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IETF RFC 6349
Last modified on Friday, August 19th, 2011
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Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) B. Constantine
Request for Comments: 6349 JDSU
Category: Informational G. Forget
ISSN: 2070-1721 Bell Canada (Ext. Consultant)
R. Geib
Deutsche Telekom
R. Schrage
Schrage Consulting
August 2011
Framework for TCP Throughput Testing
Abstract
This framework describes a practical methodology for measuring end-
to-end TCP Throughput in a managed IP network. The goal is to
provide a better indication in regard to user experience. In this
framework, TCP and IP parameters are specified to optimize TCP
Throughput.
Status of This Memo
This document is not an Internet Standards Track specification; it is
published for informational purposes.
This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force
(IETF). It represents the consensus of the IETF community. It has
received public review and has been approved for publication by the
Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG). Not all documents
approved by the IESG are a candidate for any level of Internet
Standard; see Section 2 of RFC 5741.
Information about the current status of this document, any errata,
and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at
http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/RFC 6349.
Constantine, et al. Informational PAGE 1
RFC 6349 Framework for TCP Throughput Testing August 2011
Copyright Notice
Copyright (c) 2011 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the
document authors. All rights reserved.
This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal
Provisions Relating to IETF Documents
(http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of
publication of this document. Please review these documents
carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect
to this document. Code Components extracted from this document must
include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of
the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as
described in the Simplified BSD License.
Table of Contents
1. Introduction ....................................................3
1.1. Requirements Language ......................................4
1.2. Terminology ................................................5
1.3. TCP Equilibrium ............................................6
2. Scope and Goals .................................................7
3. Methodology .....................................................8
3.1. Path MTU ..................................................10
3.2. Round-Trip Time (RTT) and Bottleneck Bandwidth (BB) .......11
3.2.1. Measuring RTT ......................................11
3.2.2. Measuring BB .......................................12
3.3. Measuring TCP Throughput ..................................12
3.3.1. Minimum TCP RWND ...................................13
4. TCP Metrics ....................................................16
4.1. Transfer Time Ratio .......................................16
4.1.1. Maximum Achievable TCP Throughput Calculation ......17
4.1.2. TCP Transfer Time and Transfer Time Ratio
Calculation ........................................19
4.2. TCP Efficiency ............................................20
4.2.1. TCP Efficiency Percentage Calculation ..............20
4.3. Buffer Delay ..............................................20
4.3.1. Buffer Delay Percentage Calculation ................21
5. Conducting TCP Throughput Tests ................................21
5.1. Single versus Multiple TCP Connections ....................21
5.2. Results Interpretation ....................................22
6. Security Considerations ........................................25
6.1. Denial-of-Service Attacks .................................25
6.2. User Data Confidentiality .................................25
6.3. Interference with Metrics .................................25
7. Acknowledgments ................................................26
8. Normative References ...........................................26
Constantine, et al. Informational PAGE 2
RFC 6349 Framework for TCP Throughput Testing August 2011
1. Introduction
In the network industry, the SLA (Service Level Agreement) provided
to business-class customers is generally based upon Layer 2/3
criteria such as bandwidth, latency, packet loss, and delay
variations (jitter). Network providers are coming to the realization
that Layer 2/3 testing is not enough to adequately ensure end-users'
satisfaction. In addition to Layer 2/3 testing, this framework
recommends a methodology for measuring TCP Throughput in order to
provide meaningful results with respect to user experience.
Additionally, business-class customers seek to conduct repeatable TCP
Throughput tests between locations. Since these organizations rely
on the networks of the providers, a common test methodology with
predefined metrics would benefit both parties.
Note that the primary focus of this methodology is managed business-
class IP networks, e.g., those Ethernet-terminated services for which
organizations are provided an SLA from the network provider. Because
of the SLA, the expectation is that the TCP Throughput should achieve
the guaranteed bandwidth. End-users with "best effort" access could
use this methodology, but this framework and its metrics are intended
to be used in a predictable managed IP network. No end-to-end
performance can be guaranteed when only the access portion is being
provisioned to a specific bandwidth capacity.
The intent behind this document is to define a methodology for
testing sustained TCP Layer performance. In this document, the
achievable TCP Throughput is that amount of data per unit of time
that TCP transports when in the TCP Equilibrium state. (See
Section 1.3 for the TCP Equilibrium definition). Throughout this
document, "maximum achievable throughput" refers to the theoretical
achievable throughput when TCP is in the Equilibrium state.
TCP is connection oriented, and at the transmitting side, it uses a
congestion window (TCP CWND). At the receiving end, TCP uses a
receive window (TCP RWND) to inform the transmitting end on how many
Bytes it is capable of accepting at a given time.
Derived from Round-Trip Time (RTT) and network Bottleneck Bandwidth
(BB), the Bandwidth-Delay Product (BDP) determines the Send and
Received Socket buffer sizes required to achieve the maximum TCP
Throughput. Then, with the help of slow start and congestion
avoidance algorithms, a TCP CWND is calculated based on the IP
network path loss rate. Finally, the minimum value between the
calculated TCP CWND and the TCP RWND advertised by the opposite end
will determine how many Bytes can actually be sent by the
transmitting side at a given time.
Constantine, et al. Informational PAGE 3
RFC 6349 Framework for TCP Throughput Testing August 2011
Both TCP Window sizes (RWND and CWND) may vary during any given TCP
session, although up to bandwidth limits, larger RWND and larger CWND
will achieve higher throughputs by permitting more in-flight Bytes.
At both ends of the TCP connection and for each socket, there are
default buffer sizes. There are also kernel-enforced maximum buffer
sizes. These buffer sizes can be adjusted at both ends (transmitting
and receiving). Some TCP/IP stack implementations use Receive Window
Auto-Tuning, although, in order to obtain the maximum throughput, it
is critical to use large enough TCP Send and Receive Socket Buffer
sizes. In fact, they SHOULD be equal to or greater than BDP.
