Regarding timescale, I think we can refer to section 7 of RFC7810. 
But I agree with your point on instantaneous bandwidth, I propose to remove 
available and utilized bandwidth from draft-ietf-alto-performance-metrics,
Hope this address your comment.

-Qin
-----邮件原件-----
发件人: Brian Trammell (IETF) [mailto:[email protected]] 
发送时间: 2018年4月13日 3:48
收件人: TSV Area Review Team
抄送: [email protected]; [email protected]; IETF 
Discussion Mailing List
主题: Re: Tsvart early review of draft-ietf-alto-performance-metrics-03

On further review, I have an additional question about the metrics specified in 
the document:

Max reservable (sec 8.1) and residue (sec 8.2) bandwidth seem to be fairly 
straightforward to calculate in a stable manner, as they are essentially 
matters of router configuration, but I'm a little concerned about the temporal 
aspects of available and utilized bandwidth. On any link containing congestion 
controlled traffic not otherwise limited (e.g. by a tunnel reservation), even a 
small number of active bulk transfer flows will cause the utilized bandwidth to 
max out on short timescales: you get an almost uselessly noisy metric.

I presume, since this metric is taken straight from an IS-IS standards track 
RFC, that this doesn't happen in practice, i.e. that the temporal denominator 
is large enough that it averages these smaller peaks out. It'd be nice if the 
document named a timescale though.

I'm also a little dubious that instantaneous bandwidth is a useful cost metric 
for a system like ALTO, because even on sane timescales the delay imparted by 
the system makes  the information hard to act on in a useful way, unless the 
link is a large enough aggregate that the bandwidth doesn't change much over 
time.

Cheers,

Brian

> On 9 Apr 2018, at 18:35, Brian Trammell <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> Reviewer: Brian Trammell
> Review result: On the Right Track
> 
> I've performed a (late, apologies) early TSV-ART review of 
> draft-ietf-alto-performance-metrics-03.
> 
> The set of metrics chosen by the document seem broadly useful and 
> sane, and the integration into ALTO makes sense. However, there are a 
> few issues with the details.
> 
> Periodic One Way Delay, RTT, and PDV are defined in terms of section 
> 8, section 4, and section 5, respectively, of 
> draft-ietf-ippm-initial-registry, which specify active measurement 
> test methodologies at layer 4 for one-way and round-trip delay using 
> UDP packets. This does not seem it can be measured directly using the 
> routing  technologies the authors have identified as their source of 
> information. Is the intention that dedicated active measurement 
> hardware be used to measure delay using UDP packets, or should these metrics 
> reference [RFC2679] and [RFC2681] and leave the methodology undefined, 
> instead?
> 
> The examples for these don't make much sense: the units are expressed 
> in seconds, but Internet-scale delays are generally millisecond-scale, 
> and the examples given contain only integers. Similarly, packet loss 
> rate is given in percentile, but there are wide variations in 
> usability between a path with 0%, 1%, and 2% packet loss. Is this simply an 
> issue with the examples?
> 
> The hop count metric is underspecified: are these IP-experienced hops 
> at layer 3, as can be measured by traceroute?
> 
> Nit: section 2.1 refers to [OSPF-TE], [ISIS-TE], [BGP-LS] and 
> [BGP-PM], but these are not listed as such as references in the 
> references section. Please use consistent reference labels.
> 
> Thanks, cheers,
> 
> Brian
> 

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