<?xml version='1.0' encoding='utf-8'?>
<!DOCTYPE rfc [
  <!ENTITY nbsp    "&#160;">
  <!ENTITY zwsp   "&#8203;">
  <!ENTITY nbhy   "&#8209;">
  <!ENTITY wj     "&#8288;">
]>
<?xml-stylesheet type="text/xsl" href="rfc2629.xslt" ?>
<!-- generated by https://github.com/cabo/kramdown-rfc version 1.7.39 (Ruby 3.4.9) -->
<rfc xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude" ipr="trust200902" docName="draft-ietf-ccwg-rfc8298bis-screamv2-00" category="exp" submissionType="IETF" obsoletes="8298" version="3">
  <!-- xml2rfc v2v3 conversion 3.33.0 -->
  <front>
    <title abbrev="SCReAMv2">Self-Clocked Rate Adaptation for Multimedia</title>
    <seriesInfo name="Internet-Draft" value="draft-ietf-ccwg-rfc8298bis-screamv2-00"/>
    <author initials="I." surname="Johansson" fullname="Ingemar Johansson">
      <organization>Ericsson</organization>
      <address>
        <email>ingemar.s.johansson@ericsson.com</email>
      </address>
    </author>
    <author initials="M." surname="Westerlund" fullname="Magnus Westerlund">
      <organization>Ericsson</organization>
      <address>
        <email>magnus.westerlund@ericsson.com</email>
      </address>
    </author>
    <author initials="M." surname="Kühlewind" fullname="Mirja Kühlewind">
      <organization>Ericsson</organization>
      <address>
        <email>mirja.kuehlewind@ericsson.com</email>
      </address>
    </author>
    <date year="2026" month="May" day="18"/>
    <area>WIT</area>
    <workgroup>CCWG</workgroup>
    <abstract>
      <?line 123?>

<t>This memo describes Self-Clocked Rate Adaptation for Multimedia version 2
(SCReAMv2), an update to SCReAM congestion control for media streams such as RTP
<xref target="RFC3550"/>. SCReAMv2 includes several algorithm simplifications and adds
support for L4S. The algorithm supports handling of multiple media streams,
typical use cases are streaming for remote control, AR and 3D VR goggles.
This specification obsoletes RFC 8298.</t>
    </abstract>
    <note removeInRFC="true">
      <name>About This Document</name>
      <t>
        Status information for this document may be found at <eref target="https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-ietf-ccwg-rfc8298bis-screamv2/"/>.
      </t>
      <t>
        Discussion of this document takes place on the
        Congestion Control Working Group (ccwg) Working Group mailing list (<eref target="mailto:ccwg@ietf.org"/>),
        which is archived at <eref target="https://mailarchive.ietf.org/arch/browse/ccwg/"/>.
        Subscribe at <eref target="https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/ccwg/"/>.
      </t>
      <t>Source for this draft and an issue tracker can be found at
        <eref target="https://github.com/gloinul/draft-johansson-ccwg-scream-bis"/>.</t>
    </note>
  </front>
  <middle>
    <?line 132?>

