The Congestion Control Working Group (ccwg) WG in the Web and Internet
Transport of the IETF has been rechartered. For additional information,
please contact the Area Directors or the WG Chairs.

Congestion Control Working Group (ccwg)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Current status: Active WG

Chairs:
  Eric Kinnear <[email protected]>
  Reese Enghardt <[email protected]>

Assigned Area Director:
  Gorry Fairhurst <[email protected]>

Web and Internet Transport Directors:
  Gorry Fairhurst <[email protected]>
  Mike Bishop <[email protected]>

Mailing list:
  Address: [email protected]
  To subscribe: https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/ccwg
  Archive: https://mailarchive.ietf.org/arch/browse/ccwg/

Group page: https://datatracker.ietf.org/group/ccwg/

Charter: https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/charter-ietf-ccwg/

Congestion control is the process a network sender uses to determine the rate
at which to send data. A congestion control algorithm balances sending
sufficient data to make meaningful progress for a user with avoiding filling
buffers in the network and overloading the network path. Better congestion
control algorithms can help improve application performance, such as latency
under load, while safeguarding overall network performance for all senders.

Specifying a congestion control algorithm can help implementers, operators,
and other interested parties develop a shared understanding of how the
algorithm works, how it is expected to behave in various scenarios and
configurations, and can make it easier for them to suggest improvements and
identify limitations.

Congestion control algorithm proponents now often have the opportunity to
test and deploy at scale without IETF review. The set of protocols using
these algorithms has spread beyond TCP and SCTP to include DCCP, QUIC, and
beyond. There is more interest in specialized use cases such as data centers
and real-time protocols. The community has gained much more experience with
indications of congestion beyond packet loss.

The Congestion Control Working Group analyzes impediments to congestion
control work occurring in the IETF and generalizes congestion control
specifications to facilitate implementations for multiple relevant transport
protocols. RFC 9743 specifies the Best Current Practice for evaluation of new
congestion control proposals as Experimental or Proposed Standard RFCs. This
encourages IETF review of congestion control proposals and standardization of
mature congestion control algorithms.

The congestion control expertise in the working group makes it a natural
venue to take on work related to indications of congestion such as delay,
host queuing algorithms, rate pacing, multipath, interaction with other
layers, among others. In particular, it can address congestion control
algorithms with empirical evidence of safety (for example - avoiding
congestion collapse) and stated intent to deploy by major implementations.
The working group is intended to be a home for such work, and it is chartered
to adopt proposals in this space.

The group will coordinate closely with other relevant working and research
groups, including ICCRG, TCPM, QUIC, and TSVWG. Documents in CCWG will remain
as transport protocol agnostic as possible, but they may have short specific
instructions, such as header options or parameter formats, for one or more
protocols. Documents that are wholly specific to mechanisms in a single
protocol will remain in the maintenance working group for that protocol.
Algorithms proposed for Experimental status, in consultation with ICCRG,
based on an assessment of their maturity and likelihood of near-term
wide-scale deployment, are in scope.

Publication of Informational RFCs analyzing the published standard congestion
control algorithms is within CCWG scope. However, it is not chartered to
document the state of congestion control in the Internet, including
assessments of whether any particular implementation complies with existing
standards. Other venues, such as the IRTF, may be more appropriate for
publishing such documents.

Milestones:

   - Submit Rate-Limited Increase of the Congestion Window for publication as
   a PS

   - Submit BBR Congestion Control for publication as Experimental



_______________________________________________
IETF-Announce mailing list -- [email protected]
To unsubscribe send an email to [email protected]

Reply via email to