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Software-defined Measurement

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Presentation on theme: "Software-defined Measurement"— Presentation transcript:

1 Software-defined Measurement
Minlan Yu University of Southern California Joint work with Lavanya Jose, Rui Miao, Masoud Moshref, Ramesh Govindan, Amin Vahdat

2 Management = Measurement + Control
Accounting Count resource usage for tenants Traffic engineering Identify large traffic aggregates, traffic changes Understand flow characteristics (flow size, etc.) Performance diagnosis Why my application has high delay, low throughput? Management is important, yet underexplored Taking 80% of IT budget Responsible for 62% of outages Measurement is at least half of network management Figuring out what’s going on is harder than deciding what to do

3 Yet, measurement is underexplored
Measurement is an afterthought in network device Control functions are optimized w/ many resources Limited, fixed measurement support with NetFlow/sFlow Traffic analysis is incomplete and indirect Incomplete: May not catch all the events from samples Indirect: Offline analysis based on pre-collected logs Network-wide view of traffic is especially difficult Data are collected at different times/places SLOW down, spend more time on this

4 Software-defined Measurement
SDN offers unique opportunities for measurement Simple, reusable primitives at switches Diverse and dynamic analysis at controller Network-wide view Controller Heavy Hitter detection Change detection (Re)Configure resources 1 Configure resources 1 Fetch statistics 2

5 Challenges Diverse measurement tasks Limited resources at switches
Generic measurement primitives for diverse tasks Measurement library for easy programming Limited resources at switches New data structures to reduce memory usage Multiplexing across many tasks

6 Software-defined Measurement
OpenSketch (NSDI’13) DREAM (SIGCOMM’14) Sketch-based commodity switch components Flow-based OpenFlow TCAM Data plane Primitives Optimization w/ Provable resource-accuracy bounds Dynamic Allocation w/ Accuracy estimator Resource alloc across tasks In my other works, I also use optimization theory, random walk, hashing, and graph theory. These algorithms and data structures are not useful if we cannot demonstrate them with real prototypes. These prototypes are not sufficient to make real world impact of my research, so I also actively collaborate with industry. OpenSource NetFPGA + Sketch library networks of hardware switches and Open vSwitch Prototype

7 Software-defined Measurement with Sketches (NSDI’13)
Talk about how SNAP helps developers and auto-adaptation

8 Software Defined Networking
Controller Configure devices and collect measurements API to the data plane (OpenFlow) Fields action counters Src= drop, #packets, #bytes Rethink the abstractions for measurement Packet/Byte counters are not enough Large traffic aggregates: too many counters at switches (one counter for each micro flow) Pull too many statistics to the controller Switches Forward/measure packets

9 Tradeoff of Generality and Efficiency
Supporting a wide variety of measurement tasks Who’s sending a lot to /16? Is someone being DDoS-ed? How many people downloaded files from ? Efficiency Enabling high link speed (40 Gbps or larger) Ensuring low cost (Cheap switches with small memory) Easy to implement with commodity switch components E.g., Cisco NetFlow

10 NetFlow: General, Not Efficient
Cisco NetFlow/sFlow Log sampled packets, or flow-level counters General Ok for many measurement tasks Not ideal for any single task Not efficient It’s hard to determine the right sampling rate Measurement accuracy depends on traffic distribution Turned off or not even available in datacenters Accuracy depends on traffic distribution Different sampling solutions for different problems

11 Streaming Algo: Efficient, Not General
Streaming algorithms Summarize packet information with Sketches E.g. Count-Min Sketch, Who’s sending a lot to host A? Not general:Each algorithm solves just one question Require customized hardware or network processors Hard to implement every solution in practice # bytes from 3 5 1 9 2 4 Hash2 Hash1 Hash3 Data plane Query: 5 3 4 Pick min: 3 Control plane Bitmap for #unique items, Bloom filter for set member check

12 Where is the Sweet Spot? OpenSketch General Efficient NetFlow/sFlow
(too expensive) Streaming Algo (Not practical) OpenSketch General, and efficient data plane based on sketches Modularized control plane with automatic configuration A new data structure that harnesses the capacity of the TCAMs across all the switches to give the illusion of a much larger TCAM.

