Thanks Wes - I was hoping that someone will make this point.

btw, another common reason for lossless operation is the
size of the flows. basically flows often finish before their
window increases so much that they overflow their bottleneck's
buffer.

Plz spend some time to read the following paper:
http://www.cc.gatech.edu/fac/Constantinos.Dovrolis/Papers/buffers-ton.pdf
It is very relevant to the bufferbloat initiative and it shows clearly,
I think, that statements like "Big Buffers Bad. Small Buffers Good."
are crude oversimplifications that will cause even more confusion.

regards

Constantine

On 4/26/2011 4:21 PM, Wesley Eddy wrote:


Operating with infinite storage and operating without packet loss are
two different things.

Ideally, you may have a path with ample bandwidth such that packet
losses don't occur and all connections are either application limited or
receive window limitedand congestion control never kicks in. In this
case, there's no loss and the Internet clearly works.


--------------------------------------------------------------
Constantine Dovrolis, Associate Professor
College of Computing, Georgia Institute of Technology
3346 KACB, 404-385-4205, [email protected]
http://www.cc.gatech.edu/~dovrolis/

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