Network Working Group                                        M. Mathis
Request for Comments: 2018                                  J. Mahdavi
Category: Standards Track                                          PSC
                                                             S. Floyd
                                                                 LBNL
                                                           A. Romanow
                                                     Sun Microsystems
                                                         October 1996


                 TCP Selective Acknowledgment Options

Status of this Memo

  This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the
  Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for
  improvements.  Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet
  Official Protocol Standards" (STD 1) for the standardization state
  and status of this protocol.  Distribution of this memo is unlimited.

Abstract

  TCP may experience poor performance when multiple packets are lost
  from one window of data.   With the limited information available
  from cumulative acknowledgments, a TCP sender can only learn about a
  single lost packet per round trip time.  An aggressive sender could
  choose to retransmit packets early, but such retransmitted segments
  may have already been successfully received.

  A Selective Acknowledgment (SACK) mechanism, combined with a
  selective repeat retransmission policy, can help to overcome these
  limitations.  The receiving TCP sends back SACK packets to the sender
  informing the sender of data that has been received. The sender can
  then retransmit only the missing data segments.

  This memo proposes an implementation of SACK and discusses its
  performance and related issues.

Acknowledgements

  Much of the text in this document is taken directly from RFC1072 "TCP
  Extensions for Long-Delay Paths" by Bob Braden and Van Jacobson.  The
  authors would like to thank Kevin Fall (LBNL), Christian Huitema
  (INRIA), Van Jacobson (LBNL), Greg Miller (MITRE), Greg Minshall
  (Ipsilon), Lixia Zhang (XEROX PARC and UCLA), Dave Borman (BSDI),
  Allison Mankin (ISI) and others for their review and constructive
  comments.




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RFC 2018         TCP Selective Acknowledgement Options      October 1996


1.  Introduction

  Multiple packet losses from a window of data can have a catastrophic
  effect on TCP throughput. TCP [Postel81] uses a cumulative
  acknowledgment scheme in which received segments that are not at the
  left edge of the receive window are not acknowledged.  This forces
  the sender to either wait a roundtrip time to find out about each
  lost packet, or to unnecessarily retransmit segments which have been
  correctly received [Fall95].  With the cumulative acknowledgment
  scheme, multiple dropped segments generally cause TCP to lose its
  ACK-based clock, reducing overall throughput.

  Selective Acknowledgment (SACK) is a strategy which corrects this
  behavior in the face of multiple dropped segments.  With selective
  acknowledgments, the data receiver can inform the sender about all
  segments that have arrived successfully, so the sender need
  retransmit only the segments that have actually been lost.

  Several transport protocols, including NETBLT [Clark87], XTP
  [Strayer92], RDP [Velten84], NADIR [Huitema81], and VMTP [Cheriton88]
  have used selective acknowledgment.  There is some empirical evidence
  in favor of selective acknowledgments -- simple experiments with RDP
  have shown that disabling the selective acknowledgment facility
  greatly increases the number of retransmitted segments over a lossy,
  high-delay Internet path [Partridge87]. A recent simulation study by
  Kevin Fall and Sally Floyd [Fall95], demonstrates the strength of TCP
  with SACK over the non-SACK Tahoe and Reno TCP implementations.

  RFC1072 [VJ88] describes one possible implementation of SACK options
  for TCP.  Unfortunately, it has never been deployed in the Internet,
  as there was disagreement about how SACK options should be used in
  conjunction with the TCP window shift option (initially described
  RFC1072 and revised in [Jacobson92]).

  We propose slight modifications to the SACK options as proposed in
  RFC1072.  Specifically, sending a selective acknowledgment for the
  most recently received data reduces the need for long SACK options
  [Keshav94, Mathis95].  In addition, the SACK option now carries full
  32 bit sequence numbers.  These two modifications represent the only
  changes to the proposal in RFC1072.  They make SACK easier to
  implement and address concerns about robustness.

  The selective acknowledgment extension uses two TCP options. The
  first is an enabling option, "SACK-permitted", which may be sent in a
  SYN segment to indicate that the SACK option can be used once the
  connection is established.  The other is the SACK option itself,
  which may be sent over an established connection once permission has
  been given by SACK-permitted.



