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Bandwidth Estimation: Metrics Mesurement Techniques and Tools By Ravi Prasad, Constantinos Dovrolis, Margaret Murray and Kc Claffy IEEE Network, Nov/Dec.

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Presentation on theme: "Bandwidth Estimation: Metrics Mesurement Techniques and Tools By Ravi Prasad, Constantinos Dovrolis, Margaret Murray and Kc Claffy IEEE Network, Nov/Dec."— Presentation transcript:

1 Bandwidth Estimation: Metrics Mesurement Techniques and Tools By Ravi Prasad, Constantinos Dovrolis, Margaret Murray and Kc Claffy IEEE Network, Nov/Dec 2003 Presented by Sundar P Subramani

2 Outline Introduction Metrics  Capacity  Available bandwidth  TCP throughput and Bulk transfer capacity Bandwidth estimation techniques Taxonomy of tools Conclusion

3 Introduction Bandwidth  Physical layer – Spectral width of electromagnetic signals  Data networks – Data rate In this paper they discuss about the data networks

4 Why b/w estimation needed? P2P applications form user-level networks based on b/w between them Overlay n/w s configure routing tables based on b/w of the links Service agreements between n/w provider and consumer done based on b/w availability at crucial points of the n/w

5 Why can’t SNMP be used? Network administrators can read router/switch information using SNMP protocol End-to-end bandwidth estimation cannot be done in the above way

6 Outline Introduction Metrics  Capacity  Available bandwidth  TCP throughput and Bulk transfer capacity Bandwidth estimation techniques Taxonomy of tools Conclusion

7 Hops and segments Segment  Links at layer 2 Physical point-to-point link Virtual circuit Shared access LAN (ETHERNET, FDDI) Hop  Links at layer 3 Sequence of segments connected by switches, bridges and other layer 2 devices Path p from s to v  Sequence of hops from s to v

8 Capacity Transmission rate limited by  Capacity of the physical link  Speed of the transmitter/receiver hardware Overhead in Layer 2 in terms of encapsulation and framing produces lower rate as far as layer 3 is concerned

9 Capacity Tx time of IP packet of size L L3 in a link of capacity C L2 is  Where, H L2 is the length of the layer 2 header

10 Capacity of layer 3

11 Effect of packet size on capacity usage

12 Capacity Capacity of a hop  Maximum possible IP layer transfer rate at that hop  Maximum layer 2 transfer can occur only with MTU sized packets  Bit rate mesured at IP layer transferring MTU sized packets

13 Capacity of a path Minimum link capacity determines capacity of the path Where  H is the number of hops  C i Is the capacity of the i th hop

14 Problems Traffic shapers Rate limiters Wireless networks like 802.11  Operate at different rates 11, 5.5, 2 or 1 Mbps Definition holds during time at which the capacity remains constant

15 Average utilization At any time  Link used fully  utilization =1  Not used  utilization =0 Avg utilization from time t-α to t is given by

16 Utilization of a link Link used 8 out of 20 time slots until T So the link utilization is 40%

17 Available bandwidth Let u i be the average utiliztion of the link i over a period of time Let C i be the capacity of the hop i Then the available bandwidth during that period  A i = (1 – u i ) C i Available bandwidth along the path

18 Pipe model

19 Assumptions Link utilization remains constant over the duration of mesurement  Reasonable for short intervals  Load variations impact the measurement over a long period So available b/w mesurements should be done quickly  Since capacity remains constant those measurements need not be made quickly

20 TCP throughput and Bulk transfer capacity TCP throughput depends on various parameters  Congestion window  RTT  Slow start mechanism  Capacity and load along the path BTC  Maximum capacity obtainable by a TCP connection

21 Difference between BTC and available b/w BTC is TCP specific  Available b/w is transport protocol independent BTC depends on the how a TCP connection throughput is affected by other flows  Available b/w assumes average load remains constant and estimates additional bandwidth

22 Outline Introduction Metrics  Capacity  Available bandwidth  TCP throughput and Bulk transfer capacity Bandwidth estimation techniques Taxonomy of tools Conclusion

23 Variable size packet probing Measures capacity of each hop Measure RTT Limit packet propogation by TTL Uses ICMP to measure RTT until that hop

24 Variable size packet probing RTT includes:  Serialization delay Delay to send packet of length L across channel of capacity C = L/C  Propogation delay Time taken to traverse the link  Queuing delay Delay in routers/Switches

25 Variable size packet probing Send multiple packets and calculate minimum RTT  Assumption: for minimum RTT no queuing delay RTT has two terms  Delay independent of packet size = α  Based on packet size where

26 Variable size packet probing

27 packet size vs RTT

28 Packet pair dispersion probing Measures end-to-end capacity

29 Problems Assumption that no other traffic exists is not real Existing traffic can increase/decrease the estimate Solution?  Send multiple pairs and get a statistical estimate Does not always yield a correct estimate

30 Self-loading periodic streams Measures end-to-end available bandwidth Sends k packets at different rates Receiver notifies the “one way delay trends” If stream rate greater than available b/w  One way delay will grow large Else  Packets will not make the one way delay large

31 One way delay

32 Train dispersion probing Similar to packet pair dispersion probing Instead of sending just two packets send a train of packets Calculate the average dispersion rate

33 Taxonomy of estimation tools Per-hop capacity estimation tools Pathchar  First tool to implement Clink  On routing instability collects data along all paths  Until one path provides statistically significant estimate Pchar  Uses linear regression algorithms

34 Taxonomy of estimation tools end-to-end capacity estimation tools BProbe  Uses packet pair dispersion  Uses variable sized packets to improve efficiency  Access needed only in sender side, uses ICMP messages Nettimer  Uses sophisticated “kernel density algorithm” to provide better accuracy Pathrate Sprobe

35 Available bandwidth estimation tools CProbe  Measures dispersion of a train of eight maximum sized packets  It measures dispersion rate and not available bandwidth  Dispersion rate depends on all links of the path and the train’s initial rate  Available b/w depends only on tight link of the path Pathload  Implements SLoPS  Used UDP and requires access at both ends  Reports range Center represents the average Range represents values during mesurement period

36 TCP throughput and BTC measurement tools Treno  emulates TCP sends UDP packets to receiver  Replies with ICMP port unreachable  Does not require access to remote end  ICMP rate limited Accuracy of Treno affected Cap  More accurate than Treno  Uses UDP for TCP data and ACK  Requires access at both ends

37 Intrusiveness If probe packets comparable to available b/w VPS are non intrusive  One packet per RTT PPTD tools create bursts which last only for a very short duration  Only a small fraction of available b/w used BTC tools are intrusive  They capture all b/w for a specific duration


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