<- RFC Index (2601..2700)
RFC 2681
Network Working Group G. Almes
Request for Comments: 2681 S. Kalidindi
Category: Standards Track M. Zekauskas
Advanced Network & Services
September 1999
A Round-trip Delay Metric for IPPM
Status of this Memo
This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the
Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for
improvements. Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet
Official Protocol Standards" (STD 1) for the standardization state
and status of this protocol. Distribution of this memo is unlimited.
Copyright Notice
Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1999). All Rights Reserved.
1. Introduction
This memo defines a metric for round-trip delay of packets across
Internet paths. It builds on notions introduced and discussed in the
IPPM Framework document, RFC 2330 [1], and follows closely the
corresponding metric for One-way Delay ("A One-way Delay Metric for
IPPM") [2]; the reader is assumed to be familiar with those
documents.
The memo was largely written by copying material from the One-way
Delay metric. The intention is that, where the two metrics are
similar, they will be described with similar or identical text, and
that where the two metrics differ, new or modified text will be used.
This memo is intended to be parallel in structure to a future
companion document for Packet Loss.
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 [6].
Although RFC 2119 was written with protocols in mind, the key words
are used in this document for similar reasons. They are used to
ensure the results of measurements from two different implementations
are comparable, and to note instances when an implementation could
perturb the network.
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The structure of the memo is as follows:
+ A 'singleton' analytic metric, called Type-P-Round-trip-Delay,
will be introduced to measure a single observation of round-trip
delay.
+ Using this singleton metric, a 'sample', called Type-P-Round-trip-
Delay-Poisson-Stream, will be introduced to measure a sequence of
singleton delays measured at times taken from a Poisson process.
+ Using this sample, several 'statistics' of the sample will be
defined and discussed.
This progression from singleton to sample to statistics, with clear
separation among them, is important.
Whenever a technical term from the IPPM Framework document is first
used in this memo, it will be tagged with a trailing asterisk. For
example, "term*" indicates that "term" is defined in the Framework.
1.1. Motivation
Round-trip delay of a Type-P* packet from a source host* to a
destination host is useful for several reasons:
+ Some applications do not perform well (or at all) if end-to-end
delay between hosts is large relative to some threshold value.
+ Erratic variation in delay makes it difficult (or impossible) to
support many interactive real-time applications.
+ The larger the value of delay, the more difficult it is for
transport-layer protocols to sustain high bandwidths.
+ The minimum value of this metric provides an indication of the
delay due only to propagation and transmission delay.
+ The minimum value of this metric provides an indication of the
delay that will likely be experienced when the path* traversed is
lightly loaded.
+ Values of this metric above the minimum provide an indication of
the congestion present in the path.
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The measurement of round-trip delay instead of one-way delay has
several weaknesses, summarized here:
+ The Internet path from a source to a destination may differ from
the path from the destination back to the source ("asymmetric
paths"), such that different sequences of routers are used for the
forward and reverse paths. Therefore round-trip measurements
actually measure the performance of two distinct paths together.
+ Even when the two paths are symmetric, they may have radically
different performance characteristics due to asymmetric queueing.
+ Performance of an application may depend mostly on the performance
in one direction.
+ In quality-of-service (QoS) enabled networks, provisioning in one
direction may be radically different than provisioning in the
reverse direction, and thus the QoS guarantees differ.
On the other hand, the measurement of round-trip delay has two
specific advantages:
+ Ease of deployment: unlike in one-way measurement, it is often
possible to perform some form of round-trip delay measurement
without installing measurement-specific software at the intended
destination. A variety of approaches are well-known, including
use of ICMP Echo or of TCP-based methodologies (similar to those
outlined in "IPPM Metrics for Measuring Connectivity" [4]).
However, some approaches may introduce greater uncertainty in the
time for the destination to produce a response (see
Section 2.7.3).
+ Ease of interpretation: in some circumstances, the round-trip time
is in fact the quantity of interest. Deducing the round-trip time
from matching one-way measurements and an assumption of the
destination processing time is less direct and potentially less
accurate.