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RFC 2018         TCP Selective Acknowledgement Options      October 1996


  The SACK option is to be included in a segment sent from a TCP that
  is receiving data to the TCP that is sending that data; we will refer
  to these TCP's as the data receiver and the data sender,
  respectively.  We will consider a particular simplex data flow; any
  data flowing in the reverse direction over the same connection can be
  treated independently.

2.  Sack-Permitted Option

  This two-byte option may be sent in a SYN by a TCP that has been
  extended to receive (and presumably process) the SACK option once the
  connection has opened.  It MUST NOT be sent on non-SYN segments.

      TCP Sack-Permitted Option:

      Kind: 4

      +---------+---------+
      | Kind=4  | Length=2|
      +---------+---------+

3.  Sack Option Format

  The SACK option is to be used to convey extended acknowledgment
  information from the receiver to the sender over an established TCP
  connection.

      TCP SACK Option:

      Kind: 5

      Length: Variable

                        +--------+--------+
                        | Kind=5 | Length |
      +--------+--------+--------+--------+
      |      Left Edge of 1st Block       |
      +--------+--------+--------+--------+
      |      Right Edge of 1st Block      |
      +--------+--------+--------+--------+
      |                                   |
      /            . . .                  /
      |                                   |
      +--------+--------+--------+--------+
      |      Left Edge of nth Block       |
      +--------+--------+--------+--------+
      |      Right Edge of nth Block      |
      +--------+--------+--------+--------+



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RFC 2018         TCP Selective Acknowledgement Options      October 1996


  The SACK option is to be sent by a data receiver to inform the data
  sender of non-contiguous blocks of data that have been received and
  queued.  The data receiver awaits the receipt of data (perhaps by
  means of retransmissions) to fill the gaps in sequence space between
  received blocks.  When missing segments are received, the data
  receiver acknowledges the data normally by advancing the left window
  edge in the Acknowledgement Number Field of the TCP header.  The SACK
  option does not change the meaning of the Acknowledgement Number
  field.

  This option contains a list of some of the blocks of contiguous
  sequence space occupied by data that has been received and queued
  within the window.

  Each contiguous block of data queued at the data receiver is defined
  in the SACK option by two 32-bit unsigned integers in network byte
  order:

  *    Left Edge of Block

       This is the first sequence number of this block.

  *    Right Edge of Block

       This is the sequence number immediately following the last
       sequence number of this block.

  Each block represents received bytes of data that are contiguous and
  isolated; that is, the bytes just below the block, (Left Edge of
  Block - 1), and just above the block, (Right Edge of Block), have not
  been received.

  A SACK option that specifies n blocks will have a length of 8*n+2
  bytes, so the 40 bytes available for TCP options can specify a
  maximum of 4 blocks.  It is expected that SACK will often be used in
  conjunction with the Timestamp option used for RTTM [Jacobson92],
  which takes an additional 10 bytes (plus two bytes of padding); thus
  a maximum of 3 SACK blocks will be allowed in this case.

  The SACK option is advisory, in that, while it notifies the data
  sender that the data receiver has received the indicated segments,
  the data receiver is permitted to later discard data which have been
  reported in a SACK option.  A discussion appears below in Section 8
  of the consequences of advisory SACK, in particular that the data
  receiver may renege, or drop already SACKed data.






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RFC 2018         TCP Selective Acknowledgement Options      October 1996


4.  Generating Sack Options: Data Receiver Behavior

  If the data receiver has received a SACK-Permitted option on the SYN
  for this connection, the data receiver MAY elect to generate SACK
  options as described below.  If the data receiver generates SACK
  options under any circumstance, it SHOULD generate them under all
  permitted circumstances.  If the data receiver has not received a
  SACK-Permitted option for a given connection, it MUST NOT send SACK
  options on that connection.

  If sent at all, SACK options SHOULD be included in all ACKs which do
  not ACK the highest sequence number in the data receiver's queue.  In
  this situation the network has lost or mis-ordered data, such that
  the receiver holds non-contiguous data in its queue.  RFC 1122,
  Section 4.2.2.21, discusses the reasons for the receiver to send ACKs
  in response to additional segments received in this state.  The
  receiver SHOULD send an ACK for every valid segment that arrives
  containing new data, and each of these "duplicate" ACKs SHOULD bear a
  SACK option.