Many variables are involved in TCP Throughput performance, but this
methodology focuses on the following:
- BB (Bottleneck Bandwidth)
- RTT (Round-Trip Time)
- Send and Receive Socket Buffers
- Minimum TCP RWND
- Path MTU (Maximum Transmission Unit)
This methodology proposes TCP testing that SHOULD be performed in
addition to traditional tests of the Layer 2/3 type. In fact, Layer
2/3 tests are REQUIRED to verify the integrity of the network before
conducting TCP tests. Examples include "iperf" (UDP mode) and manual
packet-layer test techniques where packet throughput, loss, and delay
measurements are conducted. When available, standardized testing
similar to [RFC 2544], but adapted for use in operational networks,
MAY be used.
Note: [RFC 2544] was never meant to be used outside a lab environment.
Sections 2 and 3 of this document provide a general overview of the
proposed methodology. Section 4 defines the metrics, while Section 5
explains how to conduct the tests and interpret the results.
1.1. Requirements Language
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 RFC 2119 [RFC 2119].
Constantine, et al. Informational PAGE 4
RFC 6349 Framework for TCP Throughput Testing August 2011
1.2. Terminology
The common definitions used in this methodology are as follows:
- TCP Throughput Test Device (TCP TTD) refers to a compliant TCP host
that generates traffic and measures metrics as defined in this
methodology, i.e., a dedicated communications test instrument.
- Customer Provided Equipment (CPE) refers to customer-owned
equipment (routers, switches, computers, etc.).
- Customer Edge (CE) refers to a provider-owned demarcation device.
- Provider Edge (PE) refers to a provider's distribution equipment.
- Bottleneck Bandwidth (BB) refers to the lowest bandwidth along the
complete path. "Bottleneck Bandwidth" and "Bandwidth" are used
synonymously in this document. Most of the time, the Bottleneck
Bandwidth is in the access portion of the wide-area network
(CE - PE).
- Provider (P) refers to provider core network equipment.
- Network Under Test (NUT) refers to the tested IP network path.
- Round-Trip Time (RTT) is the elapsed time between the clocking in
of the first bit of a TCP segment sent and the receipt of the last
bit of the corresponding TCP Acknowledgment.
- Bandwidth-Delay Product (BDP) refers to the product of a data
link's capacity (in bits per second) and its end-to-end delay (in
seconds).
+---+ +----+ +----+ +----+ +---+ +---+ +----+ +----+ +----+ +---+
|TCP|-| CPE|-| CE |--| PE |-| P |--| P |-| PE |--| CE |-| CPE|-|TCP|
|TTD| | | | |BB| | | | | | | |BB| | | | |TTD|
+---+ +----+ +----+ +----+ +---+ +---+ +----+ +----+ +----+ +---+
<------------------------ NUT ------------------------->
R >-----------------------------------------------------------|
T |
T <-----------------------------------------------------------|
Figure 1.2. Devices, Links, and Paths
Constantine, et al. Informational PAGE 5
RFC 6349 Framework for TCP Throughput Testing August 2011
Note that the NUT may be built with a variety of devices including,
but not limited to, load balancers, proxy servers, or WAN
acceleration appliances. The detailed topology of the NUT SHOULD be
well-known when conducting the TCP Throughput tests, although this
methodology makes no attempt to characterize specific network
architectures.
1.3. TCP Equilibrium
TCP connections have three (3) fundamental congestion window phases,
which are depicted in Figure 1.3.
1. The Slow Start phase, which occurs at the beginning of a TCP
transmission or after a retransmission Time-Out.
2. The Congestion Avoidance phase, during which TCP ramps up to
establish the maximum achievable throughput. It is important to
note that retransmissions are a natural by-product of the TCP
congestion avoidance algorithm as it seeks to achieve maximum
throughput.
3. The Loss Recovery phase, which could include Fast Retransmit
(Tahoe) or Fast Recovery (Reno and New Reno). When packet loss
occurs, the Congestion Avoidance phase transitions either to Fast
Retransmission or Fast Recovery, depending upon the TCP
implementation. If a Time-Out occurs, TCP transitions back to the
Slow Start phase.
/\ |
/\ |High ssthresh TCP CWND TCP
/\ |Loss Event * halving 3-Loss Recovery Equilibrium
T | * \ upon loss
h | * \ / \ Time-Out Adjusted
r | * \ / \ +--------+ * ssthresh
T o | * \/ \ / Multiple| *
C u | * 2-Congestion\ / Loss | *
P g | * Avoidance \/ Event | *
h | * Half | *
p | * TCP CWND | * 1-Slow Start
u | * 1-Slow Start Min TCP CWND after T-O
t +-----------------------------------------------------------
Time > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > >
Note: ssthresh = Slow Start threshold.
Figure 1.3. TCP CWND Phases
Constantine, et al. Informational PAGE 6
RFC 6349 Framework for TCP Throughput Testing August 2011
A well-tuned and well-managed IP network with appropriate TCP
adjustments in the IP hosts and applications should perform very
close to the BB when TCP is in the Equilibrium state.
This TCP methodology provides guidelines to measure the maximum
achievable TCP Throughput when TCP is in the Equilibrium state. All
maximum achievable TCP Throughputs specified in Section 3.3 are with
respect to this condition.
It is important to clarify the interaction between the sender's Send
Socket Buffer and the receiver's advertised TCP RWND size. TCP test
programs such as "iperf", "ttcp", etc. allow the sender to control
the quantity of TCP Bytes transmitted and unacknowledged (in-flight),
commonly referred to as the Send Socket Buffer. This is done
independently of the TCP RWND size advertised by the receiver.
2. Scope and Goals
Before defining the goals, it is important to clearly define the
areas that are out of scope.
- This methodology is not intended to predict the TCP Throughput
during the transient stages of a TCP connection, such as during the
Slow Start phase.
- This methodology is not intended to definitively benchmark TCP
implementations of one OS to another, although some users may find
value in conducting qualitative experiments.
- This methodology is not intended to provide detailed diagnosis of
problems within endpoints or within the network itself as related
to non-optimal TCP performance, although results interpretation for
each test step may provide insights to potential issues.
- This methodology does not propose to operate permanently with high
measurement loads. TCP performance and optimization within
operational networks MAY be captured and evaluated by using data
from the "TCP Extended Statistics MIB" [RFC 4898].
In contrast to the above exclusions, the primary goal is to define a
method to conduct a practical end-to-end assessment of sustained TCP
performance within a managed business-class IP network. Another key
goal is to establish a set of "best practices" that a non-TCP expert
SHOULD apply when validating the ability of a managed IP network to
carry end-user TCP applications.