<section anchor="introduction">
      <name>Introduction</name>
      <t>This memo describes Self-Clocked Rate Adaptation for Multimedia version 2
(SCReAMv2). This specification replaces the previous experimental version <xref target="RFC8298"/> of
SCReAM with SCReAMv2. There are many and fairly significant changes to the
original SCReAM algorithm as desribed in <xref target="sec_changes"/>.</t>
      <t>Both SCReAM and SCReAMv2 estimates the forward queue delay in the same way as Low
Extra Delay Background Transport (LEDBAT) <xref target="RFC6817"/>.
However, while SCReAM is based on the self-clocking principle of TCP,
SCReAMv2 is not entirely self-clocked as it augments self-clocking with pacing
and a minimum send rate.</t>
      <t>Further, SCReAMv2 can take advantage of Explicit
Congestion Notification (ECN) <xref target="RFC3168"/> and Low Latency Low Loss and Scalable
throughput (L4S) <xref target="RFC9330"/> in cases where ECN or L4S is supported by the
network and the hosts. However, ECN or L4S is not required for the basic
congestion control functionality in SCReAMv2.</t>
      <section anchor="sec_changes">
        <name>Updates Compared to SCReAM (version 1)</name>
        <t>The algorithm in this memo differs considerably compared to the previous version of
SCReAM in <xref target="RFC8298"/>. The main differences are:</t>
        <ul spacing="normal">
          <li>
            <t>L4S support added. The L4S algoritm has many similarities with the DCTCP and
Prague congestion control but has a few extra modifications to make it work
well with periodic sources such as video.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>The delay based congestion control is changed to implement a pseudo-L4S
approach, this simplifies the delay based congestion control.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>The fast increase mode is removed. The reference window additive increase is
replaced with an adaptive multiplicative increase to enhance convergence
speed.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>The algorithm is more rate based than self-clocked:  </t>
            <ul spacing="normal">
              <li>
                <t>The calculated congestion window is mainly used to calculate proper media bitrates. Bytes in flight is
however allowed to exceed the reference window. Therefore, the term
reference window is used instead of congestion window, as the reference
 window does not set an absolute limit on the bytes in flight.      </t>
                <ul spacing="normal">
                  <li>
                    <t>The self-clocking now acts more like an emergency break
as bytes in flight can exceed the reference window only to a certain
degree. The rationale is to be able to transmit large video frames and avoid
that they are unnecessarily queued up on the sender side, but still prevent a
large network queue.</t>
                  </li>
                </ul>
              </li>
            </ul>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>The media bitrate calculation is dramatically changed and simplified. In practice
it is manifested with a relatively simple relation between the reference window and RTT.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Additional compensation is added to make SCReAMv2 handle cases such as large
changing frame sizes.</t>
          </li>
        </ul>
      </section>
      <section anchor="requirements-media">
        <name>Requirements on the Media and Feedback Protocol</name>
        <t>SCReAM was originally designed to with with RTP + RTCP where <xref target="RFC8888"/> was
used as recommended feedback. RTP offers unique packet indication with the
sequence number and <xref target="RFC8888"/> offers timestamps of received packets and the
status of the ECN bits.</t>
        <t>SCReAM is however not limited to RTP as long as some requirements are fulfilled :</t>
        <ul spacing="normal">
          <li>
            <t>Media data is split in data units that when encapsulated in IP packets fit in
the network MTU.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Each data unit can be uniquely identified.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Data units can be queued up in a packet queue before transmission.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Feedback can indicate reception time for each data units, or a group of data
units.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Feedback can indicate packets that are ECN-CE marked. Unique ECN bits
indication for each packet is not necessary. An ECN-CE counter similar to
what is defined in <xref target="RFC9000"/> is sufficient.</t>
          </li>
        </ul>
      </section>
      <section anchor="ledbat-tfwc">
        <name>Comparison with LEDBAT and TFWC in TCP</name>
        <t>The core SCReAM algorithm, which is still similar in SCReAMv2, has similarities
to the concepts of self-clocking used in TCP-friendly window-based congestion
control <xref target="TFWC"/> and follows the packet conservation principle. The packet
conservation principle is described as a key factor behind the protection of
networks from congestion <xref target="Packet-conservation"/>.</t>
        <t>The reference window decrease is determined in a way similar to
LEDBAT <xref target="RFC6817"/>. However, the window increase is not based on
delay estimates but uses both a linear increase and multiplicative increase function depending
on the time since the last congestion event and introduces use of inflection points in the
reference window increase calculation to achieve reduced delay jitter.
Further, unlike LEDBAT which is a scavenger congestion control mostly designed
for low priority background traffic, SCReAM adjusts the qdelay target to
compete with other loss-based congestion-controlled flows.</t>
        <t>SCReAMv2 adds a new reference window validation technique, as the reference window is used as a basis for the
target bitrate calculation. For that reason, various actions are taken to avoid
that the reference window grows too much beyond the bytes in flight. Additional
contraints are applied when in congested state and when the maximum target bitrate is reached.</t>
        <t>The SCReAM/SCReAMv2 congestion control method uses techniques similar to LEDBAT
<xref target="RFC6817"/> to measure the qdelay. As is the case with LEDBAT, it is not
necessary to use synchronized clocks in the sender and receiver in order to
compute the qdelay. However, it is necessary that they use the same clock
frequency, or that the clock frequency at the receiver can be inferred reliably
by the sender. Failure to meet this requirement leads to malfunction in the
SCReAM/SCReAMv2 congestion control algorithm due to incorrect estimation of the
network queue delay. Use of <xref target="RFC8888"/> as feedback ensures that the same time
base is used in sender and receiver.</t>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section anchor="requirements">
      <name>Requirements Language</name>
      <t>The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD",
"SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this
document are to be interpreted as described in BCP 14 <xref target="RFC2119"/> <xref target="RFC8174"/>
when, and only when, they appear in all capitals, as shown here.</t>
    </section>
    <section anchor="scream-overview">
      <name>Overview of SCReAMv2 Algorithm</name>
      <t>SCReAMv2 consists of three main parts: network congestion control, sender
transmission control, and media rate control. All of these parts reside at the
sender side while the receiver is assumpted to provide acknowledgements of received
data units and indication of ECN-CE marking, either as an accumulated bytes counter,
or per individual data unit.</t>
      <t>The sender implements media rate control and an data unit queue for each media
type or source, where data units containing encoded media frames are temporarily
stored for transmission. Figure 1 shows the details when a single media source
(or stream) is used. Scheduling and prioritization of mulitiple streams is not
covered in this document. However, if multiple flows are sent, each data unit queue can be
served based on some defined priority or simply in a round-robin fashion. Alternatively,
a similar approach as coupled congestion control <xref target="RFC6365"/> can be applied.</t>
      <figure anchor="fig-sender-view">
        <name>Sender Functional View</name>
        <artset>
          <artwork type="svg"><svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" version="1.1" height="528" width="472" viewBox="0 0 472 528" class="diagram" text-anchor="middle" font-family="monospace" font-size="13px" stroke-linecap="round">
              <path d="M 8,32 L 8,64" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 8,160 L 8,224" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 8,320 L 8,384" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 8,480 L 8,512" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 64,72 L 64,96" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 64,120 L 64,160" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 64,232 L 64,256" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 64,304 L 64,320" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 64,392 L 64,416" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 64,464 L 64,480" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 112,160 L 112,224" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 112,320 L 112,384" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 240,192 L 240,224" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 240,248 L 240,336" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 336,320 L 336,384" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 344,144 L 344,240" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 384,64 L 384,80" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 384,128 L 384,136" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 392,240 L 392,256" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 392,288 L 392,312" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 392,384 L 392,416" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 392,448 L 392,472" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 440,144 L 440,240" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 456,320 L 456,384" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 464,32 L 464,64" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 464,480 L 464,512" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 8,32 L 464,32" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 8,64 L 464,64" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 344,144 L 440,144" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 8,160 L 112,160" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 112,192 L 240,192" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 8,224 L 112,224" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 344,240 L 440,240" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 8,320 L 112,320" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 336,320 L 456,320" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 240,336 L 328,336" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 120,368 L 328,368" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 8,384 L 112,384" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 336,384 L 456,384" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 8,480 L 464,480" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <path d="M 8,512 L 464,512" fill="none" stroke="black"/>
              <polygon class="arrowhead" points="400,472 388,466.4 388,477.6" fill="black" transform="rotate(90,392,472)"/>
              <polygon class="arrowhead" points="400,312 388,306.4 388,317.6" fill="black" transform="rotate(90,392,312)"/>
              <polygon class="arrowhead" points="392,136 380,130.4 380,141.6" fill="black" transform="rotate(90,384,136)"/>
              <polygon class="arrowhead" points="336,368 324,362.4 324,373.6" fill="black" transform="rotate(0,328,368)"/>
              <polygon class="arrowhead" points="336,336 324,330.4 324,341.6" fill="black" transform="rotate(0,328,336)"/>
              <polygon class="arrowhead" points="72,392 60,386.4 60,397.6" fill="black" transform="rotate(270,64,392)"/>
              <polygon class="arrowhead" points="72,232 60,226.4 60,237.6" fill="black" transform="rotate(270,64,232)"/>
              <polygon class="arrowhead" points="72,72 60,66.4 60,77.6" fill="black" transform="rotate(270,64,72)"/>
              <g class="text">
                <text x="216" y="52">Media</text>
                <text x="272" y="52">encoder</text>
                <text x="372" y="100">Data</text>
                <text x="412" y="100">unit</text>
                <text x="68" y="116">target_bitrate</text>
                <text x="384" y="116">|</text>
                <text x="64" y="180">Media</text>
                <text x="388" y="180">Data</text>
                <text x="60" y="196">Rate</text>
                <text x="392" y="196">Units</text>
                <text x="64" y="212">Control</text>
                <text x="392" y="212">Queue</text>
                <text x="244" y="244">target_bitrate</text>
                <text x="64" y="276">ref_wnd</text>
                <text x="380" y="276">Data</text>
                <text x="420" y="276">unit</text>
                <text x="64" y="292">RTT</text>
                <text x="56" y="340">Network</text>
                <text x="396" y="340">Sender</text>
                <text x="60" y="356">Congestion</text>
                <text x="184" y="356">ref_wnd</text>
                <text x="396" y="356">Transmission</text>
                <text x="56" y="372">Control</text>
                <text x="392" y="372">Control</text>
                <text x="176" y="388">Bytes</text>
                <text x="212" y="388">in</text>
                <text x="252" y="388">flight</text>
                <text x="44" y="436">Congestion</text>
                <text x="124" y="436">Feedback</text>
                <text x="380" y="436">Data</text>
                <text x="420" y="436">unit</text>
                <text x="40" y="452">Bytes</text>
                <text x="76" y="452">in</text>
                <text x="116" y="452">flight</text>
                <text x="216" y="500">UDP</text>
                <text x="260" y="500">socket</text>
              </g>
            </svg>
          </artwork>
          <artwork type="ascii-art"><![CDATA[
+--------------------------------------------------------+
|                       Media encoder                    |
+----------------------------------------------+---------+
       ^                                       |
       |                                    Data unit
 target_bitrate                                |
       |                                       V
       |                                  +-----------+
+------+-----+                            |           |
|    Media   |                            |   Data    |
|    Rate    +---------------+            |   Units   |
|   Control  |               |            |   Queue   |
+------------+               |            |           |
       ^               target_bitrate     +-----+-----+
       |                     |                  |
    ref_wnd                  |               Data unit
      RTT                    |                  |
       |                     |                  v
+------+-----+               |           +--------------+
|  Network   |               +---------->|    Sender    |
| Congestion |     ref_wnd               | Transmission |
|  Control   |-------------------------->|   Control    |
+------------+     Bytes in flight       +------+-------+
       ^                                        |
       |                                        |
Congestion Feedback                          Data unit
  Bytes in flight                               |
       |                                        v
+------+-------------------------------------------------+
|                        UDP socket                      |
+--------------------------------------------------------+
]]></artwork>
        </artset>
      </figure>
      <t>Media frames are encoded and forwarded to the data unit queue in
<xref target="fig-sender-view"/>. The data units are sent by the sender transmission controller
from the data unit queue.</t>
      <t>The sender transmission controller (in case of multiple flows a transmission
scheduler) sends the data units to the UDP socket. The sender transmission
controller limits the sending rate so
that the number of bytes in flight is less than the reference window albeit with
a slack to avoid that packets are unnecessarily delayed in the Data Units Queue.
The slack avoids unnecessary delays in the Data Units Queue when the link is uncongested. The bytes in flight however become more restrained in congested situations, to avoid large variations in queue delay and bitrate.
A pacing rate is calculated based on the target bitrate provided by the
media rate controller.</t>
      <t>Feedback about the received bytes as well as metadata to estimate the congestion
level or queuing delay are provided to the network congestion controller.
The network congestion controller calculates the reference window and provides it
together with the bytes in flight to the sender transmission control.</t>
      <t>The reference window and the estimated RTT is further provided to the media rate
control to compute the appropriate target bitrate. The target bitrate is
updated whenever the reference window is updated. Additional parameters are also
communicated to make the rate control more stable when the congestion window is
very small or when L4S is not active.</t>
      <section anchor="network-cc">
        <name>Network Congestion Control</name>
        <t>The network congestion control sets reference window (ref_wnd)
which puts an upper limit on how many bytes can be in
flight, i.e., transmitted but not yet acknowledged. The reference window is
however not an absolute limit as slack is given to efficiently transmit
temporary larger media objects, such as video frames. This means that the
algorithm prefers to build up a queue in the network rather than on the sender
side. Additional congestion that this causes will reflect back and cause a
reduction of the reference window.</t>
        <t>The reference window is reduced if congestion is detected. Similar to
LEDBAT, the reference window is reduced either by a fixed fraction in
case of packet loss or Classic ECN marking, or if the estimated queue
delay exceeds a given threshold, depending on how much the delay
exceeds the threshold.  SCReAMv2 reduces the reference window in
proportion to the fraction of marked packets if L4S is used (scalable
congestion control).</t>
        <t>In each RTT ref_wnd will be reduced at most once if congestion is detected based on the following conditions:</t>
        <t>a) on loss: ref_wnd *=  LOSS_BETA</t>
        <t>b) classic ECN CE: ref_wnd *=  ECN_BETA</t>
        <t>b) on L4S ECN CE or increased delay: ref_wnd *=  1-l4sAlpha/2</t>
        <t>Independent of the congestion detection, ref_wnd is increased by a fix increment for each RTT.</t>
        <t>The reference window increases multiplicatively after a number of congestion free RTTs, this enables a faster convergence to a higher link speed. The increase factor is also adjusted relative to a previous max value.</t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="sender-tc">
        <name>Sender Transmission Control</name>
        <t>The sender transmission control limits sending rate based on the
relation of the estimated link throughput (bytes in flight) and the reference window.</t>
        <artwork><![CDATA[
send_wnd = ref_wnd * ref_wnd_overhead - bytes_in_flight
]]></artwork>
        <t>The respective sending rate is achieved by applying packet pacing: Even
if the send window allows for the transmission of a number of packets,
these packets are not transmitted immediately; rather, they are
transmitted in intervals given by the packet size and the estimated
link throughput. Packets are generally paced at a higher rate than the
target bitrate, this makes it possible to transmit occasionally larger
video frames in a timely manner. Further, this mitigates issues with
ACK compression that can cause increased jitter and/or packet loss in
the media traffic.</t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="media-rate-control">
        <name>Media Rate Control</name>
        <t>The media rate control calculates the media rate based on the reference window and RTT.</t>
        <artwork><![CDATA[
target_bitrate = 8 * ref_wnd / s_rtt
]]></artwork>
        <t>The media rate needs to ramp up quickly enough to get a fair share of
the system resources when link throughput increases. Further, the
reaction to reduced throughput must be prompt in order to avoid
getting too much data queued in the data unit queue(s) in the sender.</t>
        <t>For the case that multiple
streams are enabled, the media rate among the streams is distributed according
to relative priorities.</t>
        <t>In cases where the sender's frame queues increase rapidly, such as in the case
of a Radio Access Type (RAT) handover, the SCReAMv2 sender MAY implement
additional actions, such as discarding of encoded media frames or frame skipping
in order to ensure that the data unit queues are drained quickly. Frame skipping
results in the frame rate being temporarily reduced. Which method to use is a
design choice and is outside the scope of this algorithm description.</t>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section anchor="scream-detailed-description">
      <name>Detailed Description of SCReAMv2 Sender Algorithm</name>
      <t>This section describes the sender-side algorithm in more detail. It is split
between the network congestion control, sender transmission control, and media
rate control.</t>
      <section anchor="sender-side-state">
        <name>Sender Side State</name>
        <t>The sender needs to maintain sending state and state about the received
feedback, as explained in the following subsections.</t>
        <section anchor="status-update-when-sending-data">
          <name>Status Update When Sending Data</name>
          <t>SCReAMv2 is a window-based and byte-oriented congestion control
protocol, where the number of bytes transmitted is inferred from the
size of the transmitted data units. Thus, a list of transmitted data
units and their respective transmission times (wall-clock time) MUST
be kept for further calculation. Further the following variables are
needed:</t>
          <ul spacing="normal">
            <li>
              <t>data_unit_size (0): Size [byte] of the last transmitted data unit.</t>
            </li>
            <li>
              <t>bytes_in_flight: The number of bytes in flight is computed as the sum of the
sizes of the data units ranging from the data unit most recently transmitted,
down to but not including the acknowledged data unit with the highest sequence
number.</t>
            </li>
          </ul>
          <t>bytes_in_flight can be also seen as the difference between the highest transmitted
byte sequence number and the highest acknowledged byte sequence number. As an
example: If a data unit with sequence number SN is transmitted and the last
acknowledgement indicates SN-5 as the highest received sequence number, then
bytes_in_flight is computed as the sum of the size of data units with sequence
number SN-4, SN-3, SN-2, SN-1, and SN. It does not matter if, for instance, the
data unit with sequence number SN-3 was lost -- the size of data unit with
sequence number SN-3 will still be considered in the computation of
bytes_in_flight.</t>
          <ul spacing="normal">
            <li>
              <t>ref_wnd_ratio (0.0): Ratio between MSS and ref_wnd capped to not
exceed 1.0 (min(1.0, MSS / ref_wnd)).</t>
            </li>
            <li>
              <t>max_bytes_in_flight (0): The maximum number of bytes in flight in the current
round trip [byte].</t>
            </li>
            <li>
              <t>max_bytes_in_flight_prev (0): The maximum number of bytes in flight in
previous round trip [byte].</t>
            </li>
          </ul>
          <t>As bytes_in_flight can spike when congestion occurs, using the minimum of
max_bytes_in_flight and max_bytes_in_flight_prev
makes it more likely that an uncongested bytes_in_flight is used.</t>
        </section>
        <section anchor="status-update-on-receiving-feedback">
          <name>Status Update on Receiving Feedback</name>
          <t>The feedback from the receiver is assumed to consist of the following elements:</t>
          <ul spacing="normal">
            <li>
              <t>The receiver wall-clock timestamp corresponding to the reception
time of the data unit with the highest sequence number.</t>
            </li>
            <li>
              <t>data_units_acked: A list of received data units' sequence numbers.</t>
            </li>
            <li>
              <t>data_units_acked_ce: An indication if data units are ECN-CE marked.
The ECN status can be either per data unit or an accumulated count of
ECN-CE marked data units.</t>
            </li>
            <li>
              <t>bytes_newly_acked (0): Number of bytes newly ACKed, reset to 0 when congestion
window is updated [byte].</t>
            </li>
            <li>
              <t>bytes_newly_acked_ce (0): Number of bytes newly ACKed and CE marked, reset to
0 when reference window is updated [byte].</t>
            </li>
          </ul>
          <t>bytes_newly_acked is incremented with a value
corresponding to how much the highest sequence number has increased
since the last feedback. As an example: If the previous
acknowledgement indicated the highest sequence number N and the new
acknowledgement indicated N+3, then bytes_newly_acked is incremented
by a value equal to the sum of the sizes of data units with sequence
number N+1, N+2, and N+3. Data units that are lost are also included,
which means that even though, e.g., data unit N+2 was lost, its size
is still included in the update of bytes_newly_acked. The
bytes_newly_acked_ce is, similar to bytes_newly_acked, a counter of
bytes newly acked with the extra condition that they are ECN-CE
marked. The bytes_newly_acked and bytes_newly_acked_ce are reset to
zero after a ref_wnd update.</t>
        </section>
      </section>
      <section anchor="network-cc-2">
        <name>Network Congestion Control</name>
        <t>This section explains the network congestion control, which calculates the
reference window. The reference window gives an upper limit to the number of bytes in flight.</t>
        <section anchor="reaction-delay-loss-ce">
          <name>Congestion Detection: Delay, Data Unit Loss and ECN-CE</name>
          <t>Congestion is detected based on three different indicators:</t>
          <ul spacing="normal">
            <li>
              <t>Lost data units detected,</t>
            </li>
            <li>
              <t>ECN-CE marked data units detected either for classic ECN or L4S,</t>
            </li>
            <li>
              <t>Estimated queue delay exceeds a threshold.</t>
            </li>
          </ul>
          <t>A congestion event occurs if any of the above indicators are true AND it is at
least min(VIRTUAL_RTT,s_rtt) since the last congestion event. This ensures that
the reference window is reduced at most once per smoothed RTT.</t>
          <section anchor="reaction-loss">
            <name>Detecting Lost Data Units</name>
            <t>The reference window back-off due to loss events is deliberately a bit less than
is the case with TCP Reno, for example. TCP is generally used to transmit whole
files; the file is then like a source with an infinite bitrate until the whole
file has been transmitted. SCReAMv2, on the other hand, has a source which rate
is limited to a value close to the available transmit rate and often below that
value; the effect is that SCReAMv2 has less opportunity to grab free capacity
than a TCP-based file transfer. To compensate for this, it is RECOMMENDED to let
SCReAMv2 reduce the reference window less than what is the case with TCP when
loss events occur.</t>
            <t>Lost data unit detection is based on the received sequence number list. A
reordering window SHOULD be applied to prevent data unit reordering from triggering
loss events. The reordering window is specified as a time unit, similar to the
ideas behind Recent ACKnowledgement (RACK) <xref target="RFC8985"/>. The computation of the
reordering window is made possible by means of a lost flag in the list of
transmitted data units. This flag is set if the received sequence number list
indicates that the given data unit is missing. If later feedback indicates that
a previously lost marked data unit was indeed received, then the reordering window
is updated to reflect the reordering delay. The reordering window is given by
the difference in time between the event that the data unit was marked as lost and
the event that it was indicated as successfully received. Loss is detected if a
given data unit is not acknowledged within a time window (indicated by the
reordering window) after an data unit with a higher sequence number was
acknowledged.</t>
          </section>
          <section anchor="reaction-ecn-ce">
            <name>Receiving ECN-CE with classic ECN</name>
            <t>In classic ECN mode the ref_wnd is scaled by a fixed value (BETA_ECN).</t>
            <t>The reference window back-off due to an ECN event MAY be smaller than if a loss
event occurs. This is in line with the idea outlined in <xref target="RFC8511"/> to enable
ECN marking thresholds lower than the corresponding data unit drop thresholds.</t>
          </section>
          <section anchor="reaction-l4s-ce">
            <name>Receiving ECN-CE for L4S</name>
            <t>The ref_wnd is scaled down in proportion to the fraction of marked
data units per RTT. The scale down proportion is given by l4s_alpha,
which is an Exponentially Weighted Moving Average (EWMA) filtered
version of the fraction of marked data units per RTT. This is inline
with how DCTCP works <xref target="RFC8257"/>. Additional methods are applied to
make the reference window reduction reasonably stable, especially when
the reference window is only a few MSS. In addition, because SCReAMv2
can quite often be source limited, additional steps are taken to
restore the reference window to a proper value after a long period
without congestion.</t>
            <t>l4s_alpha is calculated based in number of data units delivered (and marked)
the following way:</t>
            <artwork><![CDATA[
data_units_delivered_this_rtt += data_units_acked
data_units_marked_this_rtt += data_units_acked_ce
# l4s_alpha is updated at least every 10ms
if (now - last_update_l4s_alpha_time >= min(0.01,s_rtt)
  # l4s_alpha is calculated from data_units marked istf bytes marked
  fraction_marked_t = data_units_marked_this_rtt/
                      data_units_delivered_this_rtt

