Internet-Draft Multiple Loss Ratio Search for Packet Th July 2021
Konstantynowicz & Polak Expires 13 January 2022 [Page]
Workgroup:
Benchmarking Working Group
Internet-Draft:
draft-ietf-bmwg-mlrsearch-01
Published:
Intended Status:
Informational
Expires:
Authors:
M. Konstantynowicz, Ed.
Cisco Systems
V. Polak, Ed.
Cisco Systems

Multiple Loss Ratio Search for Packet Throughput (MLRsearch)

Abstract

This document proposes changes to [RFC2544], specifically to packet throughput search methodology, by defining a new search algorithm referred to as Multiple Loss Ratio search (MLRsearch for short). Instead of relying on binary search with pre-set starting offered load, it proposes a novel approach discovering the starting point in the initial phase, and then searching for packet throughput based on defined packet loss ratio (PLR) input criteria and defined final trial duration time. One of the key design principles behind MLRsearch is minimizing the total test duration and searching for multiple packet throughput rates (each with a corresponding PLR) concurrently, instead of doing it sequentially.

The main motivation behind MLRsearch is the new set of challenges and requirements posed by NFV (Network Function Virtualization), specifically software based implementations of NFV data planes. Using [RFC2544] in the experience of the authors yields often not repetitive and not replicable end results due to a large number of factors that are out of scope for this draft. MLRsearch aims to address this challenge in a simple way of getting the same result sooner, so more repetitions can be done to describe the replicability.

Status of This Memo

This Internet-Draft is submitted in full conformance with the provisions of BCP 78 and BCP 79.

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This Internet-Draft will expire on 13 January 2022.

Table of Contents

1. Terminology

2. MLRsearch Background

Multiple Loss Ratio search (MLRsearch) is a packet throughput search algorithm suitable for deterministic systems (as opposed to probabilistic systems). MLRsearch discovers multiple packet throughput rates in a single search, each rate is associated with a distinct Packet Loss Ratio (PLR) criterion.

For cases when multiple rates need to be found, this property makes MLRsearch more efficient in terms of time execution, compared to traditional throughput search algorithms that discover a single packet rate per defined search criteria (e.g. a binary search specified by [RFC2544]). MLRsearch reduces execution time even further by relying on shorter trial durations of intermediate steps, with only the final measurements conducted at the specified final trial duration. This results in the shorter overall search execution time when compared to a traditional binary search, while guaranteeing the same results for deterministic systems.

In practice two rates with distinct PLRs are commonly used for packet throughput measurements of NFV systems: Non Drop Rate (NDR) with PLR=0 and Partial Drop Rate (PDR) with PLR>0. The rest of this document describes MLRsearch with NDR and PDR pair as an example.

Similarly to other throughput search approaches like binary search, MLRsearch is effective for SUTs/DUTs with PLR curve that is non-decreasing with growing offered load. It may not be as effective for SUTs/DUTs with abnormal PLR curves, although it will always converge to some value.

MLRsearch relies on traffic generator to qualify the received packet stream as error-free, and invalidate the results if any disqualifying errors are present e.g. out-of-sequence frames.

MLRsearch can be applied to both uni-directional and bi-directional throughput tests.

For bi-directional tests, MLRsearch rates and ratios are aggregates of both directions, based on the following assumptions:

MLRsearch can be applied even without those assumptions, but in that case the aggregate loss ratio is less useful as a metric.

MLRsearch can be used for network transactions consisting of more than just one packet, or anything else that has intended load as input and loss ratio as output (duration as input is optional). This text uses mostly packet-centric language.

3. MLRsearch Overview

The main properties of MLRsearch:

The main benefits of MLRsearch vs. binary search include:

Caveats:

4. Sample Implementation

Following is a brief description of a sample MLRsearch implementation, which is a simplified version of the existing implementation.