Constantine, et al. Informational PAGE 7
RFC 6349 Framework for TCP Throughput Testing August 2011
Specific goals are to:
- Provide a practical test approach that specifies tunable parameters
(such as MTU (Maximum Transmission Unit) and Socket Buffer sizes)
and how these affect the outcome of TCP performance over an IP
network.
- Provide specific test conditions such as link speed, RTT, MTU,
Socket Buffer sizes, and achievable TCP Throughput when TCP is in
the Equilibrium state. For guideline purposes, provide examples of
test conditions and their maximum achievable TCP Throughput.
Section 1.3 provides specific details concerning the definition of
TCP Equilibrium within this methodology, while Section 3 provides
specific test conditions with examples.
- Define three (3) basic metrics to compare the performance of TCP
connections under various network conditions. See Section 4.
- Provide some areas within the end host or the network that SHOULD
be considered for investigation in test situations where the
recommended procedure does not yield the maximum achievable TCP
Throughput. However, this methodology is not intended to provide
detailed diagnosis on these issues. See Section 5.2.
3. Methodology
This methodology is intended for operational and managed IP networks.
A multitude of network architectures and topologies can be tested.
The diagram in Figure 1.2 is very general and is only provided to
illustrate typical segmentation within end-user and network provider
domains.
Also, as stated in Section 1, it is considered best practice to
verify the integrity of the network by conducting Layer 2/3 tests
such as [RFC 2544] or other methods of network stress tests; although
it is important to mention here that [RFC 2544] was never meant to be
used outside a lab environment.
It is not possible to make an accurate TCP Throughput measurement
when the network is dysfunctional. In particular, if the network is
exhibiting high packet loss and/or high jitter, then TCP Layer
Throughput testing will not be meaningful. As a guideline, 5% packet
loss and/or 150 ms of jitter may be considered too high for an
accurate measurement.
Constantine, et al. Informational PAGE 8
RFC 6349 Framework for TCP Throughput Testing August 2011
TCP Throughput testing may require cooperation between the end-user
customer and the network provider. As an example, in an MPLS
(Multiprotocol Label Switching) network architecture, the testing
SHOULD be conducted either on the CPE or on the CE device and not on
the PE (Provider Edge) router.
The following represents the sequential order of steps for this
testing methodology:
1. Identify the Path MTU. Packetization Layer Path MTU Discovery
(PLPMTUD) [RFC 4821] SHOULD be conducted. It is important to
identify the path MTU so that the TCP TTD is configured properly
to avoid fragmentation.
2. Baseline Round-Trip Time and Bandwidth. This step establishes the
inherent, non-congested Round-Trip Time (RTT) and the Bottleneck
Bandwidth (BB) of the end-to-end network path. These measurements
are used to provide estimates of the TCP RWND and Send Socket
Buffer sizes that SHOULD be used during subsequent test steps.
3. TCP Connection Throughput Tests. With baseline measurements of
Round-Trip Time and Bottleneck Bandwidth, single- and multiple-
TCP-connection throughput tests SHOULD be conducted to baseline
network performance.
These three (3) steps are detailed in Sections 3.1 to 3.3.
Important to note are some of the key characteristics and
considerations for the TCP test instrument. The test host MAY be a
standard computer or a dedicated communications test instrument. In
both cases, it MUST be capable of emulating both a client and a
server.
The following criteria SHOULD be considered when selecting whether
the TCP test host can be a standard computer or has to be a dedicated
communications test instrument:
- TCP implementation used by the test host, OS version (e.g., LINUX
OS kernel using TCP New Reno), TCP options supported, etc. will
obviously be more important when using dedicated communications
test instruments where the TCP implementation may be customized or
tuned to run in higher-performance hardware. When a compliant TCP
TTD is used, the TCP implementation SHOULD be identified in the
test results. The compliant TCP TTD SHOULD be usable for complete
end-to-end testing through network security elements and SHOULD
also be usable for testing network sections.
Constantine, et al. Informational PAGE 9
RFC 6349 Framework for TCP Throughput Testing August 2011
- More importantly, the TCP test host MUST be capable of generating
and receiving stateful TCP test traffic at the full BB of the NUT.
Stateful TCP test traffic means that the test host MUST fully
implement a TCP/IP stack; this is generally a comment aimed at
dedicated communications test equipment that sometimes "blasts"
packets with TCP headers. At the time of this publication, testing
TCP Throughput at rates greater than 100 Mbps may require high-
performance server hardware or dedicated hardware-based test tools.
- A compliant TCP Throughput Test Device MUST allow adjusting both
Send and Receive Socket Buffer sizes. The Socket Buffers MUST be
large enough to fill the BDP.
- Measuring RTT and retransmissions per connection will generally
require a dedicated communications test instrument. In the absence
of dedicated hardware-based test tools, these measurements may need
to be conducted with packet capture tools, i.e., conduct TCP
Throughput tests and analyze RTT and retransmissions in packet
captures. Another option MAY be to use the "TCP Extended
Statistics MIB" [RFC 4898].
- The [RFC 4821] PLPMTUD test SHOULD be conducted with a dedicated
tester that exposes the ability to run the PLPMTUD algorithm
independently from the OS stack.
3.1. Path MTU
TCP implementations should use Path MTU Discovery techniques (PMTUD).
PMTUD relies on ICMP 'need to frag' messages to learn the path MTU.
When a device has a packet to send that has the Don't Fragment (DF)
bit in the IP header set and the packet is larger than the MTU of the
next hop, the packet is dropped, and the device sends an ICMP 'need
to frag' message back to the host that originated the packet. The
ICMP 'need to frag' message includes the next-hop MTU, which PMTUD
uses to adjust itself. Unfortunately, because many network managers
completely disable ICMP, this technique does not always prove
reliable.
Packetization Layer Path MTU Discovery (PLPMTUD) [RFC 4821] MUST then
be conducted to verify the network path MTU. PLPMTUD can be used
with or without ICMP. [RFC 4821] specifies search_high and search_low
parameters for the MTU, and we recommend using those parameters. The
goal is to avoid fragmentation during all subsequent tests.