1.2. General Issues Regarding Time
Whenever a time (i.e., a moment in history) is mentioned here, it is
understood to be measured in seconds (and fractions) relative to UTC.
As described more fully in the Framework document, there are four
distinct, but related notions of clock uncertainty:
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synchronization*
measures the extent to which two clocks agree on what time it
is. For example, the clock on one host might be 5.4 msec ahead
of the clock on a second host.
accuracy*
measures the extent to which a given clock agrees with UTC. For
example, the clock on a host might be 27.1 msec behind UTC.
resolution*
measures the precision of a given clock. For example, the clock
on an old Unix host might tick only once every 10 msec, and thus
have a resolution of only 10 msec.
skew*
measures the change of accuracy, or of synchronization, with
time. For example, the clock on a given host might gain 1.3
msec per hour and thus be 27.1 msec behind UTC at one time and
only 25.8 msec an hour later. In this case, we say that the
clock of the given host has a skew of 1.3 msec per hour relative
to UTC, which threatens accuracy. We might also speak of the
skew of one clock relative to another clock, which threatens
synchronization.
2. A Singleton Definition for Round-trip Delay
2.1. Metric Name:
Type-P-Round-trip-Delay
2.2. Metric Parameters:
+ Src, the IP address of a host
+ Dst, the IP address of a host
+ T, a time
2.3. Metric Units:
The value of a Type-P-Round-trip-Delay is either a real number, or an
undefined (informally, infinite) number of seconds.
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2.4. Definition:
For a real number dT, >>the *Type-P-Round-trip-Delay* from Src to Dst
at T is dT<< means that Src sent the first bit of a Type-P packet to
Dst at wire-time* T, that Dst received that packet, then immediately
sent a Type-P packet back to Src, and that Src received the last bit
of that packet at wire-time T+dT.
>>The *Type-P-Round-trip-Delay* from Src to Dst at T is undefined
(informally, infinite)<< means that Src sent the first bit of a
Type-P packet to Dst at wire-time T and that (either Dst did not
receive the packet, Dst did not send a Type-P packet in response, or)
Src did not receive that response packet.
>>The *Type-P-Round-trip-Delay between Src and Dst at T<< means
either the *Type-P-Round-trip-Delay from Src to Dst at T or the
*Type-P-Round-trip-Delay from Dst to Src at T. When this notion is
used, it is understood to be specifically ambiguous which host acts
as Src and which as Dst. {Comment: This ambiguity will usually be a
small price to pay for being able to have one measurement, launched
from either Src or Dst, rather than having two measurements.}
Suggestions for what to report along with metric values appear in
Section 3.8 after a discussion of the metric, methodologies for
measuring the metric, and error analysis.
2.5. Discussion:
Type-P-Round-trip-Delay is a relatively simple analytic metric, and
one that we believe will afford effective methods of measurement.
The following issues are likely to come up in practice:
+ The timestamp values (T) for the time at which delays are measured
should be fairly accurate in order to draw meaningful conclusions
about the state of the network at a given T. Therefore, Src
should have an accurate knowledge of time-of-day. NTP [3] affords
one way to achieve time accuracy to within several milliseconds.
Depending on the NTP server, higher accuracy may be achieved, for
example when NTP servers make use of GPS systems as a time source.
Note that NTP will adjust the instrument's clock. If an
adjustment is made between the time the initial timestamp is taken
and the time the final timestamp is taken the adjustment will
affect the uncertainty in the measured delay. This uncertainty
must be accounted for in the instrument's calibration.
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+ A given methodology will have to include a way to determine
whether a delay value is infinite or whether it is merely very
large (and the packet is yet to arrive at Dst). As noted by
Mahdavi and Paxson [4], simple upper bounds (such as the 255
seconds theoretical upper bound on the lifetimes of IP
packets [5]) could be used, but good engineering, including an
understanding of packet lifetimes, will be needed in practice.
