Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                         C. Raiciu
Request for Comments: 6356                Univ. Politehnica of Bucharest
Category: Experimental                                         M. Handly
ISSN: 2070-1721                                             D. Wischik
                                                   Univ. College London
                                                           October 2011


     Coupled Congestion Control for Multipath Transport Protocols

Abstract

  Often endpoints are connected by multiple paths, but communications
  are usually restricted to a single path per connection.  Resource
  usage within the network would be more efficient were it possible for
  these multiple paths to be used concurrently.  Multipath TCP is a
  proposal to achieve multipath transport in TCP.

  New congestion control algorithms are needed for multipath transport
  protocols such as Multipath TCP, as single path algorithms have a
  series of issues in the multipath context.  One of the prominent
  problems is that running existing algorithms such as standard TCP
  independently on each path would give the multipath flow more than
  its fair share at a bottleneck link traversed by more than one of its
  subflows.  Further, it is desirable that a source with multiple paths
  available will transfer more traffic using the least congested of the
  paths, achieving a property called "resource pooling" where a bundle
  of links effectively behaves like one shared link with bigger
  capacity.  This would increase the overall efficiency of the network
  and also its robustness to failure.

  This document presents a congestion control algorithm that couples
  the congestion control algorithms running on different subflows by
  linking their increase functions, and dynamically controls the
  overall aggressiveness of the multipath flow.  The result is a
  practical algorithm that is fair to TCP at bottlenecks while moving
  traffic away from congested links.














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Status of This Memo

  This document is not an Internet Standards Track specification; it is
  published for examination, experimental implementation, and
  evaluation.

  This document defines an Experimental Protocol for the Internet
  community.  This document is a product of the Internet Engineering
  Task Force (IETF).  It represents the consensus of the IETF
  community.  It has received public review and has been approved for
  publication by the Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG).  Not
  all documents approved by the IESG are a candidate for any level of
  Internet Standard; see Section 2 of RFC 5741.

  Information about the current status of this document, any errata,
  and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at
  http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6356.

Copyright Notice

  Copyright (c) 2011 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the
  document authors.  All rights reserved.

  This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal
  Provisions Relating to IETF Documents
  (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of
  publication of this document.  Please review these documents
  carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect
  to this document.  Code Components extracted from this document must
  include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of
  the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as
  described in the Simplified BSD License.

Table of Contents

  1. Introduction ....................................................3
  2. Requirements Language ...........................................5
  3. Coupled Congestion Control Algorithm ............................5
  4. Implementation Considerations ...................................7
     4.1. Computing "alpha" in Practice ..............................7
     4.2. Implementation Considerations when CWND is
          Expressed in Packets .......................................8
  5. Discussion ......................................................9
  6. Security Considerations ........................................10
  7. Acknowledgements ...............................................11
  8. References .....................................................11
     8.1. Normative References ......................................11
     8.2. Informative References ....................................11



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1.  Introduction

  Multipath TCP (MPTCP, [MPTCP-MULTIADDRESSED]) is a set of extensions
  to regular TCP [RFC0793] that allows one TCP connection to be spread
  across multiple paths.  MPTCP distributes load through the creation
  of separate "subflows" across potentially disjoint paths.

  How should congestion control be performed for multipath TCP?  First,
  each subflow must have its own congestion control state (i.e., cwnd)
  so that capacity on that path is matched by offered load.  The
  simplest way to achieve this goal is to simply run standard TCP
  congestion control on each subflow.  However, this solution is
  unsatisfactory as it gives the multipath flow an unfair share when
  the paths taken by its different subflows share a common bottleneck.

  Bottleneck fairness is just one requirement multipath congestion
  control should meet.  The following three goals capture the desirable
  properties of a practical multipath congestion control algorithm:

  o  Goal 1 (Improve Throughput) A multipath flow should perform at
     least as well as a single path flow would on the best of the paths
     available to it.

  o  Goal 2 (Do no harm) A multipath flow should not take up more
     capacity from any of the resources shared by its different paths
     than if it were a single flow using only one of these paths.  This
     guarantees it will not unduly harm other flows.

  o  Goal 3 (Balance congestion) A multipath flow should move as much
     traffic as possible off its most congested paths, subject to
     meeting the first two goals.