Constantine, et al. Informational PAGE 10
RFC 6349 Framework for TCP Throughput Testing August 2011
3.2. Round-Trip Time (RTT) and Bottleneck Bandwidth (BB)
Before stateful TCP testing can begin, it is important to determine
the baseline RTT (i.e., non-congested inherent delay) and BB of the
end-to-end network to be tested. These measurements are used to
calculate the BDP and to provide estimates of the TCP RWND and Send
Socket Buffer sizes that SHOULD be used in subsequent test steps.
3.2.1. Measuring RTT
As previously defined in Section 1.2, RTT is the elapsed time between
the clocking in of the first bit of a TCP segment sent and the
receipt of the last bit of the corresponding TCP Acknowledgment.
The RTT SHOULD be baselined during off-peak hours in order to obtain
a reliable figure of the inherent network latency. Otherwise,
additional delay caused by network buffering can occur. Also, when
sampling RTT values over a given test interval, the minimum measured
value SHOULD be used as the baseline RTT. This will most closely
estimate the real inherent RTT. This value is also used to determine
the Buffer Delay Percentage metric defined in Section 4.3.
The following list is not meant to be exhaustive, although it
summarizes some of the most common ways to determine Round-Trip Time.
The desired measurement precision (i.e., ms versus us) may dictate
whether the RTT measurement can be achieved with ICMP pings or by a
dedicated communications test instrument with precision timers. The
objective of this section is to list several techniques in order of
decreasing accuracy.
- Use test equipment on each end of the network, "looping" the far-
end tester so that a packet stream can be measured back and forth
from end to end. This RTT measurement may be compatible with delay
measurement protocols specified in [RFC 5357].
- Conduct packet captures of TCP test sessions using "iperf" or FTP,
or other TCP test applications. By running multiple experiments,
packet captures can then be analyzed to estimate RTT. It is
important to note that results based upon the SYN -> SYN-ACK at the
beginning of TCP sessions SHOULD be avoided, since Firewalls might
slow down 3-way handshakes. Also, at the sender's side,
Ostermann's LINUX TCPTRACE utility with -l -r arguments can be used
to extract the RTT results directly from the packet captures.
- Obtain RTT statistics available from MIBs defined in [RFC 4898].
Constantine, et al. Informational PAGE 11
RFC 6349 Framework for TCP Throughput Testing August 2011
- ICMP pings may also be adequate to provide Round-Trip Time
estimates, provided that the packet size is factored into the
estimates (i.e., pings with different packet sizes might be
required). Some limitations with ICMP ping may include ms
resolution and whether or not the network elements are responding
to pings. Also, ICMP is often rate-limited or segregated into
different buffer queues. ICMP might not work if QoS (Quality of
Service) reclassification is done at any hop. ICMP is not as
reliable and accurate as in-band measurements.
3.2.2. Measuring BB
Before any TCP Throughput test can be conducted, bandwidth
measurement tests SHOULD be run with stateless IP streams (i.e., not
stateful TCP) in order to determine the BB of the NUT. These
measurements SHOULD be conducted in both directions, especially in
asymmetrical access networks (e.g., Asymmetric Bit-Rate DSL (ADSL)
access). These tests SHOULD be performed at various intervals
throughout a business day or even across a week.
Testing at various time intervals would provide a better
characterization of TCP Throughput and better diagnosis insight (for
cases where there are TCP performance issues). The bandwidth tests
SHOULD produce logged outputs of the achieved bandwidths across the
complete test duration.
There are many well-established techniques available to provide
estimated measures of bandwidth over a network. It is a common
practice for network providers to conduct Layer 2/3 bandwidth
capacity tests using [RFC 2544], although it is understood that
[RFC 2544] was never meant to be used outside a lab environment.
These bandwidth measurements SHOULD use network capacity techniques
as defined in [RFC 5136].
3.3. Measuring TCP Throughput
This methodology specifically defines TCP Throughput measurement
techniques to verify maximum achievable TCP performance in a managed
business-class IP network.
With baseline measurements of RTT and BB from Section 3.2, a series
of single- and/or multiple-TCP-connection throughput tests SHOULD be
conducted.
The number of trials and the choice between single or multiple TCP
connections will be based on the intention of the test. A single-
TCP-connection test might be enough to measure the achievable
throughput of Metro Ethernet connectivity. However, it is important
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RFC 6349 Framework for TCP Throughput Testing August 2011
to note that various traffic management techniques can be used in an
IP network and that some of those techniques can only be tested with
multiple connections. As an example, multiple TCP sessions might be
required to detect traffic shaping versus policing. Multiple
sessions might also be needed to measure Active Queue Management
performance. However, traffic management testing is not within the
scope of this test methodology.
In all circumstances, it is RECOMMENDED to run the tests in each
direction independently first and then to run them in both directions
simultaneously. It is also RECOMMENDED to run the tests at different
times of the day.
In each case, the TCP Transfer Time Ratio, the TCP Efficiency
Percentage, and the Buffer Delay Percentage MUST be measured in each
direction. These 3 metrics are defined in Section 4.
3.3.1. Minimum TCP RWND
The TCP TTD MUST allow the Send Socket Buffer and Receive Window
sizes to be set higher than the BDP; otherwise, TCP performance will
be limited. In the business customer environment, these settings are
not generally adjustable by the average user. These settings are
either hard-coded in the application or configured within the OS as
part of a corporate image. In many cases, the user's host Send
Socket Buffer and Receive Window size settings are not optimal.
This section provides derivations of BDPs under various network
conditions. It also provides examples of achievable TCP Throughput
with various TCP RWND sizes. This provides important guidelines
showing what can be achieved with settings higher than the BDP,
versus what would be achieved in a variety of real-world conditions.
The minimum required TCP RWND size can be calculated from the
Bandwidth-Delay Product (BDP), which is as follows:
BDP (bits) = RTT (sec) X BB (bps)
Note that the RTT is being used as the "Delay" variable for the BDP.
Then, by dividing the BDP by 8, we obtain the minimum required TCP
RWND size in Bytes. For optimal results, the Send Socket Buffer MUST
be adjusted to the same value at each end of the network.