4.1. Input Parameters

  1. max_rate - Maximum Transmit Rate (MTR) of packets to be used by external traffic generator implementing MLRsearch, limited by the actual Ethernet link(s) rate, NIC model or traffic generator capabilities.
  2. min_rate - minimum packet transmit rate to be used for measurements. MLRsearch fails if lower transmit rate needs to be used to meet search criteria.
  3. final_trial_duration - required trial duration for final rate measurements.
  4. initial_trial_duration - trial duration for initial MLRsearch phase.
  5. final_relative_width - required measurement resolution expressed as (lower_bound, upper_bound) interval width relative to upper_bound.
  6. packet_loss_ratios - list of maximum acceptable PLR search criteria.
  7. number_of_intermediate_phases - number of phases between the initial phase and the final phase. Impacts the overall MLRsearch duration. Less phases are required for well behaving cases, more phases may be needed to reduce the overall search duration for worse behaving cases.

4.2. Initial Phase

  1. First trial measures at configured maximum transmit rate (MTR) and discovers maximum receive rate (MRR).

    • IN: trial_duration = initial_trial_duration.
    • IN: offered_transmit_rate = maximum_transmit_rate.
    • DO: single trial.
    • OUT: measured loss ratio.
    • OUT: MRR = measured receive rate. Received rate is computed as intended load multiplied by pass ratio (which is one minus loss ratio). This is useful when loss ratio is computed from a different metric than intended load. For example, intended load can be in transactions (multiple packets each), but loss ratio is computed on level of packets, not transactions.
    • Example: If MTR is 10 transactions per second, and each transaction has 10 packets, and receive rate is 90 packets per second, then loss rate is 10%, and MRR is computed to be 9 transactions per second.

    If MRR is too close to MTR, MRR is set below MTR so that interval width is equal to the width goal of the first intermediate phase. If MRR is less than min_rate, min_rate is used.

  2. Second trial measures at MRR and discovers MRR2.

    • IN: trial_duration = initial_trial_duration.
    • IN: offered_transmit_rate = MRR.
    • DO: single trial.
    • OUT: measured loss ratio.
    • OUT: MRR2 = measured receive rate. If MRR2 is less than min_rate, min_rate is used. If loss ratio is less or equal to the smallest target loss ratio, MRR2 is set to a value above MRR, so that interval width is equal to the width goal of the first intermediate phase. MRR2 could end up being equal to MTR (for example if both measurements so far had zero loss), which was already measured, step 3 is skipped in that case.
  3. Third trial measures at MRR2.

    • IN: trial_duration = initial_trial_duration.
    • IN: offered_transmit_rate = MRR2.
    • DO: single trial.
    • OUT: measured loss ratio.
    • OUT: MRR3 = measured receive rate. If MRR3 is less than min_rate, min_rate is used. If step 3 is not skipped, the first trial measurement is forgotten. This is done because in practice (if MRR2 is above MRR), external search from MRR and MRR2 is likely to lead to a faster intermediate phase than a bisect between MRR2 and MTR.

4.3. Non-Initial Phases

  1. Main phase loop:

    1. IN: trial_duration for the current phase. Set to initial_trial_duration for the first intermediate phase; to final_trial_duration for the final phase; or to the element of interpolating geometric sequence for other intermediate phases. For example with two intermediate phases, trial_duration of the second intermediate phase is the geometric average of initial_trial_duration and final_trial_duration.
    2. IN: relative_width_goal for the current phase. Set to final_relative_width for the final phase; doubled for each preceding phase. For example with two intermediate phases, the first intermediate phase uses quadruple of final_relative_width and the second intermediate phase uses double of final_relative_width.
    3. IN: Measurement results from the previous phase (previous duration).
    4. Internal target ratio loop:

      1. IN: Target loss ratio for this iteration of ratio loop.
      2. IN: Measurement results from all previous ratio loop iterations of current phase (current duration).
      3. DO: According to the procedure described in point 2:

        1. either exit the phase (by jumping to 1.5),
        2. or exit loop iteration (by continuing with next target loss ratio, jumping to 1.4.1),
        3. or calculate new transmit rate to measure with.
      4. DO: Perform the trial measurement at the new transmit rate and current trial duration, compute its loss ratio.
      5. DO: Add the result and go to next iteration (1.4.1), including the added trial result in 1.4.2.
    5. OUT: Measurement results from this phase.
    6. OUT: In the final phase, bounds for each target loss ratio are extracted and returned.