13 Flexible Measurement Data Plane
Picking the packets to measure Hashes to represent a compact set of flows A set of blacklisting IPs Classify flows with different resources/accuracy Filter out traffic for /16 Storing and exporting the data A table with flexible indexing Complex indexing using hashes and classification Diverse mappings between counters and flows

14 A three-stage pipeline
Hashing: A few hash functions on packet source Classification: based on hash value or packets Counting: Update a few counters with simple calc. # bytes from 3 5 1 9 2 4 Hash2 Hash1 Hash3

15 Build on Existing Switch Components
A few simple hash functions 4-8 three-wise or five-wise independent hash functions Leverage traffic diversity to approx. truly random func. A few TCAM entries for classification Match on both packets and hash values Avoid matching on individual micro-flow entries Flexible counters in SRAM Many logical tables for different sketches Different numbers and sizes of counters Access counters by addresses Different

16 Modularized Measurement Libarary
A measurement library of sketches Bitmap, Bloom filter, Count-Min Sketch, etc. Easy to implement with the data plane pipeline Support diverse measurement tasks Implement Heavy Hitters with OpenSketch Who’s sending a lot to /16? count-min sketch to count volume of flows reversible sketch to identify flows with heavy counts in the count-min sketch

17 Support Many Measurement Tasks
Measurement Programs Building blocks Line of Code Heavy hitters Count-min sketch; Reversible sketch Config:10 Query: 20 Superspreaders Count-min sketch; Bitmap; Reversible sketch Query:: 14 Traffic change detection Query: 30 Traffic entropy on port field Multi-resolution classifier; Count-min sketch Query: 60 Flow size distribution multi-resolution classifier; hash table Config:10 Query: 109

18 Resource management Automatic configuration within a task
Pick the right sketches for measurement tasks Allocating resources across sketches Based on provable resource-accuracy curves Resource allocation across tasks Operators simply specify relative importance of tasks Minimizing weighted error using convex optimization Decompose to optimization problem of individual tasks

19 OpenSketch Architecture

20 Evaluation Prototype on NetFPGA Trace Driven Simulators
No effect on data plane throughput Line speed measurement performance Trace Driven Simulators OpenSketch, NetFlow, and streaming algorithm One-hour CAIDA packet traces on a backbone link Tradeoff between generality and efficiency How efficient is OpenSketch compared to NetFlow? How accurate is OpenSketch compared to specific streaming algorithms? OpenSketch Configurations 4 Bytes per counter 3-5 2-universal hash functions NetFlow Configurations 32 Bytes per entry Use different sampling rate (1/50 – 1/1000) Count the actual number of flow entries used

21 Heavy Hitters: false positives/negatives
Identify flows taking > 0.5% bandwidth OpenSketch requires less memory with higher accuracy OpenSketch has no false-negatives with for 85KB memory, and no false positives when the switch has 600KB memory. In contrast, NetFlow needs 724KB memory to achieve the 3% false positves/negatives

22 Tradeoff Efficiency for Generality
In theory, OpenSketch requires 6 times memory than complex streaming algorithm or example, the Space-Saving heavy hitter detection algorithm [8] maintains a hash ta- ble of items and counts, and requires customized opera- tions such as keeping a pointer to the item with minimum counts and replacing the minimum-count entry with a new item, if the item does not have an entry

23 OpenSketch Conclusion
Bridging the gap between theory and practice Leveraging good properties of sketches Provable accuracy-memory tradeoff Making sketches easy to implement and use Generic support for different measurement tasks Easy to implement with commodity switch hardware Modularized library for easy programming

24 Dynamic Resource Allocation For TCAM-based Measurement SIGCOMM’14
Talk about how SNAP helps developers and auto-adaptation

25 SDM Challenges Many measurement tasks Many Management tasks Controller
Heavy Hitter detection Change detection Heavy Hitter detection Heavy Hitter detection H Dynamic Resource Allocator (Re)Configure resources 1 Configure resources 1 Fetch statistics 2 Many measurement tasks Task types: Heavy hitter, Change detection Header fields: Source IP, Destination port Traffic aggregate: To drill down Per-tenant tasks Limited measurement resources Limited CPU for measurement Cheap switches with limited memory We focus on hardware switches with TCAM Limited resources (TCAM)

26 Dynamic Resource Allocator
Diminishing return of resources More resources make smaller accuracy gain More resources find less significant outputs Operators can accept an accuracy bound <100% Finding 8Mbps heavy hitters on CAIDA trace detected true HH/all Recall=

27 Dynamic Resource Allocator
Temporal and spatial resource multiplexing Traffic varies over time and switches Resource for an accuracy bound depends on Traffic detected true HH/all Recall=

28 Challenges No ground truth of resource-accuracy
Hard to do traditional convex optimization New ways to estimate accuracy on the fly Adaptively increase/decrease resources accordingly Spatial & temporal changes Task and traffic dynamics Coordinate multiple switches to keep a task accurate Spatial and temporal resource adaptation

29 Dynamic Resource Allocator
Controller Heavy Hitter detection Change detection Heavy Hitter detection Heavy Hitter detection H Estimated accuracy Estimated accuracy Allocated resource Allocated resource Dynamic Resource Allocator Decompose the resource allocator to each switch Each switch separately increase/decrease resources When and how to change resources?