Minimum required TCP RWND = BDP / 8
As an example, on a T3 link with 25-ms RTT, the BDP would equal
~1,105,000 bits, and the minimum required TCP RWND would be ~138 KB.
Constantine, et al. Informational PAGE 13
RFC 6349 Framework for TCP Throughput Testing August 2011
Note that separate calculations are REQUIRED on asymmetrical paths.
An asymmetrical-path example would be a 90-ms RTT ADSL line with 5
Mbps downstream and 640 Kbps upstream. The downstream BDP would
equal ~450,000 bits, while the upstream one would be only
~57,600 bits.
The following table provides some representative network link speeds,
RTT, BDP, and their associated minimum required TCP RWND sizes.
Link Minimum Required
Speed* RTT BDP TCP RWND
(Mbps) (ms) (bits) (KBytes)
--------------------------------------------------------------------
1.536 20.00 30,720 3.84
1.536 50.00 76,800 9.60
1.536 100.00 153,600 19.20
44.210 10.00 442,100 55.26
44.210 15.00 663,150 82.89
44.210 25.00 1,105,250 138.16
100.000 1.00 100,000 12.50
100.000 2.00 200,000 25.00
100.000 5.00 500,000 62.50
1,000.000 0.10 100,000 12.50
1,000.000 0.50 500,000 62.50
1,000.000 1.00 1,000,000 125.00
10,000.000 0.05 500,000 62.50
10,000.000 0.30 3,000,000 375.00
* Note that link speed is the BB for the NUT
Table 3.3.1. Link Speed, RTT, Calculated BDP, and Minimum TCP RWND
In the above table, the following serial link speeds are used:
- T1 = 1.536 Mbps (for a B8ZS line encoding facility)
- T3 = 44.21 Mbps (for a C-Bit framing facility)
The previous table illustrates the minimum required TCP RWND. If a
smaller TCP RWND size is used, then the TCP Throughput cannot be
optimal. To calculate the TCP Throughput, the following formula is
used:
TCP Throughput = TCP RWND X 8 / RTT
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RFC 6349 Framework for TCP Throughput Testing August 2011
An example could be a 100-Mbps IP path with 5-ms RTT and a TCP RWND
of 16 KB; then:
TCP Throughput = 16 KBytes X 8 bits / 5 ms
TCP Throughput = 128,000 bits / 0.005 sec
TCP Throughput = 25.6 Mbps
Another example, for a T3 using the same calculation formula, is
illustrated in Figure 3.3.1a:
TCP Throughput = 16 KBytes X 8 bits / 10 ms
TCP Throughput = 128,000 bits / 0.01 sec
TCP Throughput = 12.8 Mbps*
When the TCP RWND size exceeds the BDP (T3 link and 64-KByte TCP RWND
on a 10-ms RTT path), the maximum Frames Per Second (FPS) limit of
3664 is reached, and then the formula is:
TCP Throughput = max FPS X (MTU - 40) X 8
TCP Throughput = 3664 FPS X 1460 Bytes X 8 bits
TCP Throughput = 42.8 Mbps**
The following diagram compares achievable TCP Throughputs on a T3
with Send Socket Buffer and TCP RWND sizes of 16 KB versus 64 KB.
45|
| _______**42.8
40| |64KB |
TCP | | |
Through- 35| | |
put | | | +-----+34.1
(Mbps) 30| | | |64KB |
| | | | |
25| | | | |
| | | | |
20| | | | | _______20.5
| | | | | |64KB |
15| | | | | | |
|*12.8+-----| | | | | |
10| |16KB | | | | | |
| | | |8.5 +-----| | | |
5| | | | |16KB | |5.1 +-----| |
|_____|_____|_____|____|_____|_____|____|16KB |_____|____
10 15 25
RTT (milliseconds)
Figure 3.3.1a. TCP Throughputs on a T3 at Different RTTs
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The following diagram shows the achievable TCP Throughput on a 25-ms
T3 when Send Socket Buffer and TCP RWND sizes are increased.
45|
|
40| +-----+40.9
TCP | | |
Through- 35| | |
put | | |
(Mbps) 30| | |
| | |
25| | |
| | |
20| +-----+20.5 | |
| | | | |
15| | | | |
| | | | |
10| +-----+10.2 | | | |
| | | | | | |
5| +-----+5.1 | | | | | |
|_____|_____|______|_____|______|_____|______|_____|_____
16 32 64 128*
TCP RWND Size (KBytes)
* Note that 128 KB requires the [RFC 1323] TCP Window Scale option.
Figure 3.3.1b. TCP Throughputs on a T3 with Different TCP RWND
4. TCP Metrics
This methodology focuses on a TCP Throughput and provides 3 basic
metrics that can be used for better understanding of the results. It
is recognized that the complexity and unpredictability of TCP makes
it very difficult to develop a complete set of metrics that accounts
for the myriad of variables (i.e., RTT variations, loss conditions,
TCP implementations, etc.). However, these 3 metrics facilitate TCP
Throughput comparisons under varying network conditions and host
buffer size/RWND settings.
4.1. Transfer Time Ratio
The first metric is the TCP Transfer Time Ratio, which is simply the
ratio between the Actual TCP Transfer Time versus the Ideal TCP
Transfer Time.
The Actual TCP Transfer Time is simply the time it takes to transfer
a block of data across TCP connection(s).
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The Ideal TCP Transfer Time is the predicted time for which a block
of data SHOULD transfer across TCP connection(s), considering the BB
of the NUT.
Actual TCP Transfer Time
TCP Transfer Time Ratio = -------------------------
Ideal TCP Transfer Time
The Ideal TCP Transfer Time is derived from the Maximum Achievable
TCP Throughput, which is related to the BB and Layer 1/2/3/4
overheads associated with the network path. The following sections
provide derivations for the Maximum Achievable TCP Throughput and
example calculations for the TCP Transfer Time Ratio.
4.1.1. Maximum Achievable TCP Throughput Calculation
This section provides formulas to calculate the Maximum Achievable
TCP Throughput, with examples for T3 (44.21 Mbps) and Ethernet.
All calculations are based on IP version 4 with TCP/IP headers of 20
Bytes each (20 for TCP + 20 for IP) within an MTU of 1500 Bytes.
