One document matched: draft-alvestrand-rtcweb-congestion-00.txt
Network Working Group H. Lundin
Internet-Draft S. Holmer
Intended status: Informational H. Alvestrand, Ed.
Expires: March 8, 2012 Google
September 5, 2011
A Google Congestion Control for Real-Time Communication on the World
Wide Web
draft-alvestrand-rtcweb-congestion-00
Abstract
This document describes two methods of congestion control when using
real-time communications on the World Wide Web (RTCWEB); one sender-
based and one receiver-based.
It is published to aid the discussion on mandatory-to-implement flow
control for RTCWEB applications; initial discussion is expected in
the RTCWEB WG's mailing list.
Requirements Language
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
"SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this
document are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119 [RFC2119].
Status of this Memo
This Internet-Draft is submitted in full conformance with the
provisions of BCP 78 and BCP 79.
Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering
Task Force (IETF). Note that other groups may also distribute
working documents as Internet-Drafts. The list of current Internet-
Drafts is at http://datatracker.ietf.org/drafts/current/.
Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months
and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any
time. It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference
material or to cite them other than as "work in progress."
This Internet-Draft will expire on March 8, 2012.
Copyright Notice
Copyright (c) 2011 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the
document authors. All rights reserved.
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This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal
Provisions Relating to IETF Documents
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Table of Contents
1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
1.1. Mathemathical notation conventions . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
2. System model . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
3. Receiver side control . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
3.1. Arrival-time filter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
3.2. Over-use detector . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
3.3. Rate control . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
4. Sender side control . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
5. Interoperability Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
6. Implementation Experience . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
7. Further Work . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
8. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
9. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
10. Acknowledgements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
11. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
11.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
11.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
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1. Introduction
Congestion control is a requirement for all applications that wish to
share the Internet [RFC2914].
The problem of doing congestion control for real-time media is made
difficult for a number of reasons:
o The media is usually encoded in forms that cannot be quickly
changed to accomodate varying bandwidth, and bandwidth
requirements can often be changed only in discrete, rather large
steps
o The participants may have certain specific wishes on how to
respond - which may not be reducing the bandwidth required by the
flow on which congestion is discovered
o The encodings are usually sensitive to packet loss, while the real
time requirement precludes the repair of packet loss by
retransmission
This memo describes two congestion control algorithms that together
are seen to give reasonable performance and reasonable (not perfect)
bandwidth sharing with other conferences and with TCP-using
applications that share the same links.
The signalling used consists of standard RTP timestamps [RFC3550],
standard RTCP feedback reports and Temporary Maximum Media Stream Bit
Rate Requests (TMMBR) as defined in [RFC5104] section 3.5.4.
1.1. Mathemathical notation conventions
The mathematics of this document have been transcribed from a more
formula-friendly format.
The following notational conventions are used:
X_bar The variable X, where X is a vector - conventionally marked by
a bar on top of the variable name.
X_hat An estimate of the true value of variable X - conventionally
marked by a circumflex accent on top of the variable name.
X(i) The "i"th value of X - conventionally marked by a subscript i.
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[x y z] A row vector consisting of elements x, y and z.
X_bar^T The transpose of vector X_bar.
2. System model
The following elements are in the system:
o Incoming media stream
o Media codec - has a bandwidth control, and encodes the incoming
media stream into an RTP stream.
o RTP sender - sends the RTP stream over the network to the RTP
receiver. Generates the RTP timestamp.
o RTP receiver - receives the RTP stream, notes the time of arrival.
Regenerates the media stream for the recipient.
o RTCP sender at RTP sender - sends sender reports.
o RTCP sender at RTP receiver - sends receiver reports and TMMBR
messages.
o RTCP receiver at RTP sender - receives receiver reports and TMMBR
messages, reports these to sender side control.
o RTCP receiver at RTP receiver.
o Sender side control - takes loss rate info, round trip time info,
and TMMBR messages and computes a sending bitrate.
o Receiver side control - takes the packet arrival info at the RTP
receiver and decides when to send TMMBR messages.
Together, sender side control and receiver side control implement the
congestion control algorithm.
3. Receiver side control
The receive-side algorithm can be further decomposed into three
parts: an arrival-time filter, an over-use detector, and a remote
rate-control.