      1. If a valid bound does not exist, use min_rate or max_rate.
  2. New transmit rate (or exit) calculation (for point 1.4.3):

    1. If the previous duration has the best upper and lower bound, select the middle point as the new transmit rate.

      1. See 2.5.3. below for the exact splitting logic.
      2. This can be a no-op if interval is narrow enough already, in that case continue with 2.2.
      3. Discussion, assuming the middle point is selected and measured:

        1. Regardless of loss rate measured, the result becomes either best upper or best lower bound at current duration.
        2. So this condition is satisfied at most once per iteration.
        3. This also explains why previous phase has double width goal:

          1. We avoid one more bisection at previous phase.
          2. At most one bound (per iteration) is re-measured with current duration.
          3. Each re-measurement can trigger an external search.
          4. Such surprising external searches are the main hurdle in achieving low overal search durations.
          5. Even without 1.1, there is at most one external search per phase and target loss ratio.
          6. But without 1.1 there can be two re-measurements, each coming with a risk of triggering external search.
    2. If the previous duration has one bound best, select its transmit rate. In deterministic case this is the last measurement needed this iteration.
    3. If only upper bound exists in current duration results:

      1. This can only happen for the smallest target loss ratio.
      2. If the upper bound was measured at min_rate, exit the whole phase early (not investigating other target loss ratios).
      3. Select new transmit rate using external search:

        1. For computing previous interval size, use:

          1. second tightest bound at current duration,
          2. or tightest bound of previous duration, if compatible and giving a more narrow interval,
          3. or target interval width if none of the above is available.
          4. In any case increase to target interval width if smaller.
        2. Quadruple the interval width.
        3. Use min_rate if the new transmit rate is lower.
    4. If only lower bound exists in current duration results:

      1. If the lower bound was measured at max_rate, exit this iteration (continue with next lowest target loss ratio).
      2. Select new transmit rate using external search:

        1. For computing previous interval size, use:

          1. second tightest bound at current duration,
          2. or tightest bound of previous duration, if compatible and giving a more narrow interval,
          3. or target interval width if none of the above is available.
          4. In any case increase to target interval width if smaller.
        2. Quadruple the interval width.
        3. Use max_rate if the new transmit rate is higher.
    5. The only remaining option is both bounds in current duration results.

      1. This can happen in two ways, depending on how the lower bound was chosen.

        1. It could have been selected for the current loss ratio, e.g. in re-measurement (2.2) or in initial bisect (2.1).
        2. It could have been found as an upper bound for the previous smaller target loss ratio, in which case it might be too low.
        3. The algorithm does not track which one is the case, as the decision logic works well regardless.
      2. Compute "extending down" candidate transmit rate exactly as in 2.3.
      3. Compute "bisecting" candidate transmit rate:

        1. Compute the current interval width from the two bounds.
        2. Express the width as a (float) multiple of the target width goal for this phase.
        3. If the multiple is not higher than one, it means the width goal is met. Exit this iteration and continue with next higher target loss ratio.
        4. If the multiple is two or less, use half of that for new width if the lower subinterval.
        5. Round the multiple up to nearest even integer.
        6. Use half of that for new width if the lower subinterval.
        7. Example: If lower bound is 2.0 and upper bound is 5.0, and width goal is 1.0, the new candidate transmit rate will be 4.0. This can save a measurement when 4.0 has small loss. Selecting the average (3.5) would never save a measurement, giving more narrow bounds instead.
      4. If either candidate computation want to exit the iteration, do as bisecting candidate computation says.
      5. The remaining case is both candidates wanting to measure at some rate. Use the higher rate. This prefers external search down narrow enough interval, competing with perfectly sized lower bisect subinterval.

5. FD.io CSIT Implementation

The only known working implementation of MLRsearch is in the open-source code running in Linux Foundation FD.io CSIT project [FDio-CSIT-MLRsearch] as part of a Continuous Integration / Continuous Development (CI/CD) framework.

MLRsearch is also available as a Python package in [PyPI-MLRsearch].

5.1. Additional details

This document so far has been describing a simplified version of MLRsearch algorithm. The full algorithm as implemented in CSIT contains additional logic, which makes some of the details (but not general ideas) above incorrect. Here is a short description of the additional logic as a list of principles, explaining their main differences from (or additions to) the simplified description, but without detailing their mutual interaction.