  # Apply a fast attack slow decay EWMA
  if (fraction_marked_t >= l4s_alpha)
     l4s_alpha = L4S_AVG_G_UP*fraction_marked_t + (1.0-L4S_AVG_G_UP)*l4S_alpha
  else
     l4s_alpha = (1.0-L4S_AVG_G_DOWN)*l4S_alpha

  last_update_l4s_alpha_time = now
  data_units_delivered_this_rtt = 0
  data_units_marked_this_rtt = 0
  last_fraction_marked = fraction_marked_t
end
]]></artwork>
            <t>This makes calculation of L4S alpha more accurate at very low bitrates,
given that the tail data unit in e.g a video frame is often smaller than MSS.</t>
            <t>The following variables are used:</t>
            <ul spacing="normal">
              <li>
                <t>l4s_alpha (0.0): Average fraction of marked data units per RTT.</t>
              </li>
              <li>
                <t>last_update_l4s_alpha_time (0): Last time l4s_alpha was updated [s].</t>
              </li>
              <li>
                <t>data_units_delivered_this_rtt (0): Counter for delivered data units.</t>
              </li>
              <li>
                <t>data_units_marked_this_rtt (0): Counter delivered and ECN-CE marked data units.</t>
              </li>
              <li>
                <t>last_fraction_marked (0.0): fraction marked data units in last update</t>
              </li>
            </ul>
            <t>The following constants are used</t>
            <ul spacing="normal">
              <li>
                <t>L4S_AVG_G_UP (1/8): Exponentially Weighted Moving Average (EWMA) factor for l4s_alpha increase</t>
              </li>
              <li>
                <t>L4S_AVG_G_DOWN (1/128): Exponentially Weighted Moving Average (EWMA) factor for l4s_alpha decrease</t>
              </li>
            </ul>
            <t>The calculation of l4s_alpha is done with an fast attack slow decay EWMA filter.
This can give a more stable performance when L4S bottlenecks have high marking thresholds.</t>
          </section>
          <section anchor="reaction-delay">
            <name>Detecting Increased Queue Delay</name>
            <t>SCReAMv2 implements a delay-based congestion control approach where it mimics
L4S congestion marking when the averaged queue delay exceeds a target
threshold. This threshold is set to qdelay_target/2 and the congestion backoff
factor (l4s_alpha_v) increases linearly from 0 to 100% as qdelay_avg goes from
qdelay_target/2 to qdelay_target. The averaged qdelay (qdelay_avg) is used to
avoid that the SCReAMv2 congestion control over-reacts to scheduling jitter,
sudden delay spikes due to e.g. handover or link layer
retransmissions.</t>
            <t>qdelay_avg is updated with a slow attack, fast decay EWMA filter as described below.</t>
            <artwork><![CDATA[
if (now - last_update_qdelay_avg_time >= min(virtual_rtt,s_rtt)
  # Calculate qdelay_avg
  if (qdelay < qdelay_avg)
    qdelay_avg = qdelay
  else
    qdelay_avg = QDELAY_AVG_G*qdelay + (1.0-QDELAY_AVG_G)*qdelay_avg
  end

  # Optional code to calculate the variation on queue delay, which is an
  # Indication of congestion or near congestion.
  if (REDUCE_JITTER == true)
     calculate_qdelay_norm()
  end
  last_update_qdelay_avg_time = now
end
]]></artwork>
            <t>The following variables are used:</t>
            <ul spacing="normal">
              <li>
                <t>qdelay (0): When the sender receives feedback, the qdelay is calculated as outlined in
<xref target="RFC6817"/>. A qdelay sample is obtained for each received acknowledgement.
It is typically sufficient with one update per received acknowledgement.</t>
              </li>
              <li>
                <t>last_update_qdelay_avg_time (0): Last time qdelay_avg was updated [s].</t>
              </li>
              <li>
                <t>s_rtt (0.0): Smoothed RTT [s], computed with a similar method to that
described in <xref target="RFC6298"/>.</t>
              </li>
            </ul>
            <t>The following constants are used:</t>
            <ul spacing="normal">
              <li>
                <t>QDELAY_AVG_G (1/4): Exponentially Weighted Moving Average (EWMA) factor for qdelay_avg</t>
              </li>
              <li>
                <t>REDUCE_JITTER (false): (optional) config knob to enable jitter filtering</t>
              </li>
            </ul>
            <t>The SCReAM algorithm can be further improved for a greater rate stability by taking variations in qdelay into consideration. The goal is to react less to delay variations, caused by e.g. link layer related scheduling and retransmissions, but still be reactive to actual queue delay, caused by congestion. The code below provides a example implementation but more advanced statistical analysis can be considered.</t>
            <t>The variable qdelay_dev_norm indicates how much the queue delay varies,
normalized to QDELAY_DEV_NORM. A small margin QDELAY_DEV_NORM/4 is implemented to reduce sensitivity to link layer scheduling jitter and retransmissions. In addition, a limit is implemented to avoid that qdelay_dev_norm winds up to very large values in cases of severe congestion. This limit is a factor larger than QDELAY_DEV_NORM_TH.
It increases when ref_wnd/MSS is small and therefore the relative increase of ref_wnd is large. This reduces delay and rate variations particularly for small ref_wnd values. The threshold is limited to a maximum value of 0.1 which is applied when the standard deviation of the delay jitter exceeds the threshold.</t>
            <artwork><![CDATA[
function calculate_qdelay_norm()
  # Calculate qdelay_dev_norm and cap in range [0.0, QDELAY_DEV_NORM_TH*1.5]
  tmp = max(0, min(QDELAY_DEV_NORM_TH*1.5, (qdelay-QDELAY_DEV_NORM/4)/QDELAY_DEV_NORM))
  qdelay_dev_norm = (1.0-QDELAY_DEV_AVG_G) * qdelay_dev_norm +
     QDELAY_DEV_AVG_G * tmp
end
]]></artwork>
            <t>The following variables are used:¶</t>
            <ul spacing="normal">
              <li>
                <t>qdelay_dev_norm (0): indicates how much the queue delay varies, normalized to QDELAY_DEV_NORM.</t>
              </li>
            </ul>
            <t>The following constants are used:</t>
            <ul spacing="normal">
              <li>
                <t>QDELAY_DEV_AVG_G (1/64): Exponentially Weighted Moving Average (EWMA) factor for qdelay_dev_norm</t>
              </li>
              <li>
                <t>QDELAY_DEV_NORM (0.025): The normalization factor for qdelay_dev_norm</t>
              </li>
              <li>
                <t>QDELAY_DEV_NORM_TH (1.0): A threshold for the limitation ref_wnd growth and ref_wnd_overhead.</t>
              </li>
            </ul>
            <section anchor="competing-flows-compensation">
              <name>Competing Flows Compensation</name>
              <t>It is likely that a flow will have to share congested bottlenecks with other
flows that use a more aggressive congestion control algorithm (for example,
large FTP flows using loss-based congestion control). The worst condition occurs
when the bottleneck queues are of tail-drop type with a large buffer
size. SCReAMv2 takes care of such situations by adjusting the qdelay_target when
loss-based flows are detected, as shown in the pseudocode below.</t>
              <artwork><![CDATA[
adjust_qdelay_target(qdelay)
  qdelay_norm_t = qdelay / QDELAY_TARGET_LOW
  update_qdelay_norm_history(qdelay_norm_t)
  # Compute variance
  qdelay_norm_var_t = VARIANCE(qdelay_norm_history(200))
  # Compensation for competing traffic
  # Compute average
  qdelay_norm_avg_t = AVERAGE(qdelay_norm_history(50))
  # Compute upper limit to target delay
  new_target_t = qdelay_norm_avg_t + sqrt(qdelay_norm_var_t)
  new_target_t *= QDELAY_TARGET_LO
  if (loss_event_rate > 0.002)
    # Data unit losses detected
    qdelay_target = 1.5 * new_target_t
  else
    if (qdelay_norm_var_t < 0.2)
      # Reasonably safe to set target qdelay
      qdelay_target = new_target_t
    else
      # Check if target delay can be reduced; this helps prevent
      # the target delay from being locked to high values forever
      if (new_target_t < QDELAY_TARGET_LO)
        # Decrease target delay quickly, as measured queuing
        # delay is lower than target
        qdelay_target = max(qdelay_target * 0.5, new_target_t)
      else
        # Decrease target delay slowly
        qdelay_target *= 0.9
      end
    end
  end