  If the data receiver chooses to send a SACK option, the following
  rules apply:

     * The first SACK block (i.e., the one immediately following the
     kind and length fields in the option) MUST specify the contiguous
     block of data containing the segment which triggered this ACK,
     unless that segment advanced the Acknowledgment Number field in
     the header.  This assures that the ACK with the SACK option
     reflects the most recent change in the data receiver's buffer
     queue.

     * The data receiver SHOULD include as many distinct SACK blocks as
     possible in the SACK option.  Note that the maximum available
     option space may not be sufficient to report all blocks present in
     the receiver's queue.

     * The SACK option SHOULD be filled out by repeating the most
     recently reported SACK blocks (based on first SACK blocks in
     previous SACK options) that are not subsets of a SACK block
     already included in the SACK option being constructed.  This
     assures that in normal operation, any segment remaining part of a
     non-contiguous block of data held by the data receiver is reported
     in at least three successive SACK options, even for large-window
     TCP implementations [RFC1323]).  After the first SACK block, the
     following SACK blocks in the SACK option may be listed in
     arbitrary order.





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RFC 2018         TCP Selective Acknowledgement Options      October 1996


  It is very important that the SACK option always reports the block
  containing the most recently received segment, because this provides
  the sender with the most up-to-date information about the state of
  the network and the data receiver's queue.

5.  Interpreting the Sack Option and Retransmission Strategy: Data
  Sender Behavior

  When receiving an ACK containing a SACK option, the data sender
  SHOULD record the selective acknowledgment for future reference.  The
  data sender is assumed to have a retransmission queue that contains
  the segments that have been transmitted but not yet acknowledged, in
  sequence-number order.  If the data sender performs re-packetization
  before retransmission, the block boundaries in a SACK option that it
  receives may not fall on boundaries of segments in the retransmission
  queue; however, this does not pose a serious difficulty for the
  sender.

  One possible implementation of the sender's behavior is as follows.
  Let us suppose that for each segment in the retransmission queue
  there is a (new) flag bit "SACKed", to be used to indicate that this
  particular segment has been reported in a SACK option.

  When an acknowledgment segment arrives containing a SACK option, the
  data sender will turn on the SACKed bits for segments that have been
  selectively acknowledged.  More specifically, for each block in the
  SACK option, the data sender will turn on the SACKed flags for all
  segments in the retransmission queue that are wholly contained within
  that block.  This requires straightforward sequence number
  comparisons.

  After the SACKed bit is turned on (as the result of processing a
  received SACK option), the data sender will skip that segment during
  any later retransmission.  Any segment that has the SACKed bit turned
  off and is less than the highest SACKed segment is available for
  retransmission.

  After a retransmit timeout the data sender SHOULD turn off all of the
  SACKed bits, since the timeout might indicate that the data receiver
  has reneged.  The data sender MUST retransmit the segment at the left
  edge of the window after a retransmit timeout, whether or not the
  SACKed bit is on for that segment.  A segment will not be dequeued
  and its buffer freed until the left window edge is advanced over it.








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RFC 2018         TCP Selective Acknowledgement Options      October 1996


5.1  Congestion Control Issues

  This document does not attempt to specify in detail the congestion
  control algorithms for implementations of TCP with SACK.  However,
  the congestion control algorithms present in the de facto standard
  TCP implementations MUST be preserved [Stevens94].  In particular, to
  preserve robustness in the presence of packets reordered by the
  network, recovery is not triggered by a single ACK reporting out-of-
  order packets at the receiver.  Further, during recovery the data
  sender limits the number of segments sent in response to each ACK.
  Existing implementations limit the data sender to sending one segment
  during Reno-style fast recovery, or to two segments during slow-start
  [Jacobson88].  Other aspects of congestion control, such as reducing
  the congestion window in response to congestion, must similarly be
  preserved.

  The use of time-outs as a fall-back mechanism for detecting dropped
  packets is unchanged by the SACK option.  Because the data receiver
  is allowed to discard SACKed data, when a retransmit timeout occurs
  the data sender MUST ignore prior SACK information in determining
  which data to retransmit.

  Future research into congestion control algorithms may take advantage
  of the additional information provided by SACK.  One such area for
  future research concerns modifications to TCP for a wireless or
  satellite environment where packet loss is not necessarily an
  indication of congestion.