First, the maximum achievable Layer 2 throughput of a T3 interface is
limited by the maximum quantity of Frames Per Second (FPS) permitted
by the actual physical layer (Layer 1) speed.
The calculation formula is:
FPS = T3 Physical Speed / ((MTU + PPP + Flags + CRC16) X 8)
FPS = (44.21 Mbps /
((1500 Bytes + 4 Bytes + 2 Bytes + 2 Bytes) X 8 )))
FPS = (44.21 Mbps / (1508 Bytes X 8))
FPS = 44.21 Mbps / 12064 bits
FPS = 3664
Then, to obtain the Maximum Achievable TCP Throughput (Layer 4), we
simply use:
(MTU - 40) in Bytes X 8 bits X max FPS
For a T3, the maximum TCP Throughput =
1460 Bytes X 8 bits X 3664 FPS
Maximum TCP Throughput = 11680 bits X 3664 FPS
Maximum TCP Throughput = 42.8 Mbps
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On Ethernet, the maximum achievable Layer 2 throughput is limited by
the maximum Frames Per Second permitted by the IEEE802.3 standard.
The maximum FPS for 100-Mbps Ethernet is 8127, and the calculation
formula is:
FPS = (100 Mbps / (1538 Bytes X 8 bits))
The maximum FPS for GigE is 81274, and the calculation formula is:
FPS = (1 Gbps / (1538 Bytes X 8 bits))
The maximum FPS for 10GigE is 812743, and the calculation formula is:
FPS = (10 Gbps / (1538 Bytes X 8 bits))
The 1538 Bytes equates to:
MTU + Ethernet + CRC32 + IFG + Preamble + SFD
(IFG = Inter-Frame Gap and SFD = Start of Frame Delimiter)
where MTU is 1500 Bytes, Ethernet is 14 Bytes, CRC32 is 4 Bytes, IFG
is 12 Bytes, Preamble is 7 Bytes, and SFD is 1 Byte.
Then, to obtain the Maximum Achievable TCP Throughput (Layer 4), we
simply use:
(MTU - 40) in Bytes X 8 bits X max FPS
For 100-Mbps Ethernet, the maximum TCP Throughput =
1460 Bytes X 8 bits X 8127 FPS
Maximum TCP Throughput = 11680 bits X 8127 FPS
Maximum TCP Throughput = 94.9 Mbps
It is important to note that better results could be obtained with
jumbo frames on Gigabit and 10-Gigabit Ethernet interfaces.
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4.1.2. TCP Transfer Time and Transfer Time Ratio Calculation
The following table illustrates the Ideal TCP Transfer Time of a
single TCP connection when its TCP RWND and Send Socket Buffer sizes
equal or exceed the BDP.
Link Maximum Ideal TCP
Speed BDP Achievable TCP Transfer Time
(Mbps) RTT (ms) (KBytes) Throughput(Mbps) (seconds)*
--------------------------------------------------------------------
1.536 50.00 9.6 1.4 571.0
44.210 25.00 138.2 42.8 18.0
100.000 2.00 25.0 94.9 9.0
1,000.000 1.00 125.0 949.2 1.0
10,000.000 0.05 62.5 9,492.0 0.1
* Transfer times are rounded for simplicity.
Table 4.1.2. Link Speed, RTT, BDP, TCP Throughput, and
Ideal TCP Transfer Time for a 100-MB File
For a 100-MB file (100 X 8 = 800 Mbits), the Ideal TCP Transfer Time
is derived as follows:
800 Mbits
Ideal TCP Transfer Time = -----------------------------------
Maximum Achievable TCP Throughput
To illustrate the TCP Transfer Time Ratio, an example would be the
bulk transfer of 100 MB over 5 simultaneous TCP connections (each
connection transferring 100 MB). In this example, the Ethernet
service provides a Committed Access Rate (CAR) of 500 Mbps. Each
connection may achieve different throughputs during a test, and the
overall throughput rate is not always easy to determine (especially
as the number of connections increases).
The Ideal TCP Transfer Time would be ~8 seconds, but in this example,
the Actual TCP Transfer Time was 12 seconds. The TCP Transfer Time
Ratio would then be 12/8 = 1.5, which indicates that the transfer
across all connections took 1.5 times longer than the ideal.
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4.2. TCP Efficiency
The second metric represents the percentage of Bytes that were not
retransmitted.
Transmitted Bytes - Retransmitted Bytes
TCP Efficiency % = --------------------------------------- X 100
Transmitted Bytes
Transmitted Bytes are the total number of TCP Bytes to be
transmitted, including the original and the retransmitted Bytes.
4.2.1. TCP Efficiency Percentage Calculation
As an example, if 100,000 Bytes were sent and 2,000 had to be
retransmitted, the TCP Efficiency Percentage would be calculated as:
102,000 - 2,000
TCP Efficiency % = ----------------- X 100 = 98.03%
102,000
Note that the Retransmitted Bytes may have occurred more than once;
if so, then these multiple retransmissions are added to the
Retransmitted Bytes and to the Transmitted Bytes counts.
4.3. Buffer Delay
The third metric is the Buffer Delay Percentage, which represents the
increase in RTT during a TCP Throughput test versus the inherent or
baseline RTT. The baseline RTT is the Round-Trip Time inherent to
the network path under non-congested conditions as defined in
Section 3.2.1. The average RTT is derived from the total of all
measured RTTs during the actual test at every second divided by the
test duration in seconds.
Total RTTs during transfer
Average RTT during transfer = -----------------------------
Transfer duration in seconds
Average RTT during transfer - Baseline RTT
Buffer Delay % = ------------------------------------------ X 100
Baseline RTT
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4.3.1. Buffer Delay Percentage Calculation
As an example, consider a network path with a baseline RTT of 25 ms.
During the course of a TCP transfer, the average RTT across the
entire transfer increases to 32 ms. Then, the Buffer Delay
Percentage would be calculated as:
32 - 25
Buffer Delay % = ------- X 100 = 28%
25
Note that the TCP Transfer Time Ratio, TCP Efficiency Percentage, and
the Buffer Delay Percentage MUST all be measured during each
throughput test. A poor TCP Transfer Time Ratio (i.e., Actual TCP
Transfer Time greater than the Ideal TCP Transfer Time) may be
diagnosed by correlating with sub-optimal TCP Efficiency Percentage
and/or Buffer Delay Percentage metrics.