  Goals 1 and 2 together ensure fairness at the bottleneck.  Goal 3
  captures the concept of resource pooling [WISCHIK]: if each multipath
  flow sends more data through its least congested path, the traffic in
  the network will move away from congested areas.  This improves
  robustness and overall throughput, among other things.  The way to
  achieve resource pooling is to effectively "couple" the congestion
  control loops for the different subflows.

  We propose an algorithm that couples the additive increase function
  of the subflows, and uses unmodified TCP behavior in case of a drop.
  The algorithm relies on the traditional TCP mechanisms to detect
  drops, to retransmit data, etc.







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  Detecting shared bottlenecks reliably is quite difficult, but is just
  one part of a bigger question.  This bigger question is how much
  bandwidth a multipath user should use in total, even if there is no
  shared bottleneck.

  The congestion controller aims to set the multipath flow's aggregate
  bandwidth to be the same as that of a regular TCP flow would get on
  the best path available to the multipath flow.  To estimate the
  bandwidth of a regular TCP flow, the multipath flow estimates loss
  rates and round-trip times (RTTs) and computes the target rate.
  Then, it adjusts the overall aggressiveness (parameter alpha) to
  achieve the desired rate.

  While the mechanism above applies always, its effect depends on
  whether the multipath TCP flow influences or does not influence the
  link loss rates (low versus high statistical multiplexing).  If MPTCP
  does not influence link loss rates, MPTCP will get the same
  throughput as TCP on the best path.  In cases with low statistical
  multiplexing, where the multipath flow influences the loss rates on
  the path, the multipath throughput will be strictly higher than that
  a single TCP would get on any of the paths.  In particular, if using
  two idle paths, multipath throughput will be sum of the two paths'
  throughput.

  This algorithm ensures bottleneck fairness and fairness in the
  broader, network sense.  We acknowledge that current TCP fairness
  criteria are far from ideal, but a multipath TCP needs to be
  deployable in the current Internet.  If needed, new fairness criteria
  can be implemented by the same algorithm we propose by appropriately
  scaling the overall aggressiveness.

  It is intended that the algorithm presented here can be applied to
  other multipath transport protocols, such as alternative multipath
  extensions to TCP, or indeed any other congestion-aware transport
  protocols.  However, for the purposes of example, this document will,
  where appropriate, refer to the MPTCP.

  The design decisions and evaluation of the congestion control
  algorithm are published in [NSDI].

  The algorithm presented here only extends standard TCP congestion
  control for multipath operation.  It is foreseeable that other
  congestion controllers will be implemented for multipath transport to
  achieve the bandwidth-scaling properties of the newer congestion
  control algorithms for regular TCP (such as Compound TCP and Cubic).






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2.  Requirements Language

  The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
  "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this
  document are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119 [RFC2119] .

3.  Coupled Congestion Control Algorithm

  The algorithm we present only applies to the increase phase of the
  congestion avoidance state specifying how the window inflates upon
  receiving an ACK.  The slow start, fast retransmit, and fast recovery
  algorithms, as well as the multiplicative decrease of the congestion
  avoidance state are the same as in standard TCP [RFC5681].

  Let cwnd_i be the congestion window on the subflow i.  Let cwnd_total
  be the sum of the congestion windows of all subflows in the
  connection.  Let p_i, rtt_i, and MSS_i be the loss rate, round-trip
  time (i.e., smoothed round-trip time estimate used by TCP), and
  maximum segment size on subflow i.

  We assume throughout this document that the congestion window is
  maintained in bytes, unless otherwise specified.  We briefly describe
  the algorithm for packet-based implementations of cwnd in section
  Section 4.2.

  Our proposed "Linked Increases" algorithm MUST:

  o  For each ACK received on subflow i, increase cwnd_i by

               alpha * bytes_acked * MSS_i   bytes_acked * MSS_i
         min ( --------------------------- , ------------------- )  (1)
                        cwnd_total                   cwnd_i

  The increase formula (1) takes the minimum between the computed
  increase for the multipath subflow (first argument to min), and the
  increase TCP would get in the same scenario (the second argument).
  In this way, we ensure that any multipath subflow cannot be more
  aggressive than a TCP flow in the same circumstances, hence achieving
  Goal 2 (do no harm).

  "alpha" is a parameter of the algorithm that describes the
  aggressiveness of the multipath flow.  To meet Goal 1 (improve
  throughput), the value of alpha is chosen such that the aggregate
  throughput of the multipath flow is equal to the throughput a TCP
  flow would get if it ran on the best path.