6.  Efficiency and Worst Case Behavior

  If the return path carrying ACKs and SACK options were lossless, one
  block per SACK option packet would always be sufficient.  Every
  segment arriving while the data receiver holds discontinuous data
  would cause the data receiver to send an ACK with a SACK option
  containing the one altered block in the receiver's queue.  The data
  sender is thus able to construct a precise replica of the receiver's
  queue by taking the union of all the first SACK blocks.














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RFC 2018         TCP Selective Acknowledgement Options      October 1996


  Since the return path is not lossless, the SACK option is defined to
  include more than one SACK block in a single packet.  The redundant
  blocks in the SACK option packet increase the robustness of SACK
  delivery in the presence of lost ACKs.  For a receiver that is also
  using the time stamp option [Jacobson92], the SACK option has room to
  include three SACK blocks.  Thus each SACK block will generally be
  repeated at least three times, if necessary, once in each of three
  successive ACK packets.  However, if all of the ACK packets reporting
  a particular SACK block are dropped, then the sender might assume
  that the data in that SACK block has not been received, and
  unnecessarily retransmit those segments.

  The deployment of other TCP options may reduce the number of
  available SACK blocks to 2 or even to 1.  This will reduce the
  redundancy of SACK delivery in the presence of lost ACKs.  Even so,
  the exposure of TCP SACK in regard to the unnecessary retransmission
  of packets is strictly less than the exposure of current
  implementations of TCP.  The worst-case conditions necessary for the
  sender to needlessly retransmit data is discussed in more detail in a
  separate document [Floyd96].

  Older TCP implementations which do not have the SACK option will not
  be unfairly disadvantaged when competing against SACK-capable TCPs.
  This issue is discussed in more detail in [Floyd96].

7.  Sack Option Examples

  The following examples attempt to demonstrate the proper behavior of
  SACK generation by the data receiver.

  Assume the left window edge is 5000 and that the data transmitter
  sends a burst of 8 segments, each containing 500 data bytes.

     Case 1: The first 4 segments are received but the last 4 are
     dropped.

     The data receiver will return a normal TCP ACK segment
     acknowledging sequence number 7000, with no SACK option.













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RFC 2018         TCP Selective Acknowledgement Options      October 1996


     Case 2:  The first segment is dropped but the remaining 7 are
     received.

        Upon receiving each of the last seven packets, the data
        receiver will return a TCP ACK segment that acknowledges
        sequence number 5000 and contains a SACK option specifying
        one block of queued data:

            Triggering    ACK      Left Edge   Right Edge
            Segment

            5000         (lost)
            5500         5000     5500       6000
            6000         5000     5500       6500
            6500         5000     5500       7000
            7000         5000     5500       7500
            7500         5000     5500       8000
            8000         5000     5500       8500
            8500         5000     5500       9000


     Case 3:  The 2nd, 4th, 6th, and 8th (last) segments are
     dropped.

     The data receiver ACKs the first packet normally.  The
     third, fifth, and seventh packets trigger SACK options as
     follows:

         Triggering  ACK    First Block   2nd Block     3rd Block
         Segment            Left   Right  Left   Right  Left   Right
                            Edge   Edge   Edge   Edge   Edge   Edge

         5000       5500
         5500       (lost)
         6000       5500    6000   6500
         6500       (lost)
         7000       5500    7000   7500   6000   6500
         7500       (lost)
         8000       5500    8000   8500   7000   7500   6000   6500
         8500       (lost)











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RFC 2018         TCP Selective Acknowledgement Options      October 1996


     Suppose at this point, the 4th packet is received out of order.
     (This could either be because the data was badly misordered in the
     network, or because the 2nd packet was retransmitted and lost, and
     then the 4th packet was retransmitted). At this point the data
     receiver has only two SACK blocks to report.  The data receiver
     replies with the following Selective Acknowledgment:

         Triggering  ACK    First Block   2nd Block     3rd Block
         Segment            Left   Right  Left   Right  Left   Right
                            Edge   Edge   Edge   Edge   Edge   Edge

         6500       5500    6000   7500   8000   8500

     Suppose at this point, the 2nd segment is received.  The data
     receiver then replies with the following Selective Acknowledgment:

         Triggering  ACK    First Block   2nd Block     3rd Block
         Segment            Left   Right  Left   Right  Left   Right
                            Edge   Edge   Edge   Edge   Edge   Edge

         5500       7500    8000   8500

8.  Data Receiver Reneging

  Note that the data receiver is permitted to discard data in its queue
  that has not been acknowledged to the data sender, even if the data
  has already been reported in a SACK option.  Such discarding of
  SACKed packets is discouraged, but may be used if the receiver runs
  out of buffer space.

