Network Working Group                                         I. Widjaja
Request For Comments: 2682                Fujitsu Network Communications
Category: Informational                                       A. Elwalid
                                         Bell Labs, Lucent Technologies
                                                         September 1999


           Performance Issues in VC-Merge Capable ATM LSRs

Status of this Memo

  This memo provides information for the Internet community.  It does
  not specify an Internet standard of any kind.  Distribution of this
  memo is unlimited.

Copyright Notice

  Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1999).  All Rights Reserved.

Abstract

  VC merging allows many routes to be mapped to the same VC label,
  thereby providing a scalable mapping method that can support
  thousands of edge routers. VC merging requires reassembly buffers so
  that cells belonging to different packets intended for the same
  destination do not interleave with each other.  This document
  investigates the impact of VC merging on the additional buffer
  required for the reassembly buffers and other buffers.  The main
  result indicates that VC merging incurs a minimal overhead compared
  to non-VC merging in terms of additional buffering. Moreover, the
  overhead decreases as utilization increases, or as the traffic
  becomes more bursty.

1.0 Introduction

  Recently some radical proposals to overhaul the legacy router
  architectures have been presented by several organizations, notably
  the Ipsilon's IP switching [1], Cisco's Tag switching [2], Toshiba's
  CSR [3], IBM's ARIS [4], and IETF's MPLS [5].  Although the details
  of their implementations vary, there is one fundamental concept that
  is shared by all these proposals: map the route information to short
  fixed-length labels so that next-hop routers can be determined by
  direct indexing.

  Although any layer 2 switching mechanism can in principle be applied,
  the use of ATM switches in the backbone network is believed to be a
  very attractive solution since ATM hardware switches have been
  extensively studied and are widely available in many different



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  architectures.  In this document, we will assume that layer 2
  switching uses ATM technology. In this case, each IP packet may be
  segmented to multiple 53-byte cells before being switched.
  Traditionally, AAL 5 has been used as the encapsulation method in
  data communications since it is simple, efficient, and has a powerful
  error detection mechanism.  For the ATM switch to forward incoming
  cells to the correct outputs, the IP route information needs to be
  mapped to ATM labels which are kept in the VPI or/and VCI fields.
  The relevant route information that is stored semi-permanently in the
  IP routing table contains the tuple (destination, next-hop router).
  The route information changes when the network state changes and this
  typically occurs slowly, except during transient cases.  The word
  "destination" typically refers to the destination network (or CIDR
  prefix), but can be readily generalized to (destination network,
  QoS), (destination host, QoS), or many other granularities. In this
  document, the destination can mean any of the above or other possible
  granularities.

  Several methods of mapping the route information to ATM labels exist.
  In the simplest form, each source-destination pair is mapped to a
  unique VC value at a switch. This method, called the non-VC merging
  case, allows the receiver to easily reassemble cells into respective
  packets since the VC values can be used to distinguish the senders.
  However, if there are n sources and destinations, each switch is
  potentially required to manage O(n^2) VC labels for full-meshed
  connectivity.  For example, if there are 1,000 sources/destinations,
  then the size of the VC routing table is on the order of 1,000,000
  entries.  Clearly, this method is not scalable to large networks.  In
  the second method called  VP merging, the VP labels of cells that are
  intended for the same destination would be translated to the same
  outgoing VP value, thereby reducing VP consumption downstream.  For
  each VP, the VC value is used to identify the sender so that the
  receiver can reconstruct packets even though cells from different
  packets are allowed to interleave.  Each switch is now required to
  manage O(n) VP labels - a considerable saving from O(n^2).  Although
  the number of label entries is considerably reduced, VP merging  is
  limited to only 4,096 entries at the network-to-network interface.
  Moreover, VP merging requires coordination of the VC values for a
  given VP, which introduces more complexity.  A third method, called
  VC merging, maps incoming VC labels for the same destination to the
  same outgoing VC label. This method is scalable and does not have the
  space constraint problem as in VP merging. With VC merging, cells for
  the same destination is indistinguishable at the output of a switch.
  Therefore, cells belonging to different packets for the same
  destination cannot interleave with each other, or else the receiver
  will not be able to reassemble the packets.  With VC merging, the
  boundary between two adjacent packets are identified by the "End-of-
  Packet" (EOP) marker used by AAL 5.