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  To get an idea of what the algorithm is trying to do, let's take the
  case where all the subflows have the same round-trip time and Maximum
  Segment Size (MSS).  In this case, the algorithm will grow the total
  window by approximately alpha*MSS per RTT.  This increase is
  distributed to the individual flows according to their instantaneous
  window size.  Subflow i will increase by alpha*cwnd_i/cwnd_total
  segments per RTT.

  Note that, as in standard TCP, when cwnd_total is large the increase
  may be 0.  In this case, the increase MUST be set to 1.  We discuss
  how to implement this formula in practice in the next section.

  We assume implementations use an approach similar to appropriate byte
  counting (ABC, [RFC3465]), where the bytes_acked variable records the
  number of bytes newly acknowledged.  If this is not the case,
  bytes_acked SHOULD be set to MSS_i.

  To compute cwnd_total, it is an easy mistake to sum up cwnd_i across
  all subflows: when a flow is in fast retransmit, its cwnd is
  typically inflated and no longer represents the real congestion
  window.  The correct behavior is to use the ssthresh (slow start
  threshold) value for flows in fast retransmit when computing
  cwnd_total.  To cater to connections that are app limited, the
  computation should consider the minimum between flight_size_i and
  cwnd_i, and flight_size_i and ssthresh_i, where appropriate.

  The total throughput of a multipath flow depends on the value of
  alpha and the loss rates, maximum segment sizes, and round-trip times
  of its paths.  Since we require that the total throughput is no worse
  than the throughput a single TCP would get on the best path, it is
  impossible to choose, a priori, a single value of alpha that achieves
  the desired throughput in every occasion.  Hence, alpha must be
  computed based on the observed properties of the paths.

  The formula to compute alpha is:

                       MAX (cwnd_i/rtt_i^2)
  alpha = cwnd_total * -------------------------           (2)
                       (SUM (cwnd_i/rtt_i))^2

  Note:

  MAX (x_i) means the maximum value for any possible value of i.

  SUM (x_i) means the summation for all possible values of i.






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  The formula (2) is derived by equalizing the rate of the multipath
  flow with the rate of a TCP running on the best path, and solving for
  alpha.

4.  Implementation Considerations

  Equation (2) implies that alpha is a floating point value.  This
  would require performing costly floating point operations whenever an
  ACK is received.  Further, in many kernels, floating point operations
  are disabled.  There is an easy way to approximate the above
  calculations using integer arithmetic.

4.1.  Computing "alpha" in Practice

  Let alpha_scale be an integer.  When computing alpha, use alpha_scale
  * cwnd_total instead of cwnd_total and do all the operations in
  integer arithmetic.

  Then, scale down the increase per ACK by alpha_scale.  The resulting
  algorithm is a simple change from Equation (1):

  o  For each ACK received on subflow i, increase cwnd_i by:

               alpha * bytes_acked * MSS_i   bytes_acked * MSS_i
         min ( --------------------------- , ------------------- )  (3)
                alpha_scale * cwnd_total              cwnd_i

  The alpha_scale parameter denotes the precision we want for computing
  alpha.  Observe that the errors in computing the numerator or the
  denominator in the formula for alpha are quite small, as the cwnd in
  bytes is typically much larger than the RTT (measured in ms).

  With these changes, all the operations can be done using integer
  arithmetic.  We propose alpha_scale be a small power of two, to allow
  using faster shift operations instead of multiplication and division.
  Our experiments show that using alpha_scale=512 works well in a wide
  range of scenarios.  Increasing alpha_scale increases precision, but
  also increases the risk of overflow when computing alpha.  Using 64-
  bit operations would solve this issue.  Another option is to
  dynamically adjust alpha_scale when computing alpha; in this way, we
  avoid overflow and obtain maximum precision.

  It is possible to implement the algorithm by calculating cwnd_total
  on each ack; however, this would be costly especially when the number
  of subflows is large.  To avoid this overhead, the implementation MAY
  choose to maintain a new per-connection state variable called
  "cwnd_total".  If it does so, the implementation will update the
  cwnd_total value whenever the individual subflow's windows are



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  updated.  Updating only requires one more addition or subtraction
  operation compared to the regular, per-subflow congestion control
  code, so its performance impact should be minimal.

  Computing alpha per ACK is also costly.  We propose alpha be a per-
  connection variable, computed whenever there is a drop and once per
  RTT otherwise.  More specifically, let cwnd_new be the new value of
  the congestion window after it is inflated or after a drop.  Update
  alpha only if the quotient of cwnd_i/MSS_i differs from the quotient
  of cwnd_new_i/MSS_i.