  The data receiver MAY elect not to keep data which it has reported in
  a SACK option.  In this case, the receiver SACK generation is
  additionally qualified:

     * The first SACK block MUST reflect the newest segment.  Even if
     the newest segment is going to be discarded and the receiver has
     already discarded adjacent segments, the first SACK block MUST
     report, at a minimum, the left and right edges of the newest
     segment.

     * Except for the newest segment, all SACK blocks MUST NOT report
     any old data which is no longer actually held by the receiver.

  Since the data receiver may later discard data reported in a SACK
  option, the sender MUST NOT discard data before it is acknowledged by
  the Acknowledgment Number field in the TCP header.





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RFC 2018         TCP Selective Acknowledgement Options      October 1996


9.  Security Considerations

  This document neither strengthens nor weakens TCP's current security
  properties.

10. References

  [Cheriton88]  Cheriton, D., "VMTP: Versatile Message Transaction
  Protocol", RFC 1045, Stanford University, February 1988.

  [Clark87] Clark, D., Lambert, M., and L. Zhang, "NETBLT: A Bulk Data
  Transfer Protocol", RFC 998, MIT, March 1987.

  [Fall95]  Fall, K. and Floyd, S., "Comparisons of Tahoe, Reno, and
  Sack TCP", ftp://ftp.ee.lbl.gov/papers/sacks.ps.Z, December 1995.

  [Floyd96]  Floyd, S.,  "Issues of TCP with SACK",
  ftp://ftp.ee.lbl.gov/papers/issues_sa.ps.Z, January 1996.

  [Huitema81] Huitema, C., and Valet, I., An Experiment on High Speed
  File Transfer using Satellite Links, 7th Data Communication
  Symposium, Mexico, October 1981.

  [Jacobson88] Jacobson, V., "Congestion Avoidance and Control",
  Proceedings of SIGCOMM '88, Stanford, CA., August 1988.

  [Jacobson88}, Jacobson, V. and R. Braden, "TCP Extensions for Long-
  Delay Paths", RFC 1072, October 1988.

  [Jacobson92] Jacobson, V., Braden, R., and D. Borman, "TCP Extensions
  for High Performance", RFC 1323, May 1992.

  [Keshav94]  Keshav, presentation to the Internet End-to-End Research
  Group, November 1994.

  [Mathis95]  Mathis, M., and Mahdavi, J., TCP Forward Acknowledgment
  Option, presentation to the Internet End-to-End Research Group, June
  1995.

  [Partridge87]  Partridge, C., "Private Communication", February 1987.

  [Postel81]  Postel, J., "Transmission Control Protocol - DARPA
  Internet Program Protocol Specification", RFC 793, DARPA, September
  1981.

  [Stevens94] Stevens, W., TCP/IP Illustrated, Volume 1: The Protocols,
  Addison-Wesley, 1994.




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RFC 2018         TCP Selective Acknowledgement Options      October 1996


  [Strayer92] Strayer, T., Dempsey, B., and Weaver, A., XTP -- the
  xpress transfer protocol. Addison-Wesley Publishing Company, 1992.

  [Velten84] Velten, D., Hinden, R., and J. Sax, "Reliable Data
  Protocol", RFC 908, BBN, July 1984.

11. Authors' Addresses

   Matt Mathis and Jamshid Mahdavi
   Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center
   4400 Fifth Ave
   Pittsburgh, PA 15213
   [email protected]
   [email protected]

   Sally Floyd
   Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
   One Cyclotron Road
   Berkeley, CA 94720
   [email protected]

   Allyn Romanow
   Sun Microsystems, Inc.
   2550 Garcia Ave., MPK17-202
   Mountain View, CA 94043
   [email protected]

























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