  1. Logarithmic transmit rate.

    • In order to better fit the relative width goal, the interval doubling and halving is done differently.
    • For example, the middle of 2 and 8 is 4, not 5.
  2. Timeout for bad cases.

    • The worst case for MLRsearch is when each phase converges to intervals way different than the results of the previous phase.
    • Rather than suffer total search time several times larger than pure binary search, the implemented tests fail themselves when the search takes too long (given by argument timeout).
  3. Intended count.

    • The number of packets to send during the trial should be equal to the intended load multiplied by the duration.

      • Also multiplied by a coefficient, if loss ratio is calculated from a different metric.

        • Example: If a successful transaction uses 10 packets, load is given in transactions per second, byt loss ratio is calculated from packets, the coefficient to get intended count of packets is 10.
    • But in practice that does not work.

      • It could result in a fractional number of packets,
      • so it has to be rounded in a way traffic generator chooses,
      • which may depend on the number of traffic flows and traffic generator worker threads.
  4. Attempted count. As the real number of intended packets is not known exactly, the computation uses the number of packets traffic generator reports as sent. Unless overriden by the next point.
  5. Duration stretching.

    • In some cases, traffic generator may get overloaded, causing it to take significantly longer (than duration) to send all packets.
    • The implementation uses an explicit stop,

      • causing lower attempted count in those cases.
    • The implementation tolerates some small difference between attempted count and intended count.

      • 10 microseconds worth of traffic is sufficient for our tests.
    • If the difference is higher, the unsent packets are counted as lost.

      • This forces the search to avoid the regions of high duration stretching.
      • The final bounds describe the performance of not just SUT, but of the whole system, including the traffic generator.
  6. Excess packets.

    • In some test (e.g. using TCP flows) Traffic generator reacts to packet loss by retransmission. Usually, such packet loss is already affecting loss ratio. If a test also wants to treat retransmissions due to heavily delayed packets also as a failure, this is once again visible as a mismatch between the intended count and the attempted count.
    • The CSIT implementation simply looks at absolute value of the difference, so it offes the same small tolerance before it start marking a "loss".
  7. For result processing, we use lower bounds and ignore upper bounds.

5.1.1. FD.io CSIT Input Parameters

  1. max_rate - Typical values: 2 * 14.88 Mpps for 64B 10GE link rate, 2 * 18.75 Mpps for 64B 40GE NIC (specific model).
  2. min_rate - Value: 2 * 9001 pps (we reserve 9000 pps for latency measurements).
  3. final_trial_duration - Value: 30.0 seconds.
  4. initial_trial_duration - Value: 1.0 second.
  5. final_relative_width - Value: 0.005 (0.5%).
  6. packet_loss_ratios - Value: 0.0, 0.005 (0.0% for NDR, 0.5% for PDR).
  7. number_of_intermediate_phases - Value: 2. The value has been chosen based on limited experimentation to date. More experimentation needed to arrive to clearer guidelines.
  8. timeout - Limit for the overall search duration (for one search). If MLRsearch oversteps this limit, it immediatelly declares the test failed, to avoid wasting even more time on a misbehaving SUT. Value: 600.0 (seconds).
  9. expansion_coefficient - Width multiplier for external search. Value: 4.0 (interval width is quadroupled). Value of 2.0 is best for well-behaved SUTs, but value of 4.0 has been found to decrease overall search time for worse-behaved SUT configurations, contributing more to the overall set of different SUT configurations tested.

5.2. Example MLRsearch Run

The following list describes a search from a real test run in CSIT (using the default input values as above).

  • Initial phase, trial duration 1.0 second.

Measurement 1, intended load 18750000.0 pps (MTR), measured loss ratio 0.7089514628479618 (valid upper bound for both NDR and PDR).

Measurement 2, intended load 5457160.071600716 pps (MRR), measured loss ratio 0.018650817320118702 (new tightest upper bounds).

Measurement 3, intended load 5348832.933500009 pps (slightly less than MRR2 in preparation for first intermediate phase target interval width), measured loss ratio 0.00964383362905351 (new tightest upper bounds).

  • First intermediate phase starts, trial duration still 1.0 seconds.

Measurement 4, intended load 4936605.579021453 pps (no lower bound, performing external search downwards, for NDR), measured loss ratio 0.0 (valid lower bound for both NDR and PDR).

