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Data Transport Challenges for e-VLBI Julianne S.O. Sansa* * With Arpad Szomoru, Thijs van der Hulst & Mike Garret.

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Presentation on theme: "Data Transport Challenges for e-VLBI Julianne S.O. Sansa* * With Arpad Szomoru, Thijs van der Hulst & Mike Garret."— Presentation transcript:

1 Data Transport Challenges for e-VLBI Julianne S.O. Sansa* * With Arpad Szomoru, Thijs van der Hulst & Mike Garret

2 27 October 20052 Outline Network performance tests Simulation results conclusion

3 27 October 20053 Network Performance Measurements Investigate critically several connections established. Wire speeds suggests much higher throughput than what application data realises. TCP Congestion Control algorithm (AIMD) –SSACK:Cwnd  Cwnd +1 –CAACK:Cwnd  Cwnd + 1/Cwnd DROP: Cwnd  Cwnd -1/2*Cwnd Cwnd = max. # packets that TCP injects into network before receiving ACK. Cwnd optimal ~ Throughput *RTT Cwnd average = 1.22*MSS/sqrt (p) [Floyd & Fall (1999), Padhya et.al (1998)]

4 27 October 20054 Specific Questions How much bandwidth is available to the these TCP connections? Is it what is seen by the app? If it is less than the theoretic available b/w, what is the bottleneck? How do we minimise this bottleneck? How do multiple TCP connections share available bandwidth? What is the stability of these TCP connection (repeatability /predectability)?

5 27 October 20055 Results with web100 File transfer of 10 GB & 1GB file Modified file transfer (app socket buffers) Memory-memory with iperf

6 27 October 20056 Cwnd, RwinRcvd & for a file transfer / memory-memory

7 27 October 20057 Achieved/Available throughput

8 27 October 20058 Summary Test results Memory –MemoryFile transferModified file transfer Disk2net-net2file (yet to be done) Cwnd (bytes) TCP (Mbps) UDP (Mbps) Cwnd (bytes) TCP (Mbps) Cwnd (bytes) TCP (Mbps) CwndTCPUDP Bench via Amste rdam 2251640624.19556516056.6220000191.1

9 27 October 20059 NIC RTT/loss discrepancies

10 27 October 200510 The bottlenecks Application socket buffers Hardware (PCI bus limit, NICs) The OS (more or less tuned optimally) The transport protocol (TCP) –Window limits –Retransmissions –Interface stalls –Vendor specific implementations (Other Reductions)

11 27 October 200511 Transport Protocol Analysis Already many proposals to alter this behaviour: HighSpeed TCP, scalable TCP, Westwood TCP, HTCP, Vegas, FAST, BIC, C-TCP

12 27 October 200512 Loss-based, delay-based,or equation-based? Which way do we go? Consider getting the best out each world/Allow the application to dynamically detect network conditions & decide which algorithm to use.

13 27 October 200513 Preliminary Simulation results Simulated file transfer of bench via Amsterdam scenario TCP UDPHSTCPFAST Cwnd (bytes) 1,220.86 n/a4,543.42205 T/put (bps) 61,600,000960,000,00061,600,000310,870,560

14 27 October 200514 Cwnd for the simulated protocols

15 27 October 200515 Achieved Throughput for the simulated protocols

16 27 October 200516 Conclusions & further work Hardware (PCI bus, NICs,) on end systems as well as the application (buffers) need to be optimised. Model TCP data flows & relate flow analysis with correlation. More simulation work on Transport Protocol analysis (response function)

17 27 October 200517 References Floyd & Fall (1999) “Promoting the use of end-to- end congestion control in the internet”, IEEE/ ACM Trans. on Networking, August 1999. Padhya et.al (1998) “Modeling TCP throughput: A Simple model and its empirical validation” in Proc ACM SigCOMM 1998 Antony et.al(2004) “Exploring Practical Limitations of TCP over Transatlantic Networks” submitted Elsevier Science(2004)


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