  In certain cases with small RTTs, computing alpha can still be
  expensive.  We observe that if RTTs were constant, it is sufficient
  to compute alpha once per drop, as alpha does not change between
  drops (the insight here is that cwnd_i/cwnd_j = constant as long as
  both windows increase).  Experimental results show that even if
  round-trip times are not constant, using average round-trip time per
  sawtooth instead of instantaneous round-trip time (i.e., TCP's
  smoothed RTT estimator) gives good precision for computing alpha.
  Hence, it is possible to compute alpha only once per drop using a
  modified version of equation (2) where rtt_i is replaced with
  rtt_avg_i.

  If using average round-trip time, rtt_avg_i will be computed by
  sampling the rtt_i whenever the window can accommodate one more
  packet, i.e., when cwnd / MSS < (cwnd+increase)/MSS.  The samples are
  averaged once per sawtooth into rtt_avg_i.  This sampling ensures
  that there is no sampling bias for larger windows.

  Given cwnd_total and alpha, the congestion control algorithm is run
  for each subflow independently, with similar complexity to the
  standard TCP increase code [RFC5681].

4.2.  Implementation Considerations when CWND is Expressed in Packets

  When the congestion control algorithm maintains cwnd in packets
  rather than bytes, the algorithms above must change to take into
  account path MSS.

  To compute the increase when an ACK is received, the implementation
  for multipath congestion control is a simple extension of the
  standard TCP code.  In standard, TCP cwnd_cnt is an additional state
  variable that tracks the number of segments acked since the last cwnd
  increment; cwnd is incremented only when cwnd_cnt > cwnd; then,
  cwnd_cnt is set to 0.






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  In the multipath case, cwnd_cnt_i is maintained for each subflow as
  above, and cwnd_i is increased by 1 when cwnd_cnt_i > max(alpha_scale
  * cwnd_total / alpha, cwnd_i).

  When computing alpha for packet-based stacks, the errors in computing
  the terms in the denominator are larger (this is because cwnd is much
  smaller and rtt may be comparatively large).  Let max be the index of
  the subflow used in the numerator.  To reduce errors, it is easiest
  to move rtt_max (once calculated) from the numerator to the
  denominator, changing equation (2) to obtain the equivalent formula
  below.

                                                                 (4)

                                              cwnd_max
alpha = alpha_scale * cwnd_total * ------------------------------------
                                   (SUM ((rtt_max * cwnd_i) / rtt_i))^2


  Note that the calculation of alpha does not take into account path
  MSS and is the same for stacks that keep cwnd in bytes or packets.
  With this formula, the algorithm for computing alpha will match the
  rate of TCP on the best path in B/s for byte-oriented stacks, and in
  packets/s in packet-based stacks.  In practice, MSS rarely changes
  between paths so this shouldn't be a problem.

  However, it is simple to derive formulae allowing packet-based stacks
  to achieve byte rate fairness (and vice versa) if needed.  In
  particular, for packet-based stacks wanting byte-rate fairness,
  equation (4) above changes as follows: cwnd_max is replaced by
  cwnd_max * MSS_max * MSS_max, while cwnd_i is replaced with cwnd_i *
  MSS_i.

5.  Discussion

  The algorithm we've presented fully achieves Goals 1 and 2, but does
  not achieve full resource pooling (Goal 3).  Resource pooling
  requires that no traffic should be transferred on links with higher
  loss rates.  To achieve perfect resource pooling, one must couple
  both increase and decrease of congestion windows across subflows, as
  in [KELLY].

  There are a few problems with such a fully coupled controller.
  First, it will insufficiently probe paths with high loss rates and
  will fail to detect free capacity when it becomes available.  Second,
  such controllers tend to exhibit "flappiness": when the paths have
  similar levels of congestion, the congestion controller will tend to
  allocate all the window to one random subflow and allocate zero



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  window to the other subflows.  The controller will perform random
  flips between these stable points.  This doesn't seem desirable in
  general, and is particularly bad when the achieved rates depend on
  the RTT (as in the current Internet): in such a case, the resulting
  rate with fluctuate unpredictably depending on which state the
  controller is in, hence violating Goal 1.