  # Apply limits
  qdelay_target = min(QDELAY_TARGET_HI, qdelay_target)
  qdelay_target = max(QDELAY_TARGET_LO, qdelay_target)
]]></artwork>
              <t>The follwoing variable is used:</t>
              <ul spacing="normal">
                <li>
                  <t>loss_event_rate (0.0): The estimated fraction of RTTs with lost data units
detected.</t>
                </li>
              </ul>
              <t>Two temporary variables are calculated. qdelay_norm_avg_t is the long-term
average queue delay, qdelay_norm_var_t is the long-term variance of the queue
delay. A high qdelay_norm_var_t indicates that the queue delay changes; this can
be an indication that bottleneck bandwidth is reduced or that a competing flow
has just entered. Thus, it indicates that it is not safe to adjust the queue
delay target.</t>
              <t>A low qdelay_norm_var_t indicates that the queue delay is relatively stable. The
reason could be that the queue delay is low, but it could also be that a
competing flow is causing the bottleneck to reach the point that data unit losses
start to occur, in which case the queue delay will stay relatively high for a
longer time.</t>
              <t>The queue delay target is allowed to be increased if either the loss event rate
is above a given threshold or qdelay_norm_var_t is low. Both these conditions
indicate that a competing flow may be present. In all other cases, the queue
delay target is decreased.</t>
              <t>The function that adjusts the qdelay_target is simple and could produce false
positives and false negatives. The case that self-inflicted congestion by the
SCReAMv2 algorithm may be falsely interpreted as the presence of competing
loss-based FTP flows is a false positive. The opposite case -- where the
algorithm fails to detect the presence of a competing FTP flow -- is a false
negative.</t>
              <t>Extensive simulations have shown that the algorithm performs well in LTE and 5G
test cases and that it also performs well in simple bandwidth-limited bottleneck
test cases with competing FTP flows. However, the potential failure of the
algorithm cannot be completely ruled out. A false positive (i.e., when
self-inflicted congestion is mistakenly identified as competing flows) is
especially problematic when it leads to increasing the target queue delay, which
can cause the end-to-end delay to increase dramatically.</t>
              <t>If it is deemed unlikely that competing flows occur over the same bottleneck,
the algorithm described in this section MAY be turned off. One such case is
QoS-enabled bearers in 3GPP-based access such as LTE and 5G. However, when
sending over the Internet, often the network conditions are not known for sure,
so in general it is not possible to make safe assumptions on how a network is
used and whether or not competing flows share the same bottleneck. Therefore,
turning this algorithm off must be considered with caution, as it can lead to
basically zero throughput if competing with loss-based traffic.</t>
            </section>
          </section>
        </section>
        <section anchor="ref-wnd-update">
          <name>Reference Window Update</name>
          <t>The reference window update contains two parts. One that reduces the reference
window when congestion events (listed above) occur, and one part that
continuously increases the reference window.</t>
          <t>The following variables are defined:</t>
          <ul spacing="normal">
            <li>
              <t>ref_wnd (MIN_REF_WND): Reference window [byte].</t>
            </li>
            <li>
              <t>ref_wnd_i (1): Reference window inflection point [byte].</t>
            </li>
            <li>
              <t>qdelay_target (QDELAY_TARGET_LO): qdelay target [s], a variable qdelay target
is introduced to manage cases where a fixed qdelay target would otherwise
starve the data flow under such circumstances (e.g., FTP competes for the
bandwidth over the same bottleneck). The qdelay target is allowed to vary
between QDELAY_TARGET_LO and QDELAY_TARGET_HI.</t>
            </li>
            <li>
              <t>last_congestion_detected_time (0): Last time congestion detected [s].</t>
            </li>
            <li>
              <t>last_reaction_to_congestion_time (0): Last time congestion avoidance occured [s].</t>
            </li>
            <li>
              <t>last_ref_wnd_i_update_time (0): Last time ref_wnd_i was updated [s].</t>
            </li>
          </ul>
          <t>Further the following constants are used (the RECOMMENDED values, within parentheses "()",
for the constants are deduced from experiments):</t>
          <ul spacing="normal">
            <li>
              <t>QDELAY_TARGET_LO (0.06): Target value for the minimum qdelay [s].</t>
            </li>
            <li>
              <t>QDELAY_TARGET_HI (0.4): Target value for the maximum qdelay [s]. This
parameter provides an upper limit to how much the target qdelay
(qdelay_target) can be increased in order to cope with competing loss-based
flows. However, the target qdelay does not have to be initialized to this high
value, as it would increase end-to-end delay and also make the rate control
and congestion control loops sluggish.</t>
            </li>
            <li>
              <t>MIN_REF_WND (3000): Minimum reference window [byte].</t>
            </li>
            <li>
              <t>BYTES_IN_FLIGHT_HEAD_ROOM (1.5): Extra headroom for bytes in flight.</t>
            </li>
            <li>
              <t>BETA_LOSS (0.7): ref_wnd scale factor due to loss event.</t>
            </li>
            <li>
              <t>BETA_ECN (0.8): ref_wnd scale factor due to ECN event.</t>
            </li>
            <li>
              <t>MSS (1000): Maximum segment size = Max data unit size [byte].</t>
            </li>
            <li>
              <t>POST_CONGESTION_DELAY_RTT (100): Determines how many RTTs after a congestion
event the reference window growth should be cautious.</t>
            </li>
            <li>
              <t>MUL_INCREASE_FACTOR (0.02): Determines how much (as a fraction of ref_wnd)
that the ref_wnd can increase per RTT.</t>
            </li>
            <li>
              <t>IS_L4S (false): Congestion control operates in L4S mode.</t>
            </li>
            <li>
              <t>VIRTUAL_RTT (0.025): Virtual RTT [s]. This mimics Prague's RTT fairness such that flows with RTT
below VIRTUAL_RTT should get a roughly equal share over an L4S path.</t>
            </li>
            <li>
              <t>MIN_QUEUE_DELAY_DEV_SCALE (0.1): Min allowed scaling of ref_wnd backoff and increase due to large qdelay_dev_norm.</t>
            </li>
          </ul>
          <section anchor="reference-window-reduction">
            <name>Reference Window Reduction</name>
            <artwork><![CDATA[
# Compute scaling factor for reference window adjustment
# when close to the last known max value before congestion
# ref_wnd_i is updated before this code
# loss_detected and data_units_marked indicates that packets
# are marked or lost since last_reaction_to_congestion_time
scl_t = (ref_wnd-ref_wnd_i) / ref_wnd_i
scl_t *= 8
scl_t = scl_t * scl_t
scl_t = max(0.1, min(1.0, scl_t))

if (loss_detected || data_units_marked)
   last_congestion_detected_time = now
end

# The reference window is updated at least every VIRTUAL_RTT
if (now - last_reaction_to_congestion_time >= min(VIRTUAL_RTT,s_rtt)
  if (loss_detected)
    is_loss_t = true
  else if (data_units_marked)
    is_ce_t = true
  else if (qdelay_avg > qdelay_target/2 && !(is_ce_t || is_loss_t))
    # The calculation of l4s_alpha_v_t is based on qdelay_avg to reduce
    # sensitivity to sudden non-congestion related delay spikes that can
    # occur due to lower protocol retransmissions or cell change
    l4s_alpha_v_t = min(1.0, max(0.0,
            (qdelay_avg - qdelay_target / 2) /
            (qdelay_target / 2)))
    is_virtual_ce_t = true
  end
end

if (is_loss_t || is_ce_t || is_virtual_ce_t)
  if (now - last_ref_wnd_i_update_time > 10*s_rtt)
    # Update ref_wnd_i, no more often than every 10 RTTs
    # Additional median filtering over more congestion epochs
    # may improve accuracy of ref_wnd_i
    last_ref_wnd_i_update_time = now
    ref_wnd_i = ref_wnd
  end
end

# Either loss, ECN mark or increased qdelay is detected
if (is_loss_t)
  # Loss is detected
  ref_wnd = ref_wnd * BETA_LOSS
end
if (is_ce_t)
  # ECN-CE detected
  if (IS_L4S)
    # L4S mode
    backoff_t = l4s_alpha / 2

    # Scale down backoff when RTT is high to avoid overreaction to
    # congestion
    backoff_t /= max(1.0, s_rtt/VIRTUAL_RTT)

    # Jitter is considered large if the qdelay is larger than qdelay_target/4
    # when L4S is enabled
    if (qdelay < qdelay_target * 0.25)
        # Scale down backoff if close to the last known max reference window
        # This is complemented with a scale down of the reference window increase
        backoff_t *= max(0.25, scl_t)

        # Optional additional code for increased rate stability
        # qdelay_dev_norm is zero if REDUCE_JITTER is false
        # Counterbalance the limitation in CWND increase when the queue
        # delay varies. This helps to avoid starvation in the presence of
        # competing TCP Prague flows
        # Code has no effect if REDUCE_JITTER == false
        backoff_t *= max(MIN_QUEUE_DELAY_DEV_SCALE,
          (QDELAY_DEV_NORM_TH - qdelay_dev_norm) / QDELAY_DEV_NORM_TH)
    end

    if (now - last_reaction_to_congestion_time >
        100*max(VIRTUAL_RTT,s_rtt))
      # A long time (>100 RTTs) since last congested because
      # link throughput exceeds max video bitrate.
      # There is a certain risk that ref_wnd has increased way above
      # bytes in flight, so we reduce it here to get it better on
      # track and thus the congestion episode is shortened
      ref_wnd = min(ref_wnd, max_bytes_in_flight_prev)
    end

    ref_wnd = (1.0 - backoff_t) * ref_wnd
  else
    # Classic ECN mode
    ref_wnd = ref_wnd * BETA_ECN
  end
end
if (is_virtual_ce_t)
  backoff_t = l4s_alpha_v_t / 2

  # Scale down backoff when RTT is high to avoid overreaction to
  # congestion
  backoff_t /= max(1.0, s_rtt/VIRTUAL_RTT)

  ref_wnd = (1.0 - backoff_t) * ref_wnd
end
ref_wnd = max(MIN_REF_WND, ref_wnd)

if (is_loss_t || is_ce_t || is_virtual_ce_t)
  last_reaction_to_congestion_time = now
end
]]></artwork>
          </section>
          <section anchor="reference-window-increase">
            <name>Reference Window Increase</name>
            <artwork><![CDATA[
# Delay factor for multiplicative reference window increase
# after congestion

post_congestion_scale_t = max(0.0, min(1.0,
  (now - last_congestion_detected_time) /
  (POST_CONGESTION_DELAY_RTTS * max(VIRTUAL_RTT, s_rtt))))

# Scale factor for ref_wnd update
ref_wnd_scale_factor_t = 1.0 + (MUL_INCREASE_FACTOR  * ref_wnd) / MSS

# Calculate bytes acked that are not CE marked
# For the case that only accumulated number of CE marked packets is
# reported by the feedback, it is necessary to make an approximation
# of bytes_newly_acked_ce based on average data unit size.
bytes_newly_acked_minus_ce_t = bytes_newly_acked-
                               bytes_newly_acked_ce

increment_t = bytes_newly_acked_minus_ce_t*ref_wnd_ratio

# Reduce increment for small RTTs
tmp_t = min(1.0, s_rtt / VIRTUAL_RTT)
increment_t *= tmp_t

# Apply limit to reference window growth when close to last
# known max value before congestion
increment_t *= max(0.25,scl_t)

# Optional additional code for increased rate stability
# qdelay_dev_norm is zero if REDUCE_JITTER is false
# Put a additional restriction on reference window growth if qdelay varies a lot.
# Better to enforce a slow increase in reference window and get
# a more stable bitrate. Restriction is limited by MIN_QUEUE_DELAY_DEV_SCALE to avoid that
# ref_wnd growth becomes zero.
# Code has no effect if REDUCE_JITTER == false
increment_t *= max(MIN_QUEUE_DELAY_DEV_SCALE,
  (QDELAY_DEV_NORM_TH - qdelay_dev_norm) / QDELAY_DEV_NORM_TH)

# Scale up increment with multiplicative increase
# Limit multiplicative increase when congestion occurred
# recently and when reference window is close to the last
# known max value.
float tmp_t = ref_wnd_scale_factor_t
if (tmp_t > 1.0)
  tmp_t = 1.0 + (tmp_t - 1.0) * post_congestion_scale_t * scl_t
end
increment_t *= tmp_t