5. Conducting TCP Throughput Tests
Several TCP tools are currently used in the network world, and one of
the most common is "iperf". With this tool, hosts are installed at
each end of the network path; one acts as a client and the other as a
server. The Send Socket Buffer and the TCP RWND sizes of both client
and server can be manually set. The achieved throughput can then be
measured, either uni-directionally or bi-directionally. For higher-
BDP situations in lossy networks (Long Fat Networks (LFNs) or
satellite links, etc.), TCP options such as Selective Acknowledgment
SHOULD become part of the window size/throughput characterization.
Host hardware performance must be well understood before conducting
the tests described in the following sections. A dedicated
communications test instrument will generally be REQUIRED, especially
for line rates of GigE and 10 GigE. A compliant TCP TTD SHOULD
provide a warning message when the expected test throughput will
exceed the subscribed customer SLA. If the throughput test is
expected to exceed the subscribed customer SLA, then the test SHOULD
be coordinated with the network provider.
The TCP Throughput test SHOULD be run over a long enough duration to
properly exercise network buffers (i.e., greater than 30 seconds) and
SHOULD also characterize performance at different times of the day.
5.1. Single versus Multiple TCP Connections
The decision whether to conduct single- or multiple-TCP-connection
tests depends upon the size of the BDP in relation to the TCP RWND
configured in the end-user environment. For example, if the BDP for
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a Long Fat Network (LFN) turns out to be 2 MB, then it is probably
more realistic to test this network path with multiple connections.
Assuming typical host TCP RWND sizes of 64 KB (e.g., Windows XP),
using 32 TCP connections would emulate a small-office scenario.
The following table is provided to illustrate the relationship
between the TCP RWND and the number of TCP connections required to
fill the available capacity of a given BDP. For this example, the
network bandwidth is 500 Mbps and the RTT is 5 ms; then, the BDP
equates to 312.5 KBytes.
Number of TCP Connections
TCP RWND to fill available bandwidth
--------------------------------------
16 KB 20
32 KB 10
64 KB 5
128 KB 3
Table 5.1. Number of TCP Connections versus TCP RWND
The TCP Transfer Time Ratio metric is useful when conducting
multiple-connection tests. Each connection SHOULD be configured to
transfer payloads of the same size (e.g., 100 MB); then, the TCP
Transfer Time Ratio provides a simple metric to verify the actual
versus expected results.
Note that the TCP transfer time is the time required for each
connection to complete the transfer of the predetermined payload
size. From the previous table, the 64-KB window is considered. Each
of the 5 TCP connections would be configured to transfer 100 MB, and
each one should obtain a maximum of 100 Mbps. So for this example,
the 100-MB payload should be transferred across the connections in
approximately 8 seconds (which would be the Ideal TCP Transfer Time
under these conditions).
Additionally, the TCP Efficiency Percentage metric MUST be computed
for each connection as defined in Section 4.2.
5.2. Results Interpretation
At the end, a TCP Throughput Test Device (TCP TTD) SHOULD generate a
report with the calculated BDP and a set of Window size experiments.
Window size refers to the minimum of the Send Socket Buffer and TCP
RWND. The report SHOULD include TCP Throughput results for each TCP
Window size tested. The goal is to provide achievable versus actual
TCP Throughput results with respect to the TCP Window size when no
fragmentation occurs. The report SHOULD also include the results for
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the 3 metrics defined in Section 4. The goal is to provide a clear
relationship between these 3 metrics and user experience. As an
example, for the same results in regard to Transfer Time Ratio, a
better TCP Efficiency could be obtained at the cost of higher Buffer
Delays.
For cases where the test results are not equal to the ideal values,
some possible causes are as follows:
- Network congestion causing packet loss, which may be inferred from
a poor TCP Efficiency % (i.e., higher TCP Efficiency % = less
packet loss).
- Network congestion causing an increase in RTT, which may be
inferred from the Buffer Delay Percentage (i.e., 0% = no increase
in RTT over baseline).
- Intermediate network devices that actively regenerate the TCP
connection and can alter TCP RWND size, MTU, etc.
- Rate limiting by policing instead of shaping.
- Maximum TCP Buffer Space. All operating systems have a global
mechanism to limit the quantity of system memory to be used by TCP
connections. On some systems, each connection is subject to a
memory limit that is applied to the total memory used for input
data, output data, and controls. On other systems, there are
separate limits for input and output buffer spaces per connection.
Client/server IP hosts might be configured with Maximum TCP Buffer
Space limits that are far too small for high-performance networks.
- Socket Buffer sizes. Most operating systems support separate
per-connection send and receive buffer limits that can be adjusted
as long as they stay within the maximum memory limits. These
socket buffers MUST be large enough to hold a full BDP of TCP Bytes
plus some overhead. There are several methods that can be used to
adjust Socket Buffer sizes, but TCP Auto-Tuning automatically
adjusts these as needed to optimally balance TCP performance and
memory usage.
It is important to note that Auto-Tuning is enabled by default in
LINUX since kernel release 2.6.6 and in UNIX since FreeBSD 7.0. It
is also enabled by default in Windows since Vista and in Mac since
OS X version 10.5 (Leopard). Over-buffering can cause some
applications to behave poorly, typically causing sluggish
interactive response and introducing the risk of running the system
out of memory. Large default socket buffers have to be considered
carefully on multi-user systems.
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- TCP Window Scale option [RFC 1323]. This option enables TCP to
support large BDP paths. It provides a scale factor that is
required for TCP to support window sizes larger than 64 KB. Most
systems automatically request WSCALE under some conditions, such as
when the Receive Socket Buffer is larger than 64 KB or when the
other end of the TCP connection requests it first. WSCALE can only
be negotiated during the 3-way handshake. If either end fails to
request WSCALE or requests an insufficient value, it cannot be
renegotiated. Different systems use different algorithms to select
WSCALE, but it is very important to have large enough buffer sizes.
Note that under these constraints, a client application wishing to
send data at high rates may need to set its own receive buffer to
something larger than 64 KBytes before it opens the connection, to
ensure that the server properly negotiates WSCALE. A system
administrator might have to explicitly enable [RFC 1323] extensions.