  By only coupling increases our proposal probes high loss paths,
  detecting free capacity quicker.  Our proposal does not suffer from
  flappiness but also achieves less resource pooling.  The algorithm
  will allocate window to the subflows such that p_i * cwnd_i =
  constant, for all i.  Thus, when the loss rates of the subflows are
  equal, each subflow will get an equal window, removing flappiness.
  When the loss rates differ, progressively more windows will be
  allocated to the flow with the lower loss rate.  In contrast, perfect
  resource pooling requires that all the window should be allocated on
  the path with the lowest loss rate.  Further details can be found in
  [NSDI].

6.  Security Considerations

  One security concern relates to what we call the traffic-shifting
  attack: on-path attackers can drop packets belonging to a multipath
  subflow, which, in turn, makes the path seem congested and will force
  the sender's congestion controller to avoid that path and push more
  data over alternate subflows.

  The attacker's goal is to create congestion on the corresponding
  alternative paths.  This behavior is entirely feasible but will only
  have minor effects: by design, the coupled congestion controller is
  less (or similarly) aggressive on any of its paths than a single TCP
  flow.  Thus, the biggest effect this attack can have is to make a
  multipath subflow be as aggressive as a single TCP flow.

  Another effect of the traffic-shifting attack is that the new path
  can monitor all the traffic, whereas before it could only see a
  subset of traffic.  We believe that if privacy is needed, splitting
  traffic across multiple paths with MPTCP is not the right solution in
  the first place; end-to-end encryption should be used instead.

  Besides the traffic-shifting attack mentioned above, the coupled
  congestion control algorithm defined in this document adds no other
  security considerations to those found in [MPTCP-MULTIADDRESSED] and
  [RFC6181].  Detailed security analysis for the Multipath TCP protocol
  itself is included in [MPTCP-MULTIADDRESSED] and [RFC6181].






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7.  Acknowledgements

  We thank Christoph Paasch for his suggestions for computing alpha in
  packet-based stacks.  The authors are supported by Trilogy
  (http://www.trilogy-project.org), a research project (ICT-216372)
  partially funded by the European Community under its Seventh
  Framework Program.  The views expressed here are those of the
  author(s) only.  The European Commission is not liable for any use
  that may be made of the information in this document.

8.  References

8.1.  Normative References

  [RFC0793]  Postel, J., "Transmission Control Protocol", STD 7,
             RFC 793, September 1981.

  [RFC2119]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
             Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.

  [RFC5681]  Allman, M., Paxson, V., and E. Blanton, "TCP Congestion
             Control", RFC 5681, September 2009.

8.2.  Informative References

  [KELLY]    Kelly, F. and T. Voice, "Stability of end-to-end
             algorithms for joint routing and rate control", ACM
             SIGCOMM CCR vol. 35 num. 2, pp. 5-12, 2005,
             <http://portal.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=1064415>.

  [MPTCP-MULTIADDRESSED]
             Ford, A., Raiciu, C., Handley, M., and O. Bonaventure,
             "TCP Extensions for Multipath Operation with Multiple
             Addresses", Work in Progress, July 2011.

  [NSDI]     Wischik, D., Raiciu, C., Greenhalgh, A., and M. Handley,
             "Design, Implementation and Evaluation of Congestion
             Control for Multipath TCP", Usenix NSDI , March 2011, <htt
             p://www.cs.ucl.ac.uk/staff/c.raiciu/files/mptcp-nsdi.pdf>.

  [RFC3465]  Allman, M., "TCP Congestion Control with Appropriate Byte
             Counting (ABC)", RFC 3465, February 2003.

  [RFC6181]  Bagnulo, M., "Threat Analysis for TCP Extensions for
             Multipath Operation with Multiple Addresses", RFC 6181,
             March 2011.





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  [WISCHIK]  Wischik, D., Handley, M., and M. Bagnulo Braun, "The
             Resource Pooling Principle", ACM SIGCOMM CCR vol. 38 num.
             5, pp. 47-52, October 2008,
             <http://ccr.sigcomm.org/online/files/p47-handleyA4.pdf>.

Authors' Addresses

  Costin Raiciu
  University Politehnica of Bucharest
  Splaiul Independentei 313
  Bucharest
  Romania

  EMail: [email protected]


  Mark Handley
  University College London
  Gower Street
  London  WC1E 6BT
  UK

  EMail: [email protected]


  Damon Wischik
  University College London
  Gower Street
  London  WC1E 6BT
  UK

  EMail: [email protected]



















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