{Comment: Note that, for many applications of these metrics, the
harm in treating a large delay as infinite might be zero or very
small. A TCP data packet, for example, that arrives only after
several multiples of the RTT may as well have been lost.}
+ If the packet is duplicated so that multiple non-corrupt instances
of the response arrive back at the source, then the packet is
counted as received, and the first instance to arrive back at the
source determines the packet's round-trip delay.
+ If the packet is fragmented and if, for whatever reason,
reassembly does not occur, then the packet will be deemed lost.
2.6. Methodologies:
As with other Type-P-* metrics, the detailed methodology will depend
on the Type-P (e.g., protocol number, UDP/TCP port number, size,
precedence).
Generally, for a given Type-P, the methodology would proceed as
follows:
+ At the Src host, select Src and Dst IP addresses, and form a test
packet of Type-P with these addresses. Any 'padding' portion of
the packet needed only to make the test packet a given size should
be filled with randomized bits to avoid a situation in which the
measured delay is lower than it would otherwise be due to
compression techniques along the path. The test packet must have
some identifying information so that the response to it can be
identified by Src when Src receives the response; one means to do
this is by placing the timestamp generated just before sending the
test packet in the packet itself.
+ At the Dst host, arrange to receive and respond to the test
packet. At the Src host, arrange to receive the corresponding
response packet.
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+ At the Src host, take the initial timestamp and then send the
prepared Type-P packet towards Dst. Note that the timestamp could
be placed inside the packet, or kept separately as long as the
packet contains a suitable identifier so the received timestamp
can be compared with the send timestamp.
+ If the packet arrives at Dst, send a corresponding response packet
back from Dst to Src as soon as possible.
+ If the response packet arrives within a reasonable period of time,
take the final timestamp as soon as possible upon the receipt of
the packet. By subtracting the two timestamps, an estimate of
round-trip delay can be computed. If the delay between the
initial timestamp and the actual sending of the packet is known,
then the estimate could be adjusted by subtracting this amount;
uncertainty in this value must be taken into account in error
analysis. Similarly, if the delay between the actual receipt of
the response packet and final timestamp is known, then the
estimate could be adjusted by subtracting this amount; uncertainty
in this value must be taken into account in error analysis. See
the next section, "Errors and Uncertainties", for a more detailed
discussion.
+ If the packet fails to arrive within a reasonable period of time,
the round-trip delay is taken to be undefined (informally,
infinite). Note that the threshold of 'reasonable' is a parameter
of the methodology.
Issues such as the packet format and the means by which Dst knows
when to expect the test packet are outside the scope of this
document.
{Comment: Note that you cannot in general add two Type-P-One-way-
Delay values (see [2]) to form a Type-P-Round-trip-Delay value. In
order to form a Type-P-Round-trip-Delay value, the return packet must
be triggered by the reception of a packet from Src.}
{Comment: "ping" would qualify as a round-trip measure under this
definition, with a Type-P of ICMP echo request/reply with 60-byte
packets. However, the uncertainties associated with a typical ping
program must be analyzed as in the next section, including the type
of reflecting point (a router may not handle an ICMP request in the
fast path) and effects of load on the reflecting point.}
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2.7. Errors and Uncertainties:
The description of any specific measurement method should include an
accounting and analysis of various sources of error or uncertainty.
The Framework document provides general guidance on this point, but
we note here the following specifics related to delay metrics:
+ Errors or uncertainties due to uncertainty in the clock of the Src
host.
+ Errors or uncertainties due to the difference between 'wire time'
and 'host time'.
+ Errors or uncertainties due to time required by the Dst to receive
the packet from the Src and send the corresponding response.
In addition, the loss threshold may affect the results. Each of
these are discussed in more detail below, along with a section
("Calibration") on accounting for these errors and uncertainties.
