CoDel

In network routing, CoDel (pronounced "coddle") for controlled delay is a scheduling algorithm for the network scheduler developed by Van Jacobson and Kathleen Nichols. It is designed to overcome bufferbloat in network links, such as routers, by setting limits on the delay network packets experience as they pass through the buffer. CoDel aims at improving on the overall performance of the Random Early Detection (RED) algorithm by addressing some of its fundamental misconceptions, as perceived by Jacobson, and by being easier to manage.

In 2012, an implementation of CoDel was written by Dave Täht and Eric Dumazet for the Linux kernel and dual licensed under the GNU General Public License and the 3-clause BSD license. Dumazet's variant of CoDel is called fq_codel, standing for "fair queuing controlled delay"; it was adopted as the standard active queue management (AQM) and packet scheduling solution in the OpenWrt release called "Barrier Breaker". From there, CoDel and fq_codel have migrated into various downstream projects such as Tomato, dd-wrt, IPFire, and technologies like StreamBoost.

Theoretical underpinnings

The theory behind CoDel is based on observations of packet behavior in packet-switched networks under the influence of data buffers. Some of these observations are about the fundamental nature of queueing and the causes of bufferbloat, others relate to weaknesses of alternative queue management algorithms. CoDel was developed as an attempt to address the problem of bufferbloat.[1]

Bufferbloat

The flow of packets slows down while travelling through a network link between a fast and a slow network, especially at the start of a TCP session, when there is a sudden burst of packets and the slower network may not be able to accept the burst quickly enough. Buffers exist to ease this problem by giving the fast network a place to store packets, to be read by the slower network at its own pace.[2] In other words, buffers act like shock absorbers to convert bursty arrivals into smooth, steady departures. However, a buffer can hold only a specific maximum number of packets. The ideal buffer is sized so it can handle a sudden burst of communication and match the speed of that burst to the speed of the slower network. Ideally, the "shock absorbing" situation is characterized by a temporary delay for packets in the buffer during the transmission burst, after which the delay rapidly disappears and the network reaches a balance in offering and handling packets.[2]

The TCP congestion avoidance algorithm relies on packet drops to determine the available bandwidth. It speeds up the data transfer until packets start to drop, and then slows down the transmission rate. Ideally it keeps speeding up and slowing down the transmission rate, until it finds an equilibrium at the speed of the link. For this to work the packet drops must occur in a timely manner, so that the algorithm can select a suitable transfer speed. With a large buffer that has been filled, the packets will arrive at their destination, but with a higher latency. The packet is not dropped, so TCP does not slow down once the uplink has been saturated, further filling the buffer. Newly arriving packets are dropped only when the buffer is full. TCP may even decide that the path of the connection has changed, and repeat the search for a new equilibrium.[3][4]

In the problematic situation, packets queued in a network buffer are only dropped if the buffer is full. Having a big and constantly full buffer which causes increased transmission delays and reduced interactivity, especially when looking at two or more simultaneous transmissions over the same channel, is called bufferbloat. Available channel bandwidth can also end up being unused, as some fast destinations may not be reached due to buffers being clogged with data awaiting delivery to slow destinations.

Good and bad queues

CoDel distinguishes between two types of queue:[2][5]

Good queue
Defined as a queue that exhibits no bufferbloat. Communication bursts cause no more than a temporary increase in queue delay. The network link utilization is maximized.
Bad queue
Defined as a queue that exhibits bufferbloat. Communication bursts cause the buffer to fill up and stay filled, resulting in low utilization and a constantly high buffer delay.

In order to be effective against bufferbloat, a solution in the form of an active queue management (AQM) algorithm must be able to recognize an occurrence of bufferbloat and react by deploying effective countermeasures.

Regarding the recognition of an unwanted situation, Van Jacobson asserted in 2006 that existing algorithms have been using incorrect means of recognizing bufferbloat.[4] Algorithms like RED measure the average queue length and consider it a case of bufferbloat if the average grows too large. Jacobson demonstrated in 2006 that this measurement is not a good metric, as the average queue length rises sharply in the case of a communications burst. The queue can then dissipate quickly (good queue) or become a standing queue (bad queue). Other factors in network traffic can also cause false positives or negatives, causing countermeasures to be deployed unnecessarily. Jacobson suggested that average queue length actually contains no information at all about packet demand or network load.[2][4] He then suggested that a better metric might be the minimum amount of delay experienced by any packet in the sliding window of the buffer.