Otherwise, the client/server IP host would not support TCP Window
sizes (BDP) larger than 64 KB. Most of the time, performance gains
will be obtained by enabling this option in LFNs.
- TCP Timestamps option [RFC 1323]. This feature provides better
measurements of the Round-Trip Time and protects TCP from data
corruption that might occur if packets are delivered so late that
the sequence numbers wrap before they are delivered. Wrapped
sequence numbers do not pose a serious risk below 100 Mbps, but the
risk increases at higher data rates. Most of the time, performance
gains will be obtained by enabling this option in Gigabit-bandwidth
networks.
- TCP Selective Acknowledgments (SACK) option [RFC 2018]. This allows
a TCP receiver to inform the sender about exactly which data
segment is missing and needs to be retransmitted. Without SACK,
TCP has to estimate which data segment is missing, which works just
fine if all losses are isolated (i.e., only one loss in any given
round trip). Without SACK, TCP takes a very long time to recover
after multiple and consecutive losses. SACK is now supported by
most operating systems, but it may have to be explicitly enabled by
the system administrator. In networks with unknown load and error
patterns, TCP SACK will improve throughput performance. On the
other hand, security appliance vendors might have implemented TCP
randomization without considering TCP SACK, and under such
circumstances, SACK might need to be disabled in the client/server
IP hosts until the vendor corrects the issue. Also, poorly
implemented SACK algorithms might cause extreme CPU loads and might
need to be disabled.
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- Path MTU. The client/server IP host system SHOULD use the largest
possible MTU for the path. This may require enabling Path MTU
Discovery [RFC 1191] and [RFC 4821]. Since [RFC 1191] is flawed, Path
MTU Discovery is sometimes not enabled by default and may need to
be explicitly enabled by the system administrator. [RFC 4821]
describes a new, more robust algorithm for MTU discovery and ICMP
black hole recovery.
- TOE (TCP Offload Engine). Some recent Network Interface Cards
(NICs) are equipped with drivers that can do part or all of the
TCP/IP protocol processing. TOE implementations require additional
work (i.e., hardware-specific socket manipulation) to set up and
tear down connections. Because TOE NIC configuration parameters
are vendor-specific and not necessarily RFC-compliant, they are
poorly integrated with UNIX and LINUX. Occasionally, TOE might
need to be disabled in a server because its NIC does not have
enough memory resources to buffer thousands of connections.
Note that both ends of a TCP connection MUST be properly tuned.
6. Security Considerations
Measuring TCP network performance raises security concerns. Metrics
produced within this framework may create security issues.
6.1. Denial-of-Service Attacks
TCP network performance metrics, as defined in this document, attempt
to fill the NUT with a stateful connection. However, since the test
MAY use stateless IP streams as specified in Section 3.2.2, it might
appear to network operators to be a denial-of-service attack. Thus,
as mentioned at the beginning of Section 3, TCP Throughput testing
may require cooperation between the end-user customer and the network
provider.
6.2. User Data Confidentiality
Metrics within this framework generate packets from a sample, rather
than taking samples based on user data. Thus, our framework does not
threaten user data confidentiality.
6.3. Interference with Metrics
The security considerations that apply to any active measurement of
live networks are relevant here as well. See [RFC 4656] and
[RFC 5357].
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RFC 6349 Framework for TCP Throughput Testing August 2011
7. Acknowledgments
Thanks to Lars Eggert, Al Morton, Matt Mathis, Matt Zekauskas, Yaakov
Stein, and Loki Jorgenson for many good comments and for pointing us
to great sources of information pertaining to past works in the TCP
capacity area.
8. Normative References
[RFC 1191] Mogul, J. and S. Deering, "Path MTU discovery", RFC 1191,
November 1990.
[RFC 1323] Jacobson, V., Braden, R., and D. Borman, "TCP Extensions
for High Performance", RFC 1323, May 1992.
[RFC 2018] Mathis, M., Mahdavi, J., Floyd, S., and A. Romanow, "TCP
Selective Acknowledgment Options", RFC 2018,
October 1996.
[RFC 2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.
[RFC 2544] Bradner, S. and J. McQuaid, "Benchmarking Methodology for
Network Interconnect Devices", RFC 2544, March 1999.
[RFC 4656] Shalunov, S., Teitelbaum, B., Karp, A., Boote, J., and M.
Zekauskas, "A One-way Active Measurement Protocol
(OWAMP)", RFC 4656, September 2006.
[RFC 4821] Mathis, M. and J. Heffner, "Packetization Layer Path MTU
Discovery", RFC 4821, March 2007.
[RFC 4898] Mathis, M., Heffner, J., and R. Raghunarayan, "TCP
Extended Statistics MIB", RFC 4898, May 2007.
[RFC 5136] Chimento, P. and J. Ishac, "Defining Network Capacity",
RFC 5136, February 2008.
[RFC 5357] Hedayat, K., Krzanowski, R., Morton, A., Yum, K., and J.
Babiarz, "A Two-Way Active Measurement Protocol (TWAMP)",
RFC 5357, October 2008.
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RFC 6349 Framework for TCP Throughput Testing August 2011
Authors' Addresses
Barry Constantine
JDSU, Test and Measurement Division
One Milesone Center Court
Germantown, MD 20876-7100
USA
Phone: +1 240 404 2227
EMail: barry.constantine@jdsu.com
Gilles Forget
Independent Consultant to Bell Canada
308, rue de Monaco, St-Eustache
Qc. J7P-4T5 CANADA
Phone: (514) 895-8212
EMail: gilles.forget@sympatico.ca
Ruediger Geib
Heinrich-Hertz-Strasse 3-7
Darmstadt, 64295 Germany
Phone: +49 6151 5812747
EMail: Ruediger.Geib@telekom.de
Reinhard Schrage
Osterende 7
Seelze, 30926
Germany
Schrage Consulting
Phone: +49 (0) 5137 909540
EMail: reinhard@schrageconsult.com
Constantine, et al. Informational PAGE 27
RFC TOTAL SIZE: 62494 bytes
PUBLICATION DATE: Friday, August 19th, 2011
LEGAL RIGHTS: The IETF Trust (see BCP 78)
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