2.7.1. Errors or Uncertainties Related to Clocks
The uncertainty in a measurement of round-trip delay is related, in
part, to uncertainty in the clock of the Src host. In the following,
we refer to the clock used to measure when the packet was sent from
Src as the source clock, and we refer to the observed time when the
packet was sent by the source as Tinitial, and the observed time when
the packet was received by the source as Tfinal. Alluding to the
notions of synchronization, accuracy, resolution, and skew mentioned
in the Introduction, we note the following:
+ While in one-way delay there is an issue of the synchronization of
the source clock and the destination clock, in round-trip delay
there is an (easier) issue of self-synchronization, as it were,
between the source clock at the time the test packet is sent and
the (same) source clock at the time the response packet is
received. Theoretically a very severe case of skew could threaten
this. In practice, the greater threat is anything that would
cause a discontinuity in the source clock during the time between
the taking of the initial and final timestamp. This might happen,
for example, with certain implementations of NTP.
+ The accuracy of a clock is important only in identifying the time
at which a given delay was measured. Accuracy, per se, has no
importance to the accuracy of the measurement of delay.
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+ The resolution of a clock adds to uncertainty about any time
measured with it. Thus, if the source clock has a resolution of
10 msec, then this adds 10 msec of uncertainty to any time value
measured with it. We will denote the resolution of the source
clock as Rsource.
Taking these items together, we note that naive computation Tfinal-
Tinitial will be off by 2*Rsource.
2.7.2. Errors or Uncertainties Related to Wire-time vs Host-time
As we have defined round-trip delay, we would like to measure the
time between when the test packet leaves the network interface of Src
and when the corresponding response packet (completely) arrives at
the network interface of Src, and we refer to these as "wire times".
If the timings are themselves performed by software on Src, however,
then this software can only directly measure the time between when
Src grabs a timestamp just prior to sending the test packet and when
it grabs a timestamp just after having received the response packet,
and we refer to these two points as "host times".
Another contributor to this problem is time spent at Dst between the
receipt there of the test packet and the sending of the response
packet. Ideally, this time is zero; it is explored further in the
next section.
To the extent that the difference between wire time and host time is
accurately known, this knowledge can be used to correct for host time
measurements and the corrected value more accurately estimates the
desired (wire time) metric.
To the extent, however, that the difference between wire time and
host time is uncertain, this uncertainty must be accounted for in an
analysis of a given measurement method. We denote by Hinitial an
upper bound on the uncertainty in the difference between wire time
and host time on the Src host in sending the test packet, and
similarly define Hfinal for the difference on the Src host in
receiving the response packet. We then note that these problems
introduce a total uncertainty of Hinitial + Hfinal. This estimate of
total wire-vs-host uncertainty should be included in the
error/uncertainty analysis of any measurement implementation.
2.7.3. Errors or Uncertainties Related to Dst Producing a Response
Any time spent by the destination host in receiving and recognizing
the packet from Src, and then producing and sending the corresponding
response adds additional error and uncertainty to the round-trip
delay measurement. The error equals the difference between the wire
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time the first bit of the packet is received by Dst and the wire time
the first bit of the response is sent by Dst. To the extent that
this difference is accurately known, this knowledge can be used to
correct the desired metric. To the extent, however, that this
difference is uncertain, this uncertainty must be accounted for in
the error analysis of a measurement implementation. We denote this
uncertainty by Hrefl. This estimate of uncertainty should be
included in the error/uncertainty analysis of any measurement
implementation.
2.7.4. Calibration
Generally, the measured values can be decomposed as follows:
measured value = true value + systematic error + random error
If the systematic error (the constant bias in measured values) can be
determined, it can be compensated for in the reported results.
reported value = measured value - systematic error
therefore
reported value = true value + random error
The goal of calibration is to determine the systematic and random
error generated by the instruments themselves in as much detail as
possible. At a minimum, a bound ("e") should be found such that the
reported value is in the range (true value - e) to (true value + e)
at least 95 percent of the time. We call "e" the calibration error
for the measurements. It represents the degree to which the values
produced by the measurement instrument are repeatable; that is, how
closely an actual delay of 30 ms is reported as 30 ms. {Comment: 95
percent was chosen because (1) some confidence level is desirable to
be able to remove outliers, which will be found in measuring any
physical property; and (2) a particular confidence level should be
specified so that the results of independent implementations can be
compared.}
From the discussion in the previous three sections, the error in
measurements could be bounded by determining all the individual
uncertainties, and adding them together to form
2*Rsource + Hinitial + Hfinal + Hrefl.