Measurement 5, intended load 5138587.208637197 pps (bisecting for NDR), measured loss ratio 0.0 (new tightest lower bounds).

Measurement 6, intended load 5242656.244044665 pps (bisecting), measured loss ratio 0.013523745379347257 (new tightest upper bounds).

  • Both intervals are narrow enough.
  • Second intermediate phase starts, trial duration 5.477225575051661 seconds.

Measurement 7, intended load 5190360.904111567 pps (initial bisect for NDR), measured loss ratio 0.0023533920869969953 (NDR upper bound, PDR lower bound).

Measurement 8, intended load 5138587.208637197 pps (re-measuring NDR lower bound), measured loss ratio 1.2080222912800403e-06 (new tightest NDR upper bound).

  • The two intervals have separate bounds from now on.

Measurement 9, intended load 4936605.381062318 pps (external NDR search down), measured loss ratio 0.0 (new valid NDR lower bound).

Measurement 10, intended load 5036583.888432355 pps (NDR bisect), measured loss ratio 0.0 (new tightest NDR lower bound).

Measurement 11, intended load 5087329.903232804 pps (NDR bisect), measured loss ratio 0.0 (new tightest NDR lower bound).

  • NDR interval is narrow enough, PDR interval not ready yet.

Measurement 12, intended load 5242656.244044665 pps (re-measuring PDR upper bound), measured loss ratio 0.0101174866190136 (still valid PDR upper bound).

  • Also PDR interval is narrow enough, with valid bounds for this duration.
  • Final phase starts, trial duration 30.0 seconds.

Measurement 13, intended load 5112894.3238511775 pps (initial bisect for NDR), measured loss ratio 0.0 (new tightest NDR lower bound).

Measurement 14, intended load 5138587.208637197 (re-measuring NDR upper bound), measured loss ratio 2.030389804256833e-06 (still valid PDR upper bound).

  • NDR interval is narrow enough, PDR interval not yet.

Measurement 15, intended load 5216443.04126728 pps (initial bisect for PDR), measured loss ratio 0.005620871287975237 (new tightest PDR upper bound).

Measurement 16, intended load 5190360.904111567 (re-measuring PDR lower bound), measured loss ratio 0.0027629971184465604 (still valid PDR lower bound).

  • PDR interval is also narrow enough.
  • Returning bounds:
  • NDR_LOWER = 5112894.3238511775 pps; NDR_UPPER = 5138587.208637197 pps;
  • PDR_LOWER = 5190360.904111567 pps; PDR_UPPER = 5216443.04126728 pps.

6. IANA Considerations

No requests of IANA.

7. Security Considerations

Benchmarking activities as described in this memo are limited to technology characterization of a DUT/SUT using controlled stimuli in a laboratory environment, with dedicated address space and the constraints specified in the sections above.

The benchmarking network topology will be an independent test setup and MUST NOT be connected to devices that may forward the test traffic into a production network or misroute traffic to the test management network.

Further, benchmarking is performed on a "black-box" basis, relying solely on measurements observable external to the DUT/SUT.

Special capabilities SHOULD NOT exist in the DUT/SUT specifically for benchmarking purposes.Any implications for network security arising from the DUT/SUT SHOULD be identical in the lab and in production networks.

8. Acknowledgements

Many thanks to Alec Hothan of OPNFV NFVbench project for thorough review and numerous useful comments and suggestions.

9. References

9.1. Normative References

[RFC2544]
Bradner, S. and J. McQuaid, "Benchmarking Methodology for Network Interconnect Devices", RFC 2544, DOI 10.17487/RFC2544, , <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2544>.

9.2. Informative References

[FDio-CSIT-MLRsearch]
"FD.io CSIT Test Methodology - MLRsearch", , <https://docs.fd.io/csit/rls2101/report/introduction/methodology_data_plane_throughput/methodology_mlrsearch_tests.html>.
[PyPI-MLRsearch]
"MLRsearch 0.4.0, Python Package Index", , <https://pypi.org/project/MLRsearch/0.4.0/>.

Authors' Addresses

Maciek Konstantynowicz (editor)
Cisco Systems
Vratko Polak (editor)
Cisco Systems