30 Per-switch Resource Allocator: When?
When a task on a switch needs more resources? Based on A’s accuracy (25%) is not enough if bound is 40%, no need to increase A’s resources Based on the global accuracy (47%) is not enough if bound is 80%, increasing B’s resources is not helpful Conclusion: when max(local, global) < accuracy bound Controller Detected HH: 14 out of 30 Global accuracy=47% Heavy Hitter detection Detected HH:5 out of 20 Local accuracy=25% Detected HH:9 out of 10 Local accuracy=90% A B

31 Per-Switch Resource Allocator: How?
How to adapt resources? Take from rich tasks, give to poor tasks How much resource to take/give? Adaptive change step for fast convergence Small steps close to bound, large steps otherwise

32 Task Implementation Controller Heavy Hitter detection Change detection
Estimated accuracy Estimated accuracy Allocated resource Allocated resource Dynamic Resource Allocator (Re)Configure resources 1 Configure resources 1 Fetch statistics 2

33 Flow-based algorithms using TCAM
Goal: Maximize accuracy given limited resources A general resource-aware algorithm Different tasks: e.g., HH, HHH, Change detection Multiple switches: e.g., HHs from different switches Assume: Each flow is seen at one switch (e.g., at sources) 36 Current *** 26 10 New 0** 1** 12 14 5 5 00* 01* 10* 11* 001 011 111 101 5 7 12 2 5 2 3 000 010 100 110

34 Divide & Merge at Multiple Switches
Divide: Monitor children to increase accuracy Requires more resources on a set of switches Example: Needs an additional entry on switch B Merge: Monitor parent to free resources Each node keeps the switch set it frees after merge Finding the least important prefixes to merge is the minimum set cover problem 26 0** Current: A:0**, B:0**, C:0** {A,B,C} {A,B} {B,C} New: A:00*, B:00*,01*, C:01* 12 14 00* 01*

35 Accuracy Estimation: Heavy Hitter Detection
Any monitored leaf with volume > threshold is a true HH Recall: Estimate missing HHs using volume and level of counter Threshold=10 At level 2 missed <=2 HH 76 26 50 12 14 5 7 2 15 35 20 000 001 010 011 100 101 110 111 10* 11* 00* 01* 0** 1** *** With size 26 missed <=2 HHs How to estimate missed HHs? HHH: challenge: Describe what is HHH reported ones are the true ones Dependent on each other

36 DREAM Overview Resource Allocator DREAM SDN Controller
Task type (Heavy hitter, Hierarchical heavy hitter, Change detection) Task specific parameters (HH threshold) Packet header field (source IP) Filter (src IP=10/24, dst IP=10.2/16) Accuracy bound (80%) Prototype Implementation with DREAM algorithms on Floodlight and Open vSwitches 1) Instantiate task 2) Accept/Reject 5) Report Resource Allocator Task object 1 Task object n 7) Allocate / Drop 6) Estimate accuracy DREAM SDN Controller 4) Fetch counters 3) Configure counters

37 Evaluation Evaluation Goals Compare to
How accurate are tasks in DREAM? Satisfaction: Task lifetime fraction above given accuracy How many more accurate tasks can DREAM support? % of rejected/dropped tasks How fast is the DREAM control loop? Compare to Equal: divide resources equally at each switch, no reject Fixed: 1/n resources to each task, reject extra tasks Prototype Implementation with DREAM algorithms on Floodlight and Open vSwitches Comparing with Equal Divide switch resources among tasks with traffic on switch Changes resources on task arrival/leave No rejection/drop Fixed Allocate fixed resources (1/32) to each task Reject if resources are not enough

38 Prototype Results DREAM: High satisfaction for avg & 5th % of tasks
with low rejection Mean 5th % Equal: only keeps small tasks satisfied Fixed: High rejection as over-provisions for small tasks 256 tasks (various task types) on 8 switches

39 Prototype Results DREAM: High satisfaction for avg & 5th % of tasks at the expense of more rejection Equal & Fixed: only keeps small tasks satisfied

40 Control Loop Delay Allocation delay is negligible vs. other delays
Incremental saving lets reduce save delay

41 DREAM Conclusion Challenges with software-defined measurement
Diverse and dynamic measurement tasks Limited resources at switches Dynamic resource allocation across tasks Accuracy estimators for TCAM-based algorithms Spatial and temporal resource multiplexing Future work Apply DREAM on the hash-based primitive (Sketches) Time-slicing measurement Other service interfaces to tasks

42 Summary Software-defined measurement Our work
Measurement is important, yet underexplored SDN brings new opportunities to measurement Time to rebuild the entire measurement stack Our work OpenSketch:Generic, efficient measurement on sketches DREAM: Dynamic resource allocation for many tasks

43 Thanks!


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