# Increase ref_wnd only if bytes in flight is large enough
# Quite a lot of slack is allowed here to avoid that bitrate
# locks to low values.
# Increase is inhibited if max target bitrate is reached.
max_allowed_t = MSS + max(max_bytes_in_flight,
  max_bytes_in_flight_prev) * BYTES_IN_FLIGHT_HEAD_ROOM
int ref_wnd_t = ref_wnd + increment_t
if (ref_wnd_t <= max_allowed_t && target_bitrate < TARGET_BITRATE_MAX)
  ref_wnd = ref_wnd_t
end
]]></artwork>
            <t>The ref_wnd_scale_factor_t scales the reference window increase. The
ref_wnd_scale_factor_t is increased with larger ref_wnd to allow for a
multiplicative increase and thus a faster convergence when link capacity
increases.</t>
            <t>The multiplicative increase is restricted directly after a congestion event and
the restriction is gradually relaxed as the time since last congested
increased. The restriction makes the reference window growth to be no faster
than additive increase when congestion continuously occurs.  For L4S operation
this means that the SCReAMv2 algorithm will adhere to the 2 marked data units per
RTT equilibrium at steady state congestion, with the exception of the case
below.</t>
            <t>The reference window increase is restricted to values as small as 0.1MSS/RTT
when the reference window is close to the last known max value (ref_wnd_i). This
increases stability and reduces periodic overshoot.</t>
            <t>It is particularly important that the reference window reflects the transmitted
bitrate especially in L4S mode operation. An inflated ref_wnd takes extra RTTs
to bring down to a correct value upon congestion and thus causes unnecessary
queue buildup. At the same time the reference window must be allowed to be large
enough to avoid that the SCReAMv2 algorithm begins to limit itself, given that
the target bitrate is calculated based on the ref_wnd. Two mechanisms are used
to manage this:</t>
            <ul spacing="normal">
              <li>
                <t>Restore correct value of ref_wnd upon congestion. This is done if is a
prolonged time since the link was congested. A typical example is that
SCReAMv2 has been rate limited, i.e the target bitrate has reached the
TARGET_BITRATE_MAX.</t>
              </li>
              <li>
                <t>Limit ref_wnd when the target_bitrate has reached TARGET_BITRATE_MAX. The
ref_wnd is restricted based on a history of the last max_bytes_in_flight
values. See <xref target="SCReAM-CPP-implementation"/> for details.</t>
              </li>
            </ul>
            <t>The two mechanisms complement one another.</t>
          </section>
        </section>
      </section>
      <section anchor="sender-transmission-control">
        <name>Sender Transmission Control</name>
        <t>The Sender Transmission control calculates of send window at the sender.
Data units are transmitted if allowed by the relation between the number of bytes
in flight and the reference window. This is controlled by the send window:</t>
        <ul spacing="normal">
          <li>
            <t>send_wnd (0): Upper limit to how many bytes can currently be
transmitted. Updated when ref_wnd is updated and when data unit is
transmitted [byte].</t>
          </li>
        </ul>
        <section anchor="send-window">
          <name>Send Window Calculation</name>
          <t>The basic design principle behind data unit transmission in SCReAM was to allow
transmission only if the number of bytes in flight is less than the congestion
window. There are, however, two reasons why this strict rule will not work
optimally:</t>
          <ul spacing="normal">
            <li>
              <t>Bitrate variations: Media sources such as video encoders generally produce
frames whose size always vary to a larger or smaller extent. The data unit queue
absorbs the natural variations in frame sizes. However, the data unit queue should
be as short as possible to prevent the end-to-end delay from increasing. A
strict 'send only when bytes in flight is less than the reference window' rule
can cause the data unit queue to grow simply because the send window is limited. The
consequence is that the reference window will not increase, or will increase
very slowly, because the reference window is only allowed to increase when
there is a sufficient amount of data in flight. The final effect is that the
media bitrate increases very slowly or not at all.</t>
            </li>
            <li>
              <t>Reverse (feedback) path congestion: Especially in transport over
buffer-bloated networks, the one-way delay in the reverse direction can jump
due to congestion. The effect is that the acknowledgements are delayed, and
the self-clocking is temporarily halted, even though the forward path is not
congested. The ref_wnd_overhead allows for some degree of reverse path
congestion as the bytes in flight is allowed to exceed ref_wnd.</t>
            </li>
          </ul>
          <t>In SCReAMv2, the send window is given by the relation between the adjusted
reference window and the amount of bytes in flight according to the pseudocode
below. The multiplication of ref_wnd with ref_wnd_overhead has the effect that bytes in flight is 'around' the ref_wnd
rather than limited by the ref_wnd. The
implementation allows the data unit queue to be small even when the frame sizes vary
and thus increased e2e delay can be avoided.</t>
          <artwork><![CDATA[
send_wnd = ref_wnd * ref_wnd_overhead - bytes_in_flight
]]></artwork>
          <t>The send window is updated whenever an data unit is transmitted or an feedback
messaged is received.</t>
          <t>The ref_wnd_overhead is adjusted dynamically. A large overhead is beneficial when the network link is uncongested as it allows to
transmit large media frames with little transmission delay. A large overhead is also beneficial for cases where network links use virtual queue marking or can temporarly absorb bursts from L4S capable flows.
If, on the other hand the network link is congested, then it is better to restrict how much bytes in flight exceeds the reference window because is not possible to push data faster than the reference window allows. This restriction reduces varaitions in RTT caused by self-congestion and improves performance for the cases where media encoders are slow to react to changes in target rate.</t>
          <t>The following constants are used (the RECOMMENDED values, within parentheses "()",
for the constants are deduced from experiments):</t>
          <ul spacing="normal">
            <li>
              <t>REF_WND_OVERHEAD_MIN (1.5): Indicates a lower limit how much bytes in flight is allowed to
exceed ref_wnd.</t>
            </li>
            <li>
              <t>REF_WND_OVERHEAD_MAX (3.0): Indicates an upper limit how much bytes in flight is allowed to exceed ref_wnd. This is roughly equal to MAX_RELAXED_PACING_FACTOR to allow that media frames can be transmitted quickly when the transmission channel is uncongested.</t>
            </li>
          </ul>
          <t>The ref_wnd_overhead is calculated as:</t>
          <artwork><![CDATA[
ref_wnd_overhead = REF_WND_OVERHEAD_MIN +
  (REF_WND_OVERHEAD_MAX - REF_WND_OVERHEAD_MIN)*max(0.0,(QDELAY_DEV_NORM_TH-qdelay_dev_norm)/QDELAY_DEV_NORM_TH)
]]></artwork>
        </section>
        <section anchor="packet-pacing">
          <name>Packet Pacing</name>
          <t>Packet pacing is used in order to mitigate coalescing, i.e., when packets are
transmitted in bursts, with the risks of increased jitter and potentially
increased packet loss. Packet pacing is also highly recommended to be used with L4S and
also mitigates possible issues with queue overflow due to key-frame generation
in video coders. However, when the link is uncongested, it is beneficial to relax
the packet pacing and allow frames to be transmitted faster, to reduce end to end delay on the application layer.</t>
          <ul spacing="normal">
            <li>
              <t>pace_bitrate (1e6): Data unit pacing rate [bps].</t>
            </li>
            <li>
              <t>t_pace (1e-6): Pacing interval between data units [s].</t>
            </li>
          </ul>
          <t>The following constants are used by the packet pacing:</t>
          <ul spacing="normal">
            <li>
              <t>RATE_PACE_MIN (50000): Minimum pacing rate in [bps].</t>
            </li>
            <li>
              <t>PACKET_PACING_HEADROOM (1.5): Headroom for packet pacing.</t>
            </li>
            <li>
              <t>MAX_RELAXED_PACING_FACTOR (4.0): Max extra packet pacing when the media coder reaches the max bitrate. This should be roughly equal to REF_WND_OVERHEAD_MAX.</t>
            </li>
            <li>
              <t>RELAXED_PACING_LIMIT_LOW (0.8): Nominal bitrate fraction of TARGET_BITRATE_MAX at which the pacing should be increasingly relaxed.</t>
            </li>
          </ul>
          <t>The time interval between consecutive data unit transmissions is
greater than or equal to t_pace, where t_pace is given by the equations below:</t>
          <artwork><![CDATA[
pace_bitrate = max(RATE_PACE_MIN, target_bitrate) *
               PACKET_PACING_HEADROOM

# Calculate and apply relaxed pacing
nominal_rate_t = target_bitrate/TARGET_BITRATE_MAX
pace_rate_scale_t = min(1.0,
  (nominal_rate_t-RELAXED_PACING_LIMIT_LOW)/(1.0 - RELAXED_PACING_LIMIT_LOW))
pace_rate_scale_t = min(1.0,
  max(1.0 / MAX_RELAXED_PACING_FACTOR, 1.0 - pace_rate_scale_t))
pace_bitrate /= pace_rate_scale_t

t_pace = data_unit_size * 8 / pace_bitrate
]]></artwork>
          <t>data_unit_size is the size of the last transmitted data unit. RATE_PACE_MIN is the
minimum pacing rate.</t>
        </section>
      </section>
      <section anchor="media-rate-control-2">
        <name>Media Rate Control</name>
        <t>The media rate control algorithm is executed whenever the reference window is
updated and calculates the target bitrate:</t>
        <ul spacing="normal">
          <li>
            <t>target_bitrate (0): Media target bitrate [bps].</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>rate_adjust_factor (0): Adjustment factor to avoid unnecessary media queue buildup.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>frame_size_dev (0): Frame size deviation.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>frame_period (0.02): An estimated frame period.</t>
          </li>
        </ul>
        <t>The following constants are used by the media rate control:</t>
        <ul spacing="normal">
          <li>
            <t>PACKET_OVERHEAD (20) : Estimated packetization overhead [byte].</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>TARGET_BITRATE_MIN: Minimum target bitrate in [bps] (bits per second).</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>TARGET_BITRATE_MAX: Maximum target bitrate in [bps].</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>RATE_ADJUST_GAIN (1/16): Adjustment gain for rate adjustment to compensate for media queue buildup.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>FRAME_SIZE_DEV_ALPHA (1/64): Time constant to compensate for varying frame sizes.</t>
          </li>
        </ul>
        <t>The target bitrate is essentiatlly based on the reference window ref_wnd and the (smoothed) RTT s_rtt according to</t>
        <artwork><![CDATA[
target_bitrate = 8 * ref_wnd / s_rtt
]]></artwork>
        <t>The role of the media rate control is to strike a reasonable balance between a
low amount of queuing in the data unit queue(s) and a sufficient amount of data to
send in order to keep the data path busy. Because the reference window is
updated based on loss, ECN-CE and delay, so does the target rate also update.</t>
        <t>The code above however needs some modifications to work fine in a number of
scenarios</t>
        <ul spacing="normal">
          <li>
            <t>ref_wnd is very small, just a few MSS or smaller</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>The media queue grows large, which can result in large e2e delay</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>The frame sizes vary much, which can result in larger e2e delay if not compensated for</t>
          </li>
        </ul>
        <t>The rate_adjust_factor helps to reduce the target rate when the delay in the data unit increases beyond frame_period/4, this allows for some modest queue buildup to ensure a good link utilization. The frame_size_dev calculates the positive deviation in frame sizes from the nominal, this helps compensate for larger variations in frame size, systematic errors in media encoder output bitrate and also to some extent sluggish media rate control loops where the media coder rate lags behind the target bitrate.
The complete pseudo code for adjustment of the target bitrate is shown below. The algorithm parts for rate_adjust_factor and frame_size_dev are suggested examples how to compensate for that frames sized deviate from the nominal.</t>
        <artwork><![CDATA[
# Calculate the rate_adjust_factor and the frame_size_dev for each new media frame.
# The input variables are media_qdelay [s] and frame_size [byte].
# The media_qdelay is the elapsed time the oldest media packet has
# been in the media queue.