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  It is worthy to mention that cell interleaving may be allowed if we
  use the AAL 3/4 Message Identifier (MID) field to identify the sender
  uniquely. However, this method has some serious drawbacks as:  1) the
  MID size may not be sufficient to identify all senders, 2) the
  encapsulation method is not efficient, 3) the CRC capability is not
  as powerful as in AAL 5, and 4) AAL 3/4 is not as widely supported as
  AAL 5 in data communications.

  Before VC merging with no cell interleaving can be qualified as the
  most promising approach, two main issues need to be addressed.
  First, the feasibility of an ATM switch that is capable of merging
  VCs needs to be investigated. Second, there is widespread concern
  that the additional amount of buffering required to implement VC
  merging is excessive and thus making the VC-merging method
  impractical.  Through analysis and simulation, we will dispel these
  concerns in this document by showing that the additional buffer
  requirement for VC merging is minimal for most practical purposes.
  Other performance related issues such as additional delay due to VC
  merging will also be discussed.

2.0 A VC-Merge Capable MPLS Switch Architecture

  In principle, the reassembly buffers can be placed at the input or
  output side of a switch. If they are located at the input, then the
  switch fabric has to transfer all cells belonging to a given packet
  in an atomic manner since cells are not allowed to interleave.  This
  requires the fabric to perform frame switching which is not flexible
  nor desirable when multiple QoSs need to be supported.  On the other
  hand, if the reassembly buffers are located at the output, the switch
  fabric can forward each cell independently as in normal ATM
  switching.  Placing the reassembly buffers at the output makes an
  output-buffered ATM switch a natural choice.

  We consider a generic output-buffered VC-merge capable MPLS switch
  with VCI translation performed at the output. Other possible
  architectures may also be adopted.  The switch consists of a non-
  blocking cell switch fabric and multiple output modules (OMs), each
  is associated with an output port.  Each arriving ATM cell is
  appended with two fields containing an output port number and an
  input port number.  Based on the output port number, the switch
  fabric forwards each cell to the correct output port, just as in
  normal ATM switches.  If VC merging is not implemented, then the OM
  consists of an output buffer.  If VC merging is implemented, the OM
  contains a number of reassembly buffers (RBs), followed by a merging
  unit, and an output buffer. Each RB typically corresponds to an
  incoming VC value. It is important to note that each buffer is a
  logical buffer, and it is envisioned that there is a common pool of
  memory for the reassembly buffers and the output buffer.



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  The purpose of the RB is to ensure that cells for a given packet do
  not interleave with other cells that are merged to the same VC.  This
  mechanism (called store-and-forward at the packet level) can be
  accomplished by storing each incoming cell for a given packet at the
  RB until the last cell of the packet arrives.  When the last cell
  arrives, all cells in the packet are transferred in an atomic manner
  to the output buffer for transmission to the next hop. It is worth
  pointing out that performing a cut-through mode at the RB is not
  recommended since it would result in wastage of bandwidth if the
  subsequent cells are delayed.  During the transfer of a packet to the
  output buffer, the incoming VCI is translated to the outgoing VCI by
  the merging unit.  To save VC translation table space, different
  incoming VCIs are merged to the same outgoing VCI during the
  translation process if the cells are intended for the same
  destination.  If all traffic is best-effort, full-merging where all
  incoming VCs destined for the same destination network are mapped to
  the same outgoing VC, can be implemented.  However, if the traffic is
  composed of multiple classes, it is desirable to implement partial
  merging, where incoming VCs destined for the same (destination
  network, QoS) are mapped to the same outgoing VC.

  Regardless of whether full merging or partial merging is implemented,
  the output buffer may consist of a single FIFO buffer or multiple
  buffers each corresponding to a destination network or (destination
  network, QoS).  If a single output buffer is used, then the switch
  essentially tries to emulate frame switching.  If multiple output
  buffers are used, VC merging is different from frame switching since
  cells of a given packet are not bound to be transmitted back-to-back.
  In fact, fair queueing can be implemented so that cells from their
  respective output buffers are served according to some QoS
  requirements. Note that cell-by-cell scheduling can be implemented
  with VC merging, whereas only packet-by-packet scheduling can be
  implemented with frame switching.  In summary, VC merging is more
  flexible than frame switching and supports better QoS control.

3.0 Performance Investigation of VC Merging

  This section compares the VC-merging switch and the non-VC merging
  switch. The non-VC merging switch is analogous to the traditional
  output-buffered ATM switch, whereby cells of any packets are allowed
  to interleave.  Since each cell is a distinct unit of information,
  the non-VC merging switch is a work-conserving system at the cell
  level.  On the other hand, the VC-merging switch is non-work
  conserving so its performance is always lower than that of the non-VC
  merging switch.  The main objective here is to study the effect of VC
  merging on performance implications of MPLS switches such as
  additional delay, additional buffer, etc., subject to different
  traffic conditions.