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However, reasonable bounds on both the clock-related uncertainty
captured by the first term and the host-related uncertainty captured
by the last three terms should be possible by careful design
techniques and calibrating the instruments using a known, isolated,
network in a lab.
The host-related uncertainties, Hinitial + Hfinal + Hrefl, could be
bounded by connecting two instruments back-to-back with a high-speed
serial link or isolated LAN segment. In this case, repeated
measurements are measuring the same round-trip delay.
If the test packets are small, such a network connection has a
minimal delay that may be approximated by zero. The measured delay
therefore contains only systematic and random error in the
instrumentation. The "average value" of repeated measurements is the
systematic error, and the variation is the random error.
One way to compute the systematic error, and the random error to a
95% confidence is to repeat the experiment many times - at least
hundreds of tests. The systematic error would then be the median.
The random error could then be found by removing the systematic error
from the measured values. The 95% confidence interval would be the
range from the 2.5th percentile to the 97.5th percentile of these
deviations from the true value. The calibration error "e" could then
be taken to be the largest absolute value of these two numbers, plus
the clock-related uncertainty. {Comment: as described, this bound is
relatively loose since the uncertainties are added, and the absolute
value of the largest deviation is used. As long as the resulting
value is not a significant fraction of the measured values, it is a
reasonable bound. If the resulting value is a significant fraction
of the measured values, then more exact methods will be needed to
compute the calibration error.}
Note that random error is a function of measurement load. For
example, if many paths will be measured by one instrument, this might
increase interrupts, process scheduling, and disk I/O (for example,
recording the measurements), all of which may increase the random
error in measured singletons. Therefore, in addition to minimal load
measurements to find the systematic error, calibration measurements
should be performed with the same measurement load that the
instruments will see in the field.
We wish to reiterate that this statistical treatment refers to the
calibration of the instrument; it is used to "calibrate the meter
stick" and say how well the meter stick reflects reality.
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In addition to calibrating the instruments for finite delay, two
checks should be made to ensure that packets reported as losses were
really lost. First, the threshold for loss should be verified. In
particular, ensure the "reasonable" threshold is reasonable: that it
is very unlikely a packet will arrive after the threshold value, and
therefore the number of packets lost over an interval is not
sensitive to the error bound on measurements. Second, consider the
possibility that a packet arrives at the network interface, but is
lost due to congestion on that interface or to other resource
exhaustion (e.g. buffers) in the instrument.
2.8. Reporting the Metric:
The calibration and context in which the metric is measured MUST be
carefully considered, and SHOULD always be reported along with metric
results. We now present four items to consider: the Type-P of test
packets, the threshold of infinite delay (if any), error calibration,
and the path traversed by the test packets. This list is not
exhaustive; any additional information that could be useful in
interpreting applications of the metrics should also be reported.
2.8.1. Type-P
As noted in the Framework document [1], the value of the metric may
depend on the type of IP packets used to make the measurement, or
"type-P". The value of Type-P-Round-trip-Delay could change if the
protocol (UDP or TCP), port number, size, or arrangement for special
treatment (e.g., IP precedence or RSVP) changes. The exact Type-P
used to make the measurements MUST be accurately reported.
2.8.2. Loss threshold
In addition, the threshold (or methodology to distinguish) between a
large finite delay and loss MUST be reported.
2.8.3. Calibration Results
+ If the systematic error can be determined, it SHOULD be removed
from the measured values.
+ You SHOULD also report the calibration error, e, such that the
true value is the reported value plus or minus e, with 95%
confidence (see the last section.)
+ If possible, the conditions under which a test packet with finite
delay is reported as lost due to resource exhaustion on the
measurement instrument SHOULD be reported.