# The rate adjust factor is updated with an I (integration) controller.
# Cap values in range [0.0 0.5]
error = (media_qdelay - frame_period / 4) / frame_period
rate_adjust_factor += error * RATE_ADJUST_GAIN
rate_adjust_factor = min(0.5, max(0.0, rate_adjust_factor)

# The frame_size_dev estimates the deviation from the nominal frame size for
# the given bitrate and frame period.
# Cap values in range [0.0 0.2]
framesize_nom = target_bitrate * frame_period / 8
deviation = max(0.0, (frame_size - frame_size_nom) / frame_size_nom)
frame_size_dev = min(0.2, (1 - FRAME_SIZE_DEV_ALPHA) * frame_size_dev +
   FRAME_SIZE_DEV_ALPHA * deviation)

tmp_t = 1.0

# Scale down rate slightly when the reference window is very
# small compared to MSS
tmp_t *= 1.0 - min(0.2, max(0.0, ref_wnd_ratio - 0.1))

# Additional compensation for packetization overhead,
# important when MSS is small
tmp_t_ *= MSS / (MSS + PACKET_OVERHEAD)

# An additional downscaling is needed to avoid unnecessary
# sender queue build-up, better to set the target bitrate
# slightly lower than what ref_wnd and s_rtt indicates
tmp_t /= 1.2 + rate_adjust_factor + frame_size_dev