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  In the simulation, the arrival process to each reassembly buffer is
  an independent ON-OFF process. Cells within an ON period form a
  single packet. During an OFF periof, the slots are idle.  Note that
  the ON-OFF process is a general process that can model any traffic
  process.

3.1 Effect of Utilization on Additional Buffer Requirement

  We first investigate the effect of switch utilization on the
  additional buffer requirement for a given overflow probability.  To
  carry the comparison, we analyze the VC-merging and non-VC merging
  case when the average packet size is equal to 10 cells, using
  geometrically distributed packet sizes and packet interarrival times,
  with cells of a packet arriving contiguously (later, we consider
  other distributions).  The results show, as expected, the VC-merging
  switch requires more buffers than the non-VC merging switch. When the
  utilization is low, there may be relatively many incomplete packets
  in the reassembly buffers at any given time, thus wasting storage
  resource.  For example, when the utilization is 0.3, VC merging
  requires an additional storage of about 45 cells to achieve the same
  overflow probability.  However, as the utilization increases to 0.9,
  the additional storage to achieve the same overflow probability drops
  to about 30 cells.  The reason is that when traffic intensity
  increases, the VC-merging system becomes more work-conserving.

  It is important to note that ATM switches must be dimensioned at high
  utilization value (in the range of 0.8-0.9) to withstand harsh
  traffic conditions.  At the utilization of 0.9, a VC-merge ATM switch
  requires a buffer of size 976 cells to provide an overflow
  probability of 10^{-5}, whereas an non-VC merge ATM switch requires a
  buffer of size 946.  These numbers translate the additional buffer
  requirement for VC merging to about 3% - hardly an additional
  buffering cost.

3.2 Effect of Packet Size on Additional Buffer Requirement

  We now vary the average packet size to see the impact on the buffer
  requirement.  We fix the utilization to 0.5 and use two different
  average packet sizes; that is, B=10 and B=30. To achieve the same
  overflow probability, VC merging requires an additional buffer of
  about 40 cells (or 4 packets) compared to non-VC merging when B=10.
  When B=30, the additional buffer requirement is about 90 cells (or 3
  packets).  As expected, the additional buffer requirement in terms of
  cells increases as the packet size increases. However, the additional
  buffer requirement is roughly constant in terms of packets.






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3.3 Additional Buffer Overhead Due to Packet Reassembly

  There may be some concern that VC merging may require too much
  buffering when the number of reassembly buffers increases, which
  would happen if the switch size is increased or if cells for packets
  going to different destinations are allowed to interleave.  We will
  show that the concern is unfounded since buffer sharing becomes more
  efficient as the number of reassembly buffers increases.

  To demonstrate our argument, we consider the overflow probability for
  VC merging for several values of reassembly buffers (N); i.e., N=4,
  8, 16, 32, 64, and 128.  The utilization is fixed to 0.8 for each
  case, and the average packet size is chosen to be 10.  For a given
  overflow probability, the increase in buffer requirement becomes less
  pronounced as N increases.  Beyond a certain value (N=32), the
  increase in buffer requirement becomes insignificant.  The reason is
  that as N increases, the traffic gets thinned and eventually
  approaches a limiting process.

3.4 Effect of Interarrival time Distribution on Additional Buffer

  We now turn our attention to different traffic processes.  First, we
  use the same ON period distribution and change the OFF period
  distribution from geometric to hypergeometric which has a larger
  Square Coefficient of Variation (SCV), defined to be the ratio of the
  variance to the square of the mean.  Here we fix the utilization at
  0.5.  As expected, the switch performance degrades as the SCV
  increases in both the VC-merging and non-VC merging cases.  To
  achieve a buffer overflow probability of 10^{-4}, the additional
  buffer required is about 40 cells when SCV=1, 26 cells when SCV=1.5,
  and 24 cells when SCV=2.6.  The result shows that VC merging becomes
  more work-conserving as SCV increases.  In summary, as the
  interarrival time between packets becomes more bursty, the additional
  buffer requirement for VC merging diminishes.

3.5 Effect of Internet Packets on Additional Buffer Requirement

  Up to now, the packet size has been modeled as a geometric
  distribution with a certain parameter.  We modify the packet size
  distribution to a more realistic one for the rest of this document.
  Since the initial deployment of VC-merge capable ATM switches is
  likely to be in the core network, it is more realistic to consider
  the packet size distribution in the Wide Area Network.  To this end,
  we refer to the data given in [6].  The data collected on Feb 10,
  1996, in FIX-West network, is in the form of probability mass
  function versus packet size in bytes.  Data collected at other dates
  closely resemble this one.




