their base RTTs, R_bC and R_bL. So R_C is replaced by equation (8) for CReno. And R_L is replaced by the max() function below, which represents the effective RTT of the current Prague congestion control [I-D.briscoe-iccrg-prague-congestion-control] in its (default) RTT-independent mode, because it sets a floor to the effective RTT that it uses for additive increase:

          ~= 0.85 * (R_bC + target) / (1.22 * max(R_bL, R_typ))
          ~= (R_bC + target) / (1.4 * max(R_bL, R_typ))

It can be seen that, for base RTTs below target (15 ms), both the numerator and the denominator plateau, which has the desired effect of limiting RTT-dependence.

At the start of the above derivations, an explanation was promised for why the L4S throughput equation in equation (6) did not need to model RTT-independence. This is because we only use one point - at the the typical base RTT where the operator chooses to calculate the coupling factor. Then, throughput equivalence will at least hold at that chosen point. Nonetheless, assuming Prague senders implement RTT-independence over a range of RTTs below this, the throughput equivalence will then extend over that range as well.

Congestion control designers can choose different ways to reduce RTT-dependence. And each operator can make a policy choice to decide on a different base RTT, and therefore a different k, at which it wants throughput equivalence. Nonetheless, for the Internet, it makes sense to choose what is believed to be the typical RTT most users experience, because a Classic AQM's target queuing delay is also derived from a typical RTT for the Internet.

As a non-Internet example, for localized traffic from a particular ISP's data centre, using the measured RTTs, it was calculated that a value of k = 8 would achieve throughput equivalence, and experiments verified the formula very closely.

But, for a typical mix of RTTs across the general Internet, a value of k=2 is recommended as a good workable compromise.

Authors' Addresses

Koen De Schepper
Nokia Bell Labs
Antwerp
Belgium
Bob Briscoe (editor)
Independent
United Kingdom
Greg White
CableLabs
Louisville, CO,
United States of America

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