# Calculate target bitrate and limit to min and max allowed
# values
target_bitrate = tmp_t * 8 * ref_wnd / s_rtt
target_bitrate = min(TARGET_BITRATE_MAX,
  max(TARGET_BITRATE_MIN, target_bitrate))
]]></artwork>
      </section>
      <section anchor="clock-drift-issues-and-remedies">
        <name>Clock drift issues and remedies</name>
        <t>SCReAM can suffer from the same issues with clock drift as is the case with LEDBAT <xref target="RFC6817"/>. However, Appendix A.2 in <xref target="RFC6817"/> describes ways to mitigate issues with clock drift. A clockdrift compensation method is also implemented in <xref target="SCReAM-CPP-implementation"/>. The SCReAM implementation resets base delay history when it is determined that clock drift or skip becomes too large. This is achieved by reducing the target bitrate for a few RTTs.</t>
        <t>The variables and constants are:
* delay_min_avg (0): A long term averaged min queue delay [s].</t>
        <ul spacing="normal">
          <li>
            <t>qdelay_min (MAX_VALUE): The min queue delay measured during an RTT [s], initialized to a very high value.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>QDELAY_MIN_AVG_ALPHA (1/256): Slow EWMA time constant for delay_min_avg.</t>
          </li>
        </ul>
        <t>The steps for the clockdrift compensation is as follows:</t>
        <ul spacing="normal">
          <li>
            <t>Store the min qdelay (qdelay_min) during one RTT.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>When an RTT has elapsed:</t>
          </li>
        </ul>
        <artwork><![CDATA[
# Update delay_min_avg
qdelay_min_avg = (1 - QDELAY_MIN_AVG_ALPHA) * qdelay_min_avg +
  QDELAY_MIN_AVG_ALPHA * qdelay_min
qdelay_min = MAX_VALUE # set qdelay_min to a very high value
if qdelay_min_avg > qdelay_target / 4
  qdelay_min_avg = 0
  # Implement the following actions
  # 1. Reset queue delay history
  # 2. Scale down target bitrate by 50% for a period of max(5 * s_rtt, 0.2)
end
]]></artwork>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section anchor="scream-receiver">
      <name>Receiver Requirements on Feedback Intensity</name>
      <t>The simple task of the receiver is to feed back acknowledgements with with time
stamp and ECN bits indication for received data units to the sender. Upon reception
of each data unit, the receiver MUST maintain enough information to send the
aforementioned values to the sender via an RTCP transport- layer feedback
message. The frequency of the feedback message depends on the available RTCP
bandwidth. The requirements on the feedback elements and the feedback interval
are described below.</t>
      <t>SCReAMv2 benefits from relatively frequent feedback. It is RECOMMENDED that a
SCReAMv2 implementation follows the guidelines below. Feedback should forcibly be transmitted in any of these cases:</t>
      <ul spacing="normal">
        <li>
          <t>More than N data units received since last feedback has been transmitted. N=16 has been tested with good results.</t>
        </li>
        <li>
          <t>A data unit with marker bit set or other last data unit for media frame is received.</t>
        </li>
        <li>
          <t>A max defined interval between feedback reports. Values such as 40 ms has been tested with good results.</t>
        </li>
      </ul>
      <t>The feedback interval depends on the media bitrate. At low bitrates, it is
sufficient with a feedback every frame; while at high bitrates, a feedback
shorther feedback interval is recommended to keep the self-clocking in SCReAMv2
working well. One indication that feedback is too sparse is that the SCReAMv2
implementation cannot reach high bitrates, even in uncongested links. More
frequent feedback might solve this issue.</t>
      <t>The transmission interval is not critical. So, in the case of multi-stream handling between two hosts, the feedback for two or more synchronization sources (SSRCs) can be bundled to save UDP/IP overhead.</t>
      <t>SCReAMv2 works with AVPF regular mode; immediate or early mode is not required
by SCReAMv2 but can nonetheless be useful for RTCP messages not directly related
to SCReAMv2, such as those specified in <xref target="RFC4585"/>. It is RECOMMENDED to use
reduced-size RTCP <xref target="RFC5506"/>, where regular full compound RTCP transmission is
controlled by trr-int as described in <xref target="RFC4585"/>.</t>
      <t>While the guidelines above are somewhat RTCP specific, similar principles apply
to for instance QUIC.</t>
    </section>
    <section anchor="discussion">
      <name>Discussion</name>
      <t>This section covers a few discussion points.</t>
      <ul spacing="normal">
        <li>
          <t>The target bitrate given by SCReAMv2 is the bitrate including the data unit and
Forward Error Correction (FEC) overhead. The media encoder SHOULD take this
overhead into account when the media bitrate is set. This means that the media
coder bitrate SHOULD be computed as: media_rate = target_bitrate -
data_unit_plus_fec_overhead_bitrate It is not necessary to make a 100% perfect
compensation for the overhead, as the SCReAM algorithm will inherently
compensate for moderate errors. Under-compensating for the overhead has the
effect of increasing jitter, while overcompensating will cause the bottleneck
link to become underutilized.</t>
        </li>
        <li>
          <t>The link utilization with SCReAMv2 can be lower than 100%. There are several
possible reasons to this:  </t>
          <ul spacing="normal">
            <li>
              <t>Large variations in frame sizes: Large variations in frame size makes
SCReAMv2 push down the target_bitrate to give sufficient headroom and avoid
queue buildup in the network. It is in general recommended to operate video
coders in low latency mode and enable GDR (Gradual Decoding Refresh) if
possible to minimize frame size variations.</t>
            </li>
            <li>
              <t>Link layer properties: Media transport in 5G in uplink typically requires to
transmit a scheduling request (SR) to get persmission to transmit
data. Because transmission of video is frame based, there is a high
likelihood that the channel becomes idle between frames (especially with
L4S), in which case a new SR/grant exchange is needed. This potentially
means that uplink transmission slots are unused with a lower link
utilization as a result.</t>
            </li>
          </ul>
        </li>
        <li>
          <t>Packet pacing is recommended, it is however possible to operate SCReAMv2 with
packet pacing disabled. The code in <xref target="SCReAM-CPP-implementation"/> implements
additional mechanisms to achieve a high link utilization when packet pacing is
disabled. Additional packet pacing headroom can be beneficial if unusually large media frames are generated, this can reduce unnecessary queue build-up in the data unit queue.</t>
        </li>
        <li>
          <t>Feedback issues: RTCP feedback packets <xref target="RFC8888"/> can be lost, this means that
the loss detection in SCReAMv2 may trigger even though packets arrive safely
on the receiver side. <xref target="SCReAM-CPP-implementation"/> solves this by using
overlapping RTCP feedback, i.e RTCP feedback is transmitted no more seldom
than every 16th packet, and where each RTCP feedback spans the last 32
received packets. This however creates unnecessary overhead. <xref target="RFC3550"/> RR
(Receiver Reports) can possibly be another solution to achieve better
robustness with less overhead. QUIC <xref target="RFC9000"/> overcomes this issue because
of inherent design.</t>
        </li>
        <li>
          <t>SCReAM has been designed to target two marked packets per RTT in steady state when L4S is enabled.
 However, SCReAM can settle for a lower number of marked packets per RTT in steady state
 due to measures taken in the calculation of the ref_wnd and the target_bitrate
 that are necessary to get a stable bitrate and lower queue delay.
 In those cases SCReAM may get a lower share of the link capacity
 when competing against e.g. a large file transfer with TCP Prague congestion control.</t>
        </li>
        <li>
          <t>SCReAM has over time been evaluated in a number of different experiments, a
few examples are found in <xref target="SCReAM-evaluation-L4S"/>.</t>
        </li>
        <li>
          <t>SCReAM (+L4S) is currently being integrated in chrome for performance evaluation and comparison against GCC, nightly Chrome Canary builds are available at <xref target="SCReAM-Chrome-Canary"/>.</t>
        </li>
        <li>
          <t>The addition of the optional qdelay_dev_norm related restriction on ref_wnd increase can cause the rate increase to go slower when the non-congestion related jitter is high. Non-congestion related jitter can occur for instance in 5G where the amount of scheduling delay jitter depends of factors like TDD (Time Division Duplex) patterns an overall load in a cell. Improved methods to take delay jitter and compensate for that can remedy this. The objective is to avoid the restriction when the delay jitter is not congestion related. Discriminating between non-congestion related delay jitter and congestion related ditto is however not an easy task. One method to to estimate the jitter when link is known to be uncongested. A challenge is that congestion related jitter emerges already as the application bitrate gets near the congestion point and this can make distinction more difficult. The example algorithm in the draft is expected to be modified in a future draft version.</t>
        </li>
      </ul>
    </section>
    <section anchor="iana">
      <name>IANA Considerations</name>
      <t>This document does not require any IANA actions.</t>
    </section>
    <section anchor="security-considerations">
      <name>Security Considerations</name>
      <t>The feedback can be vulnerable to attacks similar to those that can affect
TCP. It is therefore RECOMMENDED that the RTCP feedback is at least integrity
protected. Furthermore, as SCReAM/SCReAMv2 is self-clocked, a malicious
middlebox can drop RTCP feedback packets and thus cause the self-clocking to
stall. However, this attack is mitigated by the minimum send rate maintained by
SCReAM/SCReAMv2 when no feedback is received.</t>
    </section>
  </middle>
  <back>
    <references anchor="sec-combined-references">
      <name>References</name>
      <references anchor="sec-normative-references">
        <name>Normative References</name>
        <reference anchor="RFC3168" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3168" xml:base="https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.3168.xml">
          <front>
            <title>The Addition of Explicit Congestion Notification (ECN) to IP</title>
            <author fullname="K. Ramakrishnan" initials="K." surname="Ramakrishnan"/>
            <author fullname="S. Floyd" initials="S." surname="Floyd"/>
            <author fullname="D. Black" initials="D." surname="Black"/>
            <date month="September" year="2001"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This memo specifies the incorporation of ECN (Explicit Congestion Notification) to TCP and IP, including ECN's use of two bits in the IP header. [STANDARDS-TRACK]</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="3168"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC3168"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC3550" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3550" xml:base="https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.3550.xml">
          <front>
            <title>RTP: A Transport Protocol for Real-Time Applications</title>
            <author fullname="H. Schulzrinne" initials="H." surname="Schulzrinne"/>
            <author fullname="S. Casner" initials="S." surname="Casner"/>
            <author fullname="R. Frederick" initials="R." surname="Frederick"/>
            <author fullname="V. Jacobson" initials="V." surname="Jacobson"/>
            <date month="July" year="2003"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This memorandum describes RTP, the real-time transport protocol. RTP provides end-to-end network transport functions suitable for applications transmitting real-time data, such as audio, video or simulation data, over multicast or unicast network services. RTP does not address resource reservation and does not guarantee quality-of- service for real-time services. The data transport is augmented by a control protocol (RTCP) to allow monitoring of the data delivery in a manner scalable to large multicast networks, and to provide minimal control and identification functionality. RTP and RTCP are designed to be independent of the underlying transport and network layers. The protocol supports the use of RTP-level translators and mixers. Most of the text in this memorandum is identical to RFC 1889 which it obsoletes. There are no changes in the packet formats on the wire, only changes to the rules and algorithms governing how the protocol is used. The biggest change is an enhancement to the scalable timer algorithm for calculating when to send RTCP packets in order to minimize transmission in excess of the intended rate when many participants join a session simultaneously. [STANDARDS-TRACK]</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="STD" value="64"/>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="3550"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC3550"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC4585" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4585" xml:base="https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.4585.xml">
          <front>
            <title>Extended RTP Profile for Real-time Transport Control Protocol (RTCP)-Based Feedback (RTP/AVPF)</title>
            <author fullname="J. Ott" initials="J." surname="Ott"/>
            <author fullname="S. Wenger" initials="S." surname="Wenger"/>
            <author fullname="N. Sato" initials="N." surname="Sato"/>
            <author fullname="C. Burmeister" initials="C." surname="Burmeister"/>
            <author fullname="J. Rey" initials="J." surname="Rey"/>
            <date month="July" year="2006"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>Real-time media streams that use RTP are, to some degree, resilient against packet losses. Receivers may use the base mechanisms of the Real-time Transport Control Protocol (RTCP) to report packet reception statistics and thus allow a sender to adapt its transmission behavior in the mid-term. This is the sole means for feedback and feedback-based error repair (besides a few codec-specific mechanisms). This document defines an extension to the Audio-visual Profile (AVP) that enables receivers to provide, statistically, more immediate feedback to the senders and thus allows for short-term adaptation and efficient feedback-based repair mechanisms to be implemented. This early feedback profile (AVPF) maintains the AVP bandwidth constraints for RTCP and preserves scalability to large groups. [STANDARDS-TRACK]</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="4585"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC4585"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC5506" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5506" xml:base="https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.5506.xml">
          <front>
            <title>Support for Reduced-Size Real-Time Transport Control Protocol (RTCP): Opportunities and Consequences</title>
            <author fullname="I. Johansson" initials="I." surname="Johansson"/>
            <author fullname="M. Westerlund" initials="M." surname="Westerlund"/>
            <date month="April" year="2009"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This memo discusses benefits and issues that arise when allowing Real-time Transport Protocol (RTCP) packets to be transmitted with reduced size. The size can be reduced if the rules on how to create compound packets outlined in RFC 3550 are removed or changed. Based on that analysis, this memo defines certain changes to the rules to allow feedback messages to be sent as Reduced-Size RTCP packets under certain conditions when using the RTP/AVPF (Real-time Transport Protocol / Audio-Visual Profile with Feedback) profile (RFC 4585). This document updates RFC 3550, RFC 3711, and RFC 4585. [STANDARDS-TRACK]</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="5506"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC5506"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC6298" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6298" xml:base="https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.6298.xml">
          <front>
            <title>Computing TCP's Retransmission Timer</title>
            <author fullname="V. Paxson" initials="V." surname="Paxson"/>
            <author fullname="M. Allman" initials="M." surname="Allman"/>
            <author fullname="J. Chu" initials="J." surname="Chu"/>
            <author fullname="M. Sargent" initials="M." surname="Sargent"/>
            <date month="June" year="2011"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document defines the standard algorithm that Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) senders are required to use to compute and manage their retransmission timer. It expands on the discussion in Section 4.2.3.1 of RFC 1122 and upgrades the requirement of supporting the algorithm from a SHOULD to a MUST. This document obsoletes RFC 2988. [STANDARDS-TRACK]</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="6298"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC6298"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC6817" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6817" xml:base="https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.6817.xml">
          <front>
            <title>Low Extra Delay Background Transport (LEDBAT)</title>
            <author fullname="S. Shalunov" initials="S." surname="Shalunov"/>
            <author fullname="G. Hazel" initials="G." surname="Hazel"/>
            <author fullname="J. Iyengar" initials="J." surname="Iyengar"/>
            <author fullname="M. Kuehlewind" initials="M." surname="Kuehlewind"/>
            <date month="December" year="2012"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>Low Extra Delay Background Transport (LEDBAT) is an experimental delay-based congestion control algorithm that seeks to utilize the available bandwidth on an end-to-end path while limiting the consequent increase in queueing delay on that path. LEDBAT uses changes in one-way delay measurements to limit congestion that the flow itself induces in the network. LEDBAT is designed for use by background bulk-transfer applications to be no more aggressive than standard TCP congestion control (as specified in RFC 5681) and to yield in the presence of competing flows, thus limiting interference with the network performance of competing flows. This document defines an Experimental Protocol for the Internet community.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="6817"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC6817"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC8174" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8174" xml:base="https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.8174.xml">
          <front>
            <title>Ambiguity of Uppercase vs Lowercase in RFC 2119 Key Words</title>
            <author fullname="B. Leiba" initials="B." surname="Leiba"/>
            <date month="May" year="2017"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>RFC 2119 specifies common key words that may be used in protocol specifications. This document aims to reduce the ambiguity by clarifying that only UPPERCASE usage of the key words have the defined special meanings.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="BCP" value="14"/>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="8174"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC8174"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC9330" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc9330" xml:base="https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.9330.xml">
          <front>
            <title>Low Latency, Low Loss, and Scalable Throughput (L4S) Internet Service: Architecture</title>
            <author fullname="B. Briscoe" initials="B." role="editor" surname="Briscoe"/>
            <author fullname="K. De Schepper" initials="K." surname="De Schepper"/>
            <author fullname="M. Bagnulo" initials="M." surname="Bagnulo"/>
            <author fullname="G. White" initials="G." surname="White"/>
            <date month="January" year="2023"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document describes the L4S architecture, which enables Internet applications to achieve low queuing latency, low congestion loss, and scalable throughput control. L4S is based on the insight that the root cause of queuing delay is in the capacity-seeking congestion controllers of senders, not in the queue itself. With the L4S architecture, all Internet applications could (but do not have to) transition away from congestion control algorithms that cause substantial queuing delay and instead adopt a new class of congestion controls that can seek capacity with very little queuing. These are aided by a modified form of Explicit Congestion Notification (ECN) from the network. With this new architecture, applications can have both low latency and high throughput.</t>
              <t>The architecture primarily concerns incremental deployment. It defines mechanisms that allow the new class of L4S congestion controls to coexist with 'Classic' congestion controls in a shared network. The aim is for L4S latency and throughput to be usually much better (and rarely worse) while typically not impacting Classic performance.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="9330"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC9330"/>
        </reference>
      </references>
      <references anchor="sec-informative-references">
        <name>Informative References</name>
        <reference anchor="RFC2119" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2119" xml:base="https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.2119.xml">
          <front>
            <title>Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels</title>
            <author fullname="S. Bradner" initials="S." surname="Bradner"/>
            <date month="March" year="1997"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>In many standards track documents several words are used to signify the requirements in the specification. These words are often capitalized. This document defines these words as they should be interpreted in IETF documents. This document specifies an Internet Best Current Practices for the Internet Community, and requests discussion and suggestions for improvements.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="BCP" value="14"/>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="2119"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC2119"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC6365" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6365" xml:base="https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.6365.xml">
          <front>
            <title>Terminology Used in Internationalization in the IETF</title>
            <author fullname="P. Hoffman" initials="P." surname="Hoffman"/>
            <author fullname="J. Klensin" initials="J." surname="Klensin"/>
            <date month="September" year="2011"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document provides a list of terms used in the IETF when discussing internationalization. The purpose is to help frame discussions of internationalization in the various areas of the IETF and to help introduce the main concepts to IETF participants. This memo documents an Internet Best Current Practice.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="BCP" value="166"/>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="6365"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC6365"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC7478" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7478" xml:base="https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.7478.xml">
          <front>
            <title>Web Real-Time Communication Use Cases and Requirements</title>
            <author fullname="C. Holmberg" initials="C." surname="Holmberg"/>
            <author fullname="S. Hakansson" initials="S." surname="Hakansson"/>
            <author fullname="G. Eriksson" initials="G." surname="Eriksson"/>
            <date month="March" year="2015"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document describes web-based real-time communication use cases. Requirements on the browser functionality are derived from the use cases.</t>
              <t>This document was developed in an initial phase of the work with rather minor updates at later stages. It has not really served as a tool in deciding features or scope for the WG's efforts so far. It is being published to record the early conclusions of the WG. It will not be used as a set of rigid guidelines that specifications and implementations will be held to in the future.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="7478"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC7478"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC8298" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8298" xml:base="https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.8298.xml">
          <front>
            <title>Self-Clocked Rate Adaptation for Multimedia</title>
            <author fullname="I. Johansson" initials="I." surname="Johansson"/>
            <author fullname="Z. Sarker" initials="Z." surname="Sarker"/>
            <date month="December" year="2017"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This memo describes a rate adaptation algorithm for conversational media services such as interactive video. The solution conforms to the packet conservation principle and uses a hybrid loss-and-delay- based congestion control algorithm. The algorithm is evaluated over both simulated Internet bottleneck scenarios as well as in a Long Term Evolution (LTE) system simulator and is shown to achieve both low latency and high video throughput in these scenarios.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="8298"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC8298"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC8511" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8511" xml:base="https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.8511.xml">
          <front>
            <title>TCP Alternative Backoff with ECN (ABE)</title>
            <author fullname="N. Khademi" initials="N." surname="Khademi"/>
            <author fullname="M. Welzl" initials="M." surname="Welzl"/>
            <author fullname="G. Armitage" initials="G." surname="Armitage"/>
            <author fullname="G. Fairhurst" initials="G." surname="Fairhurst"/>
            <date month="December" year="2018"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>Active Queue Management (AQM) mechanisms allow for burst tolerance while enforcing short queues to minimise the time that packets spend enqueued at a bottleneck. This can cause noticeable performance degradation for TCP connections traversing such a bottleneck, especially if there are only a few flows or their bandwidth-delay product (BDP) is large. The reception of a Congestion Experienced (CE) Explicit Congestion Notification (ECN) mark indicates that an AQM mechanism is used at the bottleneck, and the bottleneck network queue is therefore likely to be short. Feedback of this signal allows the TCP sender-side ECN reaction in congestion avoidance to reduce the Congestion Window (cwnd) by a smaller amount than the congestion control algorithm's reaction to inferred packet loss. Therefore, this specification defines an experimental change to the TCP reaction specified in RFC 3168, as permitted by RFC 8311.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="8511"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC8511"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC8699" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8699" xml:base="https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.8699.xml">
          <front>
            <title>Coupled Congestion Control for RTP Media</title>
            <author fullname="S. Islam" initials="S." surname="Islam"/>
            <author fullname="M. Welzl" initials="M." surname="Welzl"/>
            <author fullname="S. Gjessing" initials="S." surname="Gjessing"/>
            <date month="January" year="2020"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>When multiple congestion-controlled Real-time Transport Protocol (RTP) sessions traverse the same network bottleneck, combining their controls can improve the total on-the-wire behavior in terms of delay, loss, and fairness. This document describes such a method for flows that have the same sender, in a way that is as flexible and simple as possible while minimizing the number of changes needed to existing RTP applications. This document also specifies how to apply the method for the Network-Assisted Dynamic Adaptation (NADA) congestion control algorithm and provides suggestions on how to apply it to other congestion control algorithms.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="8699"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC8699"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC8869" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8869" xml:base="https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.8869.xml">
          <front>
            <title>Evaluation Test Cases for Interactive Real-Time Media over Wireless Networks</title>
            <author fullname="Z. Sarker" initials="Z." surname="Sarker"/>
            <author fullname="X. Zhu" initials="X." surname="Zhu"/>
            <author fullname="J. Fu" initials="J." surname="Fu"/>
            <date month="January" year="2021"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>The Real-time Transport Protocol (RTP) is a common transport choice for interactive multimedia communication applications. The performance of these applications typically depends on a well-functioning congestion control algorithm. To ensure a seamless and robust user experience, a well-designed RTP-based congestion control algorithm should work well across all access network types. This document describes test cases for evaluating performances of candidate congestion control algorithms over cellular and Wi-Fi networks.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="8869"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC8869"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC8985" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8985" xml:base="https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.8985.xml">
          <front>
            <title>The RACK-TLP Loss Detection Algorithm for TCP</title>
            <author fullname="Y. Cheng" initials="Y." surname="Cheng"/>
            <author fullname="N. Cardwell" initials="N." surname="Cardwell"/>
            <author fullname="N. Dukkipati" initials="N." surname="Dukkipati"/>
            <author fullname="P. Jha" initials="P." surname="Jha"/>
            <date month="February" year="2021"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document presents the RACK-TLP loss detection algorithm for TCP. RACK-TLP uses per-segment transmit timestamps and selective acknowledgments (SACKs) and has two parts. Recent Acknowledgment (RACK) starts fast recovery quickly using time-based inferences derived from acknowledgment (ACK) feedback, and Tail Loss Probe (TLP) leverages RACK and sends a probe packet to trigger ACK feedback to avoid retransmission timeout (RTO) events. Compared to the widely used duplicate acknowledgment (DupAck) threshold approach, RACK-TLP detects losses more efficiently when there are application-limited flights of data, lost retransmissions, or data packet reordering events. It is intended to be an alternative to the DupAck threshold approach.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="8985"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC8985"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC8257" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8257" xml:base="https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.8257.xml">
          <front>
            <title>Data Center TCP (DCTCP): TCP Congestion Control for Data Centers</title>
            <author fullname="S. Bensley" initials="S." surname="Bensley"/>
            <author fullname="D. Thaler" initials="D." surname="Thaler"/>
            <author fullname="P. Balasubramanian" initials="P." surname="Balasubramanian"/>
            <author fullname="L. Eggert" initials="L." surname="Eggert"/>
            <author fullname="G. Judd" initials="G." surname="Judd"/>
            <date month="October" year="2017"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This Informational RFC describes Data Center TCP (DCTCP): a TCP congestion control scheme for data-center traffic. DCTCP extends the Explicit Congestion Notification (ECN) processing to estimate the fraction of bytes that encounter congestion rather than simply detecting that some congestion has occurred. DCTCP then scales the TCP congestion window based on this estimate. This method achieves high-burst tolerance, low latency, and high throughput with shallow- buffered switches. This memo also discusses deployment issues related to the coexistence of DCTCP and conventional TCP, discusses the lack of a negotiating mechanism between sender and receiver, and presents some possible mitigations. This memo documents DCTCP as currently implemented by several major operating systems. DCTCP, as described in this specification, is applicable to deployments in controlled environments like data centers, but it must not be deployed over the public Internet without additional measures.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="8257"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC8257"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC8888" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8888" xml:base="https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.8888.xml">
          <front>
            <title>RTP Control Protocol (RTCP) Feedback for Congestion Control</title>
            <author fullname="Z. Sarker" initials="Z." surname="Sarker"/>
            <author fullname="C. Perkins" initials="C." surname="Perkins"/>
            <author fullname="V. Singh" initials="V." surname="Singh"/>
            <author fullname="M. Ramalho" initials="M." surname="Ramalho"/>
            <date month="January" year="2021"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>An effective RTP congestion control algorithm requires more fine-grained feedback on packet loss, timing, and Explicit Congestion Notification (ECN) marks than is provided by the standard RTP Control Protocol (RTCP) Sender Report (SR) and Receiver Report (RR) packets. This document describes an RTCP feedback message intended to enable congestion control for interactive real-time traffic using RTP. The feedback message is designed for use with a sender-based congestion control algorithm, in which the receiver of an RTP flow sends back to the sender RTCP feedback packets containing the information the sender needs to perform congestion control.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="8888"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC8888"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC9000" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc9000" xml:base="https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.9000.xml">
          <front>
            <title>QUIC: A UDP-Based Multiplexed and Secure Transport</title>
            <author fullname="J. Iyengar" initials="J." role="editor" surname="Iyengar"/>
            <author fullname="M. Thomson" initials="M." role="editor" surname="Thomson"/>
            <date month="May" year="2021"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document defines the core of the QUIC transport protocol. QUIC provides applications with flow-controlled streams for structured communication, low-latency connection establishment, and network path migration. QUIC includes security measures that ensure confidentiality, integrity, and availability in a range of deployment circumstances. Accompanying documents describe the integration of TLS for key negotiation, loss detection, and an exemplary congestion control algorithm.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="9000"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC9000"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC9332" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc9332" xml:base="https://bib.ietf.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.9332.xml">
          <front>
            <title>Dual-Queue Coupled Active Queue Management (AQM) for Low Latency, Low Loss, and Scalable Throughput (L4S)</title>
            <author fullname="K. De Schepper" initials="K." surname="De Schepper"/>
            <author fullname="B. Briscoe" initials="B." role="editor" surname="Briscoe"/>
            <author fullname="G. White" initials="G." surname="White"/>
            <date month="January" year="2023"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This specification defines a framework for coupling the Active Queue Management (AQM) algorithms in two queues intended for flows with different responses to congestion. This provides a way for the Internet to transition from the scaling problems of standard TCP-Reno-friendly ('Classic') congestion controls to the family of 'Scalable' congestion controls. These are designed for consistently very low queuing latency, very low congestion loss, and scaling of per-flow throughput by using Explicit Congestion Notification (ECN) in a modified way. Until the Coupled Dual Queue (DualQ), these Scalable L4S congestion controls could only be deployed where a clean-slate environment could be arranged, such as in private data centres.</t>
              <t>This specification first explains how a Coupled DualQ works. It then gives the normative requirements that are necessary for it to work well. All this is independent of which two AQMs are used, but pseudocode examples of specific AQMs are given in appendices.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="9332"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC9332"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="Packet-conservation">
          <front>
            <title>Congestion Avoidance and Control</title>
            <author initials="V." surname="Jacobson" fullname="Van Jacobson">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date year="1988" month="August"/>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.1145/52325.52356"/>
          <refcontent>ACM SIGCOMM Computer Communication Review</refcontent>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="LEDBAT-delay-impact" target="http://home.ifi.uio.no/michawe/research/publications/ledbat-impact-letters.pdf">
          <front>
            <title>Assessing LEDBAT's Delay Impact</title>
            <author initials="D." surname="Ros" fullname="David Ros">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author initials="M." surname="Welzl" fullname="Michael Welzl">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date year="2013" month="May"/>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.1109/LCOMM.2013.040213.130137"/>
          <refcontent>IEEE Communications Letters, Vol. 17, No. 5,</refcontent>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="QoS-3GPP" target="http://www.3gpp.org/ftp/specs/archive/23_series/23.203/">
          <front>
            <title>Policy and charging control architecture</title>
            <author>
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date year="2017" month="July"/>
          </front>
          <refcontent>3GPP TS 23.203</refcontent>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="SCReAM-CPP-implementation" target="https://github.com/EricssonResearch/scream">
          <front>
            <title>SCReAM - Mobile optimised congestion control algorithm</title>
            <author initials="" surname="Ericsson Research">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date>n.d.</date>
          </front>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="SCReAM-evaluation-L4S" target="https://github.com/EricssonResearch/scream/blob/master/L4S-Results.pdf?raw=true">
          <front>
            <title>SCReAM - evaluations with L4S</title>
            <author initials="" surname="Ericsson Research">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date>n.d.</date>
          </front>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="SCReAM-Chrome-Canary" target="https://www.google.com/chrome/canary/">
          <front>
            <title>SCReAM - Chrome Canary nightly builds</title>
            <author>
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date>n.d.</date>
          </front>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="TFWC" target="http://www-dept.cs.ucl.ac.uk/staff/M.Handley/papers/tfwc-conext.pdf">
          <front>
            <title>Fairer TCP-Friendly Congestion Control Protocol for Multimedia Streaming Applications</title>
            <author initials="S." surname="Choi" fullname="Soo-Hyun Choi">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <author initials="M." surname="Handley" fullname="Mark Handley">
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date year="2007" month="December"/>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.1145/1364654.1364717"/>
        </reference>
      </references>
    </references>
    <?line 1376?>