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2.8.4. Path
Finally, the path traversed by the packet SHOULD be reported, if
possible. In general it is impractical to know the precise path a
given packet takes through the network. The precise path may be
known for certain Type-P on short or stable paths. For example, if
Type-P includes the record route (or loose-source route) option in
the IP header, and the path is short enough, and all routers* on the
path support record (or loose-source) route, and the Dst host copies
the path from Src to Dst into the corresponding reply packet, then
the path will be precisely recorded. This is impractical because the
route must be short enough, many routers do not support (or are not
configured for) record route, and use of this feature would often
artificially worsen the performance observed by removing the packet
from common-case processing. However, partial information is still
valuable context. For example, if a host can choose between two
links* (and hence two separate routes from Src to Dst), then the
initial link used is valuable context. {Comment: For example, with
Merit's NetNow setup, a Src on one NAP can reach a Dst on another NAP
by either of several different backbone networks.}
3. A Definition for Samples of Round-trip Delay
Given the singleton metric Type-P-Round-trip-Delay, we now define one
particular sample of such singletons. The idea of the sample is to
select a particular binding of the parameters Src, Dst, and Type-P,
then define a sample of values of parameter T. The means for
defining the values of T is to select a beginning time T0, a final
time Tf, and an average rate lambda, then define a pseudo-random
Poisson process of rate lambda, whose values fall between T0 and Tf.
The time interval between successive values of T will then average
1/lambda.
{Comment: Note that Poisson sampling is only one way of defining a
sample. Poisson has the advantage of limiting bias, but other
methods of sampling might be appropriate for different situations.
We encourage others who find such appropriate cases to use this
general framework and submit their sampling method for
standardization.}
3.1. Metric Name:
Type-P-Round-trip-Delay-Poisson-Stream
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3.2. Metric Parameters:
+ Src, the IP address of a host
+ Dst, the IP address of a host
+ T0, a time
+ Tf, a time
+ lambda, a rate in reciprocal seconds
3.3. Metric Units:
A sequence of pairs; the elements of each pair are:
+ T, a time, and
+ dT, either a real number or an undefined number of seconds.
The values of T in the sequence are monotonic increasing. Note that
T would be a valid parameter to Type-P-Round-trip-Delay, and that dT
would be a valid value of Type-P-Round-trip-Delay.
3.4. Definition:
Given T0, Tf, and lambda, we compute a pseudo-random Poisson process
beginning at or before T0, with average arrival rate lambda, and
ending at or after Tf. Those time values greater than or equal to T0
and less than or equal to Tf are then selected. At each of the times
in this process, we obtain the value of Type-P-Round-trip-Delay at
this time. The value of the sample is the sequence made up of the
resulting <time, delay> pairs. If there are no such pairs, the
sequence is of length zero and the sample is said to be empty.
3.5. Discussion:
The reader should be familiar with the in-depth discussion of Poisson
sampling in the Framework document [1], which includes methods to
compute and verify the pseudo-random Poisson process.
We specifically do not constrain the value of lambda, except to note
the extremes. If the rate is too large, then the measurement traffic
will perturb the network, and itself cause congestion. If the rate
is too small, then you might not capture interesting network
behavior. {Comment: We expect to document our experiences with, and
suggestions for, lambda elsewhere, culminating in a "best current
practices" document.}
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Since a pseudo-random number sequence is employed, the sequence of
times, and hence the value of the sample, is not fully specified.
Pseudo-random number generators of good quality will be needed to
achieve the desired qualities.
The sample is defined in terms of a Poisson process both to avoid the
effects of self-synchronization and also capture a sample that is
statistically as unbiased as possible. {Comment: there is, of
course, no claim that real Internet traffic arrives according to a
Poisson arrival process.} The Poisson process is used to schedule
the delay measurements. The test packets will generally not arrive
at Dst according to a Poisson distribution, nor will response packets
arrive at Src according to a Poisson distribution, since they are
influenced by the network.