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  The distribution appears bi-modal with two big masses at 40 bytes
  (about a third) due to TCP acknowledgment packets, and 552 bytes
  (about 22 percent) due to Maximum Transmission Unit (MTU) limitations
  in many routers. Other prominent packet sizes include 72 bytes (about
  4.1 percent), 576 bytes (about 3.6 percent), 44 bytes (about 3
  percent), 185 bytes (about 2.7 percent), and 1500 bytes (about 1.5
  percent) due to Ethernet MTU. The mean packet size is  257 bytes, and
  the variance is 84,287 bytes^2. Thus, the SCV for the Internet packet
  size is about 1.1.

  To convert the IP packet size in bytes to ATM cells, we assume AAL 5
  using null encapsulation where the additional overhead in AAL 5 is 8
  bytes long [7].  Using the null encapsulation technique, the average
  packet size is about 6.2 ATM cells.

  We examine the buffer overflow probability against the buffer size
  using the Internet packet size distribution. The OFF period is
  assumed to have a geometric distribution.  Again, we find that the
  same behavior as before, except that the buffer requirement drops
  with Internet packets due to smaller average packet size.

3.6 Effect of Correlated Interarrival Times on Additional Buffer
   Requirement

  To model correlated interarrival times, we use the DAR(p) process
  (discrete autoregressive process of order p) [8], which has been used
  to accurately model video traffic (Star Wars movie) in [9].  The
  DAR(p) process is a p-th order (lag-p) discrete-time Markov chain.
  The state of the process at time n depends explicitly on the states
  at times (n-1), ...,  (n-p).

  We examine the overflow probability for the case where the
  interarrival time between packets is geometric and independent, and
  the case where the interarrival time is geometric and correlated to
  the previous one with coefficient of correlation equal to 0.9. The
  empirical distribution of the Internet packet size from the last
  section is used. The utilization is fixed to 0.5 in each case.
  Although, the overflow probability increases as p increases, the
  additional amount of buffering actually decreases for VC merging as
  p, or equivalently the correlation, increases.  One can easily
  conclude that higher-order correlation or long-range dependence,
  which occurs in self-similar traffic, will result in similar
  qualitative performance.








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3.7 Slow Sources

  The discussions up to now have assumed that cells within a packet
  arrive back-to-back. When traffic shaping is implemented, adjacent
  cells within the same packet would typically be spaced by idle slots.
  We call such sources as "slow sources".  Adjacent cells within the
  same packet may also be perturbed and spaced as these cells travel
  downstream due to the merging and splitting of cells at preceding
  nodes.

  Here, we assume that each source transmits at the rate of r_s (0 <
  r_s < 1), in units of link speed, to the ATM switch.  To capture the
  merging and splitting of cells as they travel in the network, we will
  also assume that the cell interarrival time within a packet is ran-
  domly perturbed.  To model this perturbation, we stretch the original
  ON period by 1/r_s, and  flip a Bernoulli coin with parameter r_s
  during the stretched ON period. In other words, a slot would contain
  a cell with probability r_s, and would be idle with probability 1-r_s
  during the ON period. By doing so, the average packet size remains
  the same as r_s is varied.  We simulated slow sources on the VC-merge
  ATM switch using the Internet packet size distribution with r_s=1 and
  r_s=0.2.  The packet interarrival time is assumed to be geometrically
  distributed.  Reducing the source rate in general reduces the
  stresses on the ATM switches since the traffic becomes smoother.
  With VC merging, slow sources also have the effect of increasing the
  reassembly time. At utilization of 0.5, the reassembly time is more
  dominant and causes the slow source (with r_s=0.2) to require more
  buffering than the fast source (with r_s=1).  At utilization of 0.8,
  the smoother traffic is more dominant and causes the slow source
  (with r_s=0.2) to require less buffering than the fast source (with
  r_s=1).  This result again has practical consequences in ATM switch
  design where buffer dimensioning is performed at reasonably high
  utilization. In this situation, slow sources only help.