The CoDel algorithm

Based on Jacobson's notion from 2006, CoDel was developed to manage queues under control of the minimum delay experienced by packets in the running buffer window. The goal is to keep this minimum delay below 5 milliseconds. If the minimum delay rises to too high a value, packets are dropped from the queue until the delay drops below the maximum level.[2]

Nichols and Jacobson cite several advantages to using nothing more than this metric:[2]

CoDel does nothing to manage the buffer if the minimum delay for the buffer window is below the maximum allowed value. It also does nothing if the buffer is relatively empty (if there are fewer than one MTU's worth of bytes in the buffer).[2] If these conditions do not hold, then CoDel drops packets probabilistically.[2]

Description

The algorithm is independently computed at each network hop. The algorithm operates over an interval, initially 100 milliseconds. Per-packet queuing delay is monitored through the hop. As each packet is dequeued for forwarding, the queuing delay (amount of time the packet spent waiting in the queue) is calculated. The lowest queuing delay for the interval is stored. When the last packet of the interval is dequeued, if the lowest queuing delay for the interval is greater than 5 milliseconds, this single packet is dropped and the interval used for the next group of packets is shortened. If the lowest queuing delay for the interval is less than 5 milliseconds, the packet is forwarded and the interval is reset to 100 milliseconds.

When the interval is shortened, it is done so in accordance with the inverse square root of the number of successive intervals in which packets were dropped due to excessive queuing delay. The sequence of intervals is , , , , ...

Simulation results

CoDel has been tested in simulation tests by Nichols and Jacobson, at different MTUs and link rates and other variations of conditions. In general, results indicate:[2][6]

Simulation was also performed by Greg White and Joey Padden at CableLabs.[7]

Implementation

A full implementation of CoDel was realized in May 2012 and made available as open-source software.[2] It was implemented within the Linux kernel (starting with the 3.5 mainline).[8] Dave Täht back-ported CoDel to Linux kernel 3.3 for project CeroWrt, which concerns itself among other things with bufferbloat,[9] where it was exhaustively tested. CoDel began to appear as an option in some proprietary/turnkey bandwidth management platforms in 2013.[10]

See also

References

  1. Joe Brockmeier (2012-05-08). "Good News for Solving Bufferbloat: CoDel Provides "No Knobs" Solution". ReadWriteWeb. Retrieved 2012-08-16.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Nichols, Kathleen; Jacobson, Van (6 May 2012). "Controlling Queue Delay". ACM Queue. ACM Publishing. doi:10.1145/2209249.2209264. Retrieved 12 August 2012.
  3. Jacobson, Van; Karels, MJ (1988). "Congestion avoidance and control" (PDF). ACM SIGCOMM Computer Communication Review. 18 (4). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2004-06-22.
  4. 1 2 3 Jacobson, Van (2006). "A rant on queues. A talk presented at MIT Lincoln Labs, Lexington, MA" (PDF). Retrieved 12 August 2012.
  5. Iljitsch van Beijnum (2012-05-10). "CoDel buffer management could solve the Internet’s bufferbloat jams". Ars Technica. Retrieved 2012-08-16.
  6. Nichols, Kathleen (July 2012). "Controlled Delay (CoDel) Active Queue Management". Pollere Inc. Retrieved 12 August 2012.
  7. Greg White; Joey Padden (November 2012). "Preliminary Study of Codel AGM in a Docsis Network" (PDF). cablelabs.com. Retrieved 2015-06-14.
  8. Gettys, Jim (22 May 2012). "A Milestone Reached: CoDel is in Linux!". jg's Ramblings. Retrieved 12 August 2012.
  9. "Cerowrt - Overview". Bufferbloat. Retrieved 2014-01-24.
  10. "Procera Packetlogic Changelog". proceranetworks.com.
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