All the singleton Type-P-Round-trip-Delay metrics in the sequence
will have the same values of Src, Dst, and Type-P.
Note also that, given one sample that runs from T0 to Tf, and given
new time values T0' and Tf' such that T0 <= T0' <= Tf' <= Tf, the
subsequence of the given sample whose time values fall between T0'
and Tf' are also a valid Type-P-Round-trip-Delay-Poisson-Stream
sample.
3.6. Methodologies:
The methodologies follow directly from:
+ the selection of specific times, using the specified Poisson
arrival process, and
+ the methodologies discussion already given for the singleton Type-
P-Round-trip-Delay metric.
Care must, of course, be given to correctly handle out-of-order
arrival of test or response packets; it is possible that the Src
could send one test packet at TS[i], then send a second test packet
(later) at TS[i+1], and it could receive the second response packet
at TR[i+1], and then receive the first response packet (later) at
TR[i].
3.7. Errors and Uncertainties:
In addition to sources of errors and uncertainties associated with
methods employed to measure the singleton values that make up the
sample, care must be given to analyze the accuracy of the Poisson
process with respect to the wire-times of the sending of the test
packets. Problems with this process could be caused by several
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RFC 2681 Round-trip for Delay Metric for IPPM September 1999
things, including problems with the pseudo-random number techniques
used to generate the Poisson arrival process, or with jitter in the
value of Hinitial (mentioned above as uncertainty in the singleton
delay metric). The Framework document shows how to use the
Anderson-Darling test to verify the accuracy of a Poisson process
over small time frames. {Comment: The goal is to ensure that test
packets are sent "close enough" to a Poisson schedule, and avoid
periodic behavior.}
3.8. Reporting the Metric:
You MUST report the calibration and context for the underlying
singletons along with the stream. (See "Reporting the metric" for
Type-P-Round-trip-Delay.)
4. Some Statistics Definitions for Round-trip Delay
Given the sample metric Type-P-Round-trip-Delay-Poisson-Stream, we
now offer several statistics of that sample. These statistics are
offered mostly to be illustrative of what could be done.
4.1. Type-P-Round-trip-Delay-Percentile
Given a Type-P-Round-trip-Delay-Poisson-Stream and a percent X
between 0% and 100%, the Xth percentile of all the dT values in the
Stream. In computing this percentile, undefined values are treated
as infinitely large. Note that this means that the percentile could
thus be undefined (informally, infinite). In addition, the Type-P-
Round-trip-Delay-Percentile is undefined if the sample is empty.
Example: suppose we take a sample and the results are:
Stream1 = <
<T1, 100 msec>
<T2, 110 msec>
<T3, undefined>
<T4, 90 msec>
<T5, 500 msec>
>
Then the 50th percentile would be 110 msec, since 90 msec and 100
msec are smaller and 110 msec and 'undefined' are larger.
Note that if the possibility that a packet with finite delay is
reported as lost is significant, then a high percentile (90th or
95th) might be reported as infinite instead of finite.
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4.2. Type-P-Round-trip-Delay-Median
Given a Type-P-Round-trip-Delay-Poisson-Stream, the median of all the
dT values in the Stream. In computing the median, undefined values
are treated as infinitely large. As with Type-P-Round-trip-Delay-
Percentile, Type-P-Round-trip-Delay-Median is undefined if the sample
is empty.
As noted in the Framework document, the median differs from the 50th
percentile only when the sample contains an even number of values, in
which case the mean of the two central values is used.
Example: suppose we take a sample and the results are:
Stream2 = <
<T1, 100 msec>
<T2, 110 msec>
<T3, undefined>
<T4, 90 msec>
>
Then the median would be 105 msec, the mean of 100 msec and 110 msec,
the two central values.
4.3. Type-P-Round-trip-Delay-Minimum
Given a Type-P-Round-trip-Delay-Poisson-Stream, the minimum of all
the dT values in the Stream. In computing this, undefined values are
treated as infinitely large. Note that this means that the minimum
could thus be undefined (informally, infinite) if all the dT values
are undefined. In addition, the Type-P-Round-trip-Delay-Minimum is
undefined if the sample is empty.
