Hi Vidhi

You are right 😊

Receive time stamps is of course better, the benefit is that one don’t need to 
worry about possible reverse path congestion, the drawback is that clock drift 
needs to be addressed.

 

/Ingemar

 

 

From: Vidhi Goel <[email protected]> 
Sent: den 16 november 2021 00:41
To: Joerg Ott <[email protected]>
Cc: Vidhi Goel <[email protected]>; Ingemar Johansson S 
<[email protected]>; 
[email protected]; Ingemar Johansson S 
<[email protected]>; IETF QUIC WG <[email protected]>; [email protected]
Subject: Re: RTP over QUIC experiments

 

+ Page 18 : Inferring the receive timestamp. What is suspect is that you will 
essentially halve the estimated queue delay (I assume here that the reverse 
path is uncongested). One alternative could be to compute
receive-ts = send-ts + latest_rtt + min_rtt
where min_rtt is the min RTT over a given time interval

You are right that halving latest_rtt / 2 may not be accurate if the reverse 
path is not congested, but there is no guarantee for that. So, a more accurate 
way to compute receive-ts is to use One way timestamps which can be added to 
QUIC as new Frames.


As long as the metric is taken for what it actually is, a rough
approximation, we can probably work with a number of ways to measure.
More to experiment.

 

I forgot to mention earlier, but the equation for recieve-ts should be 
(assuming queuing is only in one direction)

 

receive-ts = send-ts + min_rtt/2 + (latest_rtt - min_rtt)

 

Right?

 

Thanks,

Vidhi





On Nov 15, 2021, at 12:34 PM, Joerg Ott <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> 
> wrote:

 

Hi,




What I am trying to understand is, what is the motivation behind running real 
time congestion control like SCReAM over QUIC congestion control? The results 
(as Ingemar also mentioned) are not encouraging.


we should clarify that this wasn't a design choice but rather part of
systematically looking at the four combinations you get and then see
what happens to each one of them (we didn't expect this one to fare
particularly well but we were initially a bit surprised how poorly it
performed).




If we want to use a single QUIC connection for media (audio/video using RTP) 
and other reliable streams, then would it be better to not use QUIC CC for 
media streams and only use it for reliable streams? Obviously this will violate 
the current spec which applies congestion control on connection level. But 
maybe this use case can be specialized.


This would indeed be one option in the (more desirable?) design space:
the question is if you should allow libraries out there without
congestion control just because something claims it's real-time media
and does its own.

Somebody may have mentioned the circuit breaker last week in some
context (too many slots, sorry).

Indeed, one idea could be having a QUIC "enforce" a limit that it
considers acceptable for the current connection and provide the
RTP CC with the necessary parameters to come to a meaningful rate
itself; as long as the offered load from the RTP CC fits the
enveloped computed by QUIC CC, the DATAGRAMs could just flow;
above that rate, queuing or dropping (or local ECN-style signals)
could follow.

It remains to be seen if shared congestion control between real-time
flows, other datagrams, and regular QUIC streams can be done in a
sensible manner, with acceptable complexity and little brittleness.
And if there is a strong use case for such.  This was quite a bit
discussed in the MOQ side meeting.




+ Split of network congestion control and media rate control : QUIC already 
today has the congestion control on the connection level, it is then up to the 
individual streams to deliver media, subject to the individual stream 
priorities. SCReAM is quite similar in that respect, one difference is perhaps 
the implementation of the media rate control. I think that with QUIC one should 
do a full split and do the network congestion control on the QUIC connection 
level. The congestion control would then be some low latency version, perhaps 
BBRv2? or something similar, I am not sure that the network congestion control 
in SCReAM is the idea choice here as it is quite a lot tailored for RTP media. 

The impact of cascading two congestion controllers (with different input and 
output parameters) has not been studied extensively yet. And is a real time CC 
like SCReAM by itself not enough to control the congestion in the network? In 
other words, does it need another congestion controller to make sure that the 
real time data doesn’t cause more congestion in the network?


Right.  The main question is: should a QUIC connection trust the
arbitrary datagram source or should it check.  Given that all sources
(datagrams and otherwise) would often be part of the same application,
there is probably not much point in trying to cheat on itself.  Maybe
some sanity checks would make sense, paired with mild adjustments of
the share given to the reliable streams as the codec source traffic
won't be able to follow exactly a given target data rate.