3.8 Packet Delay

  It is of interest to see the impact of cell reassembly on packet
  delay. Here we consider the delay at one node only; end-to-end delays
  are subject of ongoing work.  We define the delay of a packet as the
  time between the arrival of the first cell of a packet at the switch
  and the departure of the last cell of the same packet.  We study the
  average packet delay as a function of utilization for both VC-merging
  and non-VC merging switches for the case r_s=1 (back-to-back cells in
  a packet).  Again, the Internet packet size distribution is used to
  adopt the more realistic scenario. The interarrival time of packets
  is geometrically distributed.  Although the difference in the worst-
  case delay between VC-merging and non-VC merging can be theoretically
  very large, we consistently observe that the difference in average



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  delays of the two systems to be consistently about one average packet
  time for a wide range of utilization. The difference is due to the
  average time needed to reassemble a packet.

  To see the effect of cell spacing in a packet, we again simulate the
  average packet delay for r_s=0.2. We observe that the difference in
  average delays of VC merging and non-VC merging increases to a few
  packet times (approximately 20 cells at high utilization).  It should
  be noted that when a VC-merge capable ATM switch reassembles packets,
  in effect it performs the task that the receiver has to do otherwise.
  From practical point-of-view, an increase in 20 cells translates to
  about 60 micro seconds at OC-3 link speed.  This additional delay
  should be insignificant for most applications.

4.0 Security Considerations

  There are no security considerations directly related to this
  document since the document is concerned with the performance
  implications of VC merging. There are also no known security
  considerations as a result of the proposed modification of a legacy
  ATM LSR to incorporate VC merging.

5.0 Discussion

  This document has investigated the impacts of VC merging on the
  performance of an ATM LSR.  We experimented with various traffic
  processes to understand the detailed behavior of VC-merge capable ATM
  LSRs.  Our main finding indicates that VC merging incurs a minimal
  overhead compared to non-VC merging in terms of additional buffering.
  Moreover, the overhead decreases as utilization increases, or as the
  traffic becomes more bursty.  This fact has important practical
  consequences since switches are dimensioned for high utilization and
  stressful traffic conditions.  We have considered the case where the
  output buffer uses a FIFO scheduling. However, based on our
  investigation on slow sources, we believe that fair queueing will not
  introduce a significant impact on the additional amount of buffering.
  Others may wish to investigate this further.

6.0 Acknowledgement

  The authors thank Debasis Mitra for his penetrating questions during
  the internal talks and discussions.









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7.0 References

  [1] P. Newman, Tom Lyon and G. Minshall, "Flow Labelled IP:
      Connectionless ATM Under IP", in Proceedings of INFOCOM'96, San-
      Francisco, April 1996.

  [2] Rekhter,Y., Davie, B., Katz, D., Rosen, E. and G. Swallow, "Cisco
      Systems' Tag Switching Architecture Overview", RFC 2105, February
      1997.

  [3] Katsube, Y., Nagami, K. and H. Esaki, "Toshiba's Router
      Architecture Extensions for ATM: Overview", RFC 2098, February
      1997.

  [4] A. Viswanathan, N. Feldman, R. Boivie and R. Woundy, "ARIS:
      Aggregate Route-Based IP Switching", Work in Progress.

  [5] R. Callon, P. Doolan, N. Feldman, A. Fredette, G. Swallow and A.
      Viswanathan, "A Framework for Multiprotocol Label Switching",
      Work in Progress.

  [6] WAN Packet Size Distribution,
      http://www.nlanr.net/NA/Learn/packetsizes.html.

  [7] Heinanen, J., "Multiprotocol Encapsulation over ATM Adaptation
      Layer 5", RFC 1483, July 1993.

  [8] P. Jacobs and P. Lewis, "Discrete Time Series Generated by
      Mixtures III:  Autoregressive Processes (DAR(p))", Technical
      Report NPS55-78-022, Naval Postgraduate School, 1978.

  [9] B.K. Ryu and A. Elwalid, "The Importance of Long-Range Dependence
      of VBR Video Traffic in ATM Traffic Engineering", ACM SigComm'96,
      Stanford, CA, pp. 3-14, August 1996.

















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Authors' Addresses

  Indra Widjaja
  Fujitsu Network Communications
  Two Blue Hill Plaza
  Pearl River, NY 10965, USA

  Phone: 914 731-2244
  EMail: [email protected]

  Anwar Elwalid
  Bell Labs, Lucent Technologies
  600 Mountain Ave, Rm 2C-324
  Murray Hill, NJ 07974, USA

  Phone: 908 582-7589
  EMail: [email protected]


































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9.  Full Copyright Statement

  Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1999).  All Rights Reserved.

  This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to
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  The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be
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  This document and the information contained herein is provided on an
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Acknowledgement

  Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the
  Internet Society.



















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