<section anchor="acknowledgements">
      <name>Acknowledgments</name>
      <t>Zaheduzzaman Sarker was a co-author of RFC 8298 the previous version
of scream which this document was based on. We would like to thank the
following people for their comments, questions, and support during the
work that led to this memo: Per Kjellander, Björn Terelius.</t>
    </section>
    <section anchor="changes-in-the-draft-versions">
      <name>Changes in the draft versions</name>
      <section anchor="changes-in-draft-version-02">
        <name>Changes in draft version -02</name>
        <t>Algorithm changes in draft version -02 were:</t>
        <ul spacing="normal">
          <li>
            <t>Slow down reference window growth when close to the last known maximum value is disabled
and when L4S is active. This makes SCReAM adhere more closely to two marked packets
per RTT at steady state.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Reference window decrease and increase reduced by up to 50% when ref_wnd/mss
is small. This reduces rate oscillations.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Target bitrate down adjustment when ref_wnd/mss is small is modified to
avoid that the data unit queue grows excessively in certain low
bitrate cases.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Timing set to multiples of RTTs instead of seconds.</t>
          </li>
        </ul>
      </section>
      <section anchor="changes-in-draft-version-03">
        <name>Changes in Draft version -03</name>
        <t>Draft version -03 is a major editorial pass including removal of some
outdated or background information and reorganisation of several sections:</t>
        <ul spacing="normal">
          <li>
            <t>Much shorter abstract and introduction focusing on what's new in SCReAMv2.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Removal of Section 1.1. on "Wireless (LTE and 5G) Access Properties" and
Section 1.2. on "Why is it a self-clocked algorithm?"</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>New Section on "Updates compared to SCReAM (version 1)" in introduction
based on old Section on "Algorithm Changes".</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Section <xref target="ledbat-tfwc"/> updated and shortened.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Overview Section <xref target="scream-overview"/> revised; now also including the overview
figure and the basic algorithms.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Old section on "Constants and variables" removed; instead all variables are now listed
in the respective sections that explain the code.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>New Section on "Sender Side State" explaining some basic variables.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Pseudo code and the corresponding explanations in Section <xref target="network-cc-2"/> on
"Network Congestion Control" moved into the respective subsections in
section <xref target="reaction-delay-loss-ce"/> on "Congestion Detection".</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Separate section on "Sender Transmission Control" introduced.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Section "Lost Data Unit Detection" merged into Section <xref target="reaction-loss"/>.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Section "Stream Prioritization" removed.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Section on "Competing Flows Compensation" moved into Section <xref target="reaction-delay-loss-ce"/>
on "Congestion Detection".</t>
          </li>
        </ul>
      </section>
      <section anchor="changes-in-draft-version-04">
        <name>Changes in Draft version -04</name>
        <ul spacing="normal">
          <li>
            <t>Restructuring of code.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Reduction of target rate when bytes_in_flight is higher than ref_wnd is done also when l4s_active, replaced with requirement that queue_delay is large.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Additional constraint for increase of ref_wnd added.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Discussion on when it is beneficial to reduce REF_WND_OVERHEAD added.</t>
          </li>
        </ul>
      </section>
      <section anchor="changes-in-draft-version-05">
        <name>Changes in Draft version -05</name>
        <t>Draft version -05 contains some clarifications based on a review by Per Kjellander
 and Björn Terelius plus some code modifications and text.</t>
        <ul spacing="normal">
          <li>
            <t>l4s_active state removed as delay based congestion control is always active.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>ref_wnd reduction when long time since congested limited to only limit ref_wnd to last max_bytes_in_flight_prev.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Calculation of l4s_alpha is modified to use a fast attack slow decay EWMA filter.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Congestion backoff downscaling also for virtual L4S marking when ref_wnd is very small.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Congestion backoff is reduced if RTT is higher than VIRTUAL_RTT.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>ref_wnd increase is reduced if L4S is likely non-active and queue delay increases.</t>
          </li>
        </ul>
      </section>
      <section anchor="changes-in-draft-version-06">
        <name>Changes in Draft version -06</name>
        <ul spacing="normal">
          <li>
            <t>Correction of typos.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Correction of send_wnd calculation.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Additional variable qdelay_dev_norm that indicated how much the queue delay varies.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Additional ref_wnd_overhead varable to limit how much bytes in flight can exceed the reference window in congested situations.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>REF_WND_OVERHEAD replaced by REF_WND_OVERHEAD_MIN and REF_WND_OVERHEAD_MAX.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Reference window increase is restricted additionally when queue delay varies a lot.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>rel_framesize_high calculation is removed.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Reduction of target bitrate when bytes in flight is high is removed because it is not helpful when media coders are sluggish.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Calculation of l4s_alpha_v_t simplified, l4s_alpha_lim_t removed.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Bug in condition for calculation of l4s_alpha_v_t fixed.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>bytes_in_flight_ratio removed.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Moved Changes per draft version to this appendix.</t>
          </li>
        </ul>
      </section>
      <section anchor="changes-in-draft-version-07">
        <name>Changes in Draft version -07</name>
        <ul spacing="normal">
          <li>
            <t>Additional restriction of ref_wnd increase and ref_wnd_overhead when ref_wnd/MSS is very low.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Additional compensation for increased media queue delay and frame size variation when calculating target bitrate.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Changes in text on feedback.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Section on handling of systematic error in media encoder output bitrate removed as this is adressed in section Media Rate Control.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Added section Clock drift issues and remedies.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Removed '*= max(0.5,1.0-ref_wnd_ratio)' as this function is replaced by qdelay_dev_norm related restriction on reference window growth.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Removed extra selective restriction on ref_wnd growth when L4S is not enabled as this function is replaced by qdelay_dev_norm related restriction on reference window growth.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Additional wording on the improvement of the optional qdelay_dev_norm related restriction based on extimation of the non-congestion related delay jitter.</t>
          </li>
        </ul>
      </section>
    </section>
  </back>
  <!-- ##markdown-source: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-->

</rfc>