In the above example, the minimum would be 90 msec.
4.4. Type-P-Round-trip-Delay-Inverse-Percentile
Given a Type-P-Round-trip-Delay-Poisson-Stream and a time duration
threshold, the fraction of all the dT values in the Stream less than
or equal to the threshold. The result could be as low as 0% (if all
the dT values exceed threshold) or as high as 100%. Type-P-Round-
trip-Delay-Inverse-Percentile is undefined if the sample is empty.
In the above example, the Inverse-Percentile of 103 msec would be
50%.
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5. Security Considerations
Conducting Internet measurements raises both security and privacy
concerns. This memo does not specify an implementation of the
metrics, so it does not directly affect the security of the Internet
nor of applications which run on the Internet. However,
implementations of these metrics must be mindful of security and
privacy concerns.
There are two types of security concerns: potential harm caused by
the measurements, and potential harm to the measurements. The
measurements could cause harm because they are active, and inject
packets into the network. The measurement parameters MUST be
carefully selected so that the measurements inject trivial amounts of
additional traffic into the networks they measure. If they inject
"too much" traffic, they can skew the results of the measurement, and
in extreme cases cause congestion and denial of service.
The measurements themselves could be harmed by routers giving
measurement traffic a different priority than "normal" traffic, or by
an attacker injecting artificial measurement traffic. If routers can
recognize measurement traffic and treat it separately, the
measurements will not reflect actual user traffic. If an attacker
injects artificial traffic that is accepted as legitimate, the loss
rate will be artificially lowered. Therefore, the measurement
methodologies SHOULD include appropriate techniques to reduce the
probability measurement traffic can be distinguished from "normal"
traffic. Authentication techniques, such as digital signatures, may
be used where appropriate to guard against injected traffic attacks.
The privacy concerns of network measurement are limited by the active
measurements described in this memo. Unlike passive measurements,
there can be no release of existing user data.
6. Acknowledgements
Special thanks are due to Vern Paxson and to Will Leland for several
useful suggestions.
7. References
[1] Paxson, D., Almes, G., Mahdavi, J. and M. Mathis, "Framework for
IP Performance Metrics", RFC 2330, May 1998.
[2] Almes, G., Kalidindi,S. and M. Zekauskas, "A One-way Delay
Metric for IPPM", RFC 2679, September 1999.
[3] Mills, D., "Network Time Protocol (v3)", RFC 1305, April 1992.
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RFC 2681 Round-trip for Delay Metric for IPPM September 1999
[4] Mahdavi, J. and V. Paxson, "IPPM Metrics for Measuring
Connectivity", RFC 2678, September 1999.
[5] Postel, J., "Internet Protocol", STD 5, RFC 791, September 1981.
[6] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement
Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.
8. Authors' Addresses
Guy Almes
Advanced Network & Services, Inc.
200 Business Park Drive
Armonk, NY 10504
USA
Phone: +1 914 765 1120
EMail: almes@advanced.org
Sunil Kalidindi
Advanced Network & Services, Inc.
200 Business Park Drive
Armonk, NY 10504
USA
Phone: +1 914 765 1128
EMail: kalidindi@advanced.org
Matthew J. Zekauskas
Advanced Network & Services, Inc.
200 Business Park Drive
Armonk, NY 10504
USA
Phone: +1 914 765 1112
EMail: matt@advanced.org
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9. Full Copyright Statement
Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1999). All Rights Reserved.
This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to
others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it
or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published
and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any
kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are
included on all such copies and derivative works. However, this
document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing
the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other
Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of
developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for
copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be
followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than
English.
The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be
revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assigns.
This document and the information contained herein is provided on an
"AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING
TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING
BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION
HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
Acknowledgement
Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the
Internet Society.
Almes, et al. Standards Track [Page 20]