My SCReAM experience is that one need to leak some of the congestion signals 
from the connection level congestion control up to the stream rate control, to 
make the whole thing responsive enough. In the SCReAM code one can see that the 
exotic variable queueDelayTrend as well as ECN marks and loss events are used 
for this purpose. I believe that something like that is needed for an RTP (or 
whatever low latency) media over QUIC. I believe that it is necessary to leak 
congestion information from the connection level up to the stream level, 
especially to be able to exploit L4S fully, even though it is a bit of a 
protocol layer violation.

We absolutely should allow sharing of network events, like RTT, ECN, packet 
loss from QUIC to RTP. Not sure how it is protocol layer violation.


Yes.




+ Page 18 : Inferring the receive timestamp. What is suspect is that you will 
essentially halve the estimated queue delay (I assume here that the reverse 
path is uncongested). One alternative could be to compute
receive-ts = send-ts + latest_rtt + min_rtt
where min_rtt is the min RTT over a given time interval

You are right that halving latest_rtt / 2 may not be accurate if the reverse 
path is not congested, but there is no guarantee for that. So, a more accurate 
way to compute receive-ts is to use One way timestamps which can be added to 
QUIC as new Frames.


As long as the metric is taken for what it actually is, a rough
approximation, we can probably work with a number of ways to measure.
More to experiment.

Best,
Jörg




On Nov 12, 2021, at 8:28 AM, Ingemar Johansson S 
<[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]>  
<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

Hi Jörg, Mathis + others
It was nice to learn about your activity to try and use SCReAM as example 
algorithm to integrate with QUIC. Pages 14-25 in
https://datatracker.ietf.org/meeting/112/materials/slides-112-avtcore-ietf-112-avtcore-03
 
<https://datatracker.ietf.org/meeting/112/materials/slides-112-avtcore-ietf-112-avtcore-03>
Did you use the new gsteamer plugin 
fromhttps://github.com/EricssonResearch/scream/tree/master/gstscream 
<https://github.com/EricssonResearch/scream/tree/master/gstscream 
<https://protect2.fireeye.com/v1/url?k=4c40e89e-13dbd19b-4c40a805-86d2114eab2f-5bc01f3ec9be70a9&q=1&e=fac4681d-c4fd-439d-89fa-e885e47e4764&u=https%3A%2F%2Fgithub.com%2FEricssonResearch%2Fscream%2Ftree%2Fmaster%2Fgstscream>
 >  ?
Observations/Comments:
+ SCReAM + Reno : Strange that the throughput dropped like that but perhaps an 
unlucky outcome of two cascaded congestion controls.
+ Split of network congestion control and media rate control : QUIC already 
today has the congestion control on the connection level, it is then up to the 
individual streams to deliver media, subject to the individual stream 
priorities. SCReAM is quite similar in that respect, one difference is perhaps 
the implementation of the media rate control.
I think that with QUIC one should do a full split and do the network congestion 
control on the QUIC connection level. The congestion control would then be some 
low latency version, perhaps BBRv2? or something similar, I am not sure that 
the network congestion control in SCReAM is the idea choice here as it is quite 
a lot tailored for RTP media.
The media rate control is done on the stream level and is then subject to 
stream priority. This should give a more clean split of functionality.
My SCReAM experience is that one need to leak some of the congestion signals 
from the connection level congestion control up to the stream rate control, to 
make the whole thing responsive enough. In the SCReAM code one can see that the 
exotic variable queueDelayTrend as well as ECN marks and loss events are used 
for this purpose. I believe that something like that is needed for an RTP (or 
whatever low latency) media over QUIC. I believe that it is necessary to leak 
congestion information from the connection level up to the stream level, 
especially to be able to exploit L4S fully, even though it is a bit of a 
protocol layer violation.
+ Stream prioritization : … is a problematic area, especially if one stream is 
low latency video and another stream is a large chunk of data for e.g. a large 
web page. With a simple round robin scheduler, the stream with the large chunk 
of data will easily win because it is quite likely to always have data to 
transmit. So some WRR is needed. I have even had problems with the algorithm in 
SCReAM that prioritizes between two cameras/video coders, this because the two 
cameras see different views and thus provide differing information 
content/compression need.
+ Page 18 : Inferring the receive timestamp. What is suspect is that you will 
essentially halve the estimated queue delay (I assume here that the reverse 
path is uncongested). One alternative could be to compute
receive-ts = send-ts + latest_rtt + min_rtt
where min_rtt is the min RTT over a given time interval
Regards
/Ingemar

 

 

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