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3.1. Arrival-time filter
This section describes an adaptive filter that continuously updates
estimates of network parameters based on the timing of the received
frames.
At the receiving side we are observing groups of incoming video
packets, where each group of packets corresponding to the same frame
having timestamp T(i).
Each frame is assigned a receive time t(i), which corresponds to the
time at which the whole frame has been received (ignoring any packet
losses). A frame is delayed relative to its predecessor if t(i)-t(i-
1)>T(i)-T(i-1), i.e., if the arrival time difference is larger than
the timestamp difference.
We define the (relative) inter-arrival time, d(i) as
d(i) = t(i)-t(i-1)-(T(i)-T(i-1))
Since the time ts to send a frame of size L over a path with a
capacity of C is
ts = L/C
we can model the inter-arrival time as
L(i)-L(i-1)
d(i) = -------------- + w(i) =~ dL(i)/C+w(i)
C
Here, w(i) is a sample from a stochastic process W, which is a
function of the capacity C, the current cross traffic X(i), and the
current send bit rate R(i). We model W as a white Gaussian process.
If we are over-using the channel we expect w(i) to increase, and if a
queue on the network path is being emptied, w(i) will decrease;
otherwise the mean of w(i) will be zero.
Breaking out the mean of w(i) to make it zero mean, we get
Equation 5
d(i) = dL(i)/C + m(i) + v(i)
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This is our fundamental model, where we take into account that a
large frame needs more time to traverse the link than a small frame,
thus arriving with higher relative delay. The noise term represents
network jitter and other delay effects not captured by the model.
When graphing the values for d(i) versus dL(i) on a scatterplot, we
find that most samples cluster around the center, and the outliers
are clustered along a line with average slope 1/C and zero offset.
When using a regular video codec, most frames are roughly the same
size after encoding (the central "cloud"); the exceptions are
I-frames (or key frames) which are typically much larger than the
average causing positive outliers (the I-frame itself) and negative
outliers (the frame after an I-frame).
The parameters d(i) and dL(i) are readily available for each frame i,
and we want to estimate C and m(i) and use those estimates to detect
whether or not we are over-using the bandwidth currently available.
These parameters are easily estimated by any adaptive filter - we are
using the Kalman filter.
Let
theta_bar(i) = [1/C(i) m(i)]^T
and call it the state of time i. We model the state evolution from
time i to time i+1 as
theta_bar(i+1) = theta_bar(i) + u_bar(i)
where u_bar(i) is the zero mean white Gaussian process noise with
covariance
Equation 7
Q(i) = E{u_bar(i) u_bar(i)^T}
Given equation 5 we get
Equation 8
d(i) = h_bar(i)^T theta_bar(i) + v(i)
h_bar(i) = [ dL(i) 1 ]^T
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where v(i) is zero mean white Gaussian measurement noise with
variance var_v = sigma(v,i)^2
The Kalman filter recursively updates our estimate
theta_hat(i) = [1/C_hat(i) m_hat(i)]^T
as
z(i) = d(i) - h_bar(i)^T * theta_hat(i-1)
theta_hat(i) = theta_hat(i-1) + z(i) * k_bar(i)
E(i-1) * h_bar(i)
k_bar(i) = ------------------------------
var_v_hat + h_bar(i)^T E(i-1)h_bar(i)
E(i)=(I - K_bar(i) h_bar(i)^T) * E(i-1) + Q(i)
I is the 2-by-2 identity matrix.
The variance var_v = sigma(v,i)^2 is estimated using an exponential
averaging filter, modified for variable sampling rate
var_v_hat = beta*sigma(v,i-1)^2 + (1-beta)*z(i)^2
beta = (1-alpha)30/(1000 * f_max)
where f_max = max {1/(T(j) - T(j-1))} for j in i-K+1...i is the
highest rate at which frames have been captured by the camera the
last K frames and alpha is a filter coefficient typically chosen as a
number in the interval [0.1, 0.001]. Since our assumption that v(i)
should be zero mean WGN is less accurate in some cases, we have
introduced an additional outlier filter around the updates of
var_v_hat. If z(i) > 3 var_v_hat the filter is updated with 3
sqrt(var_v_hat) rather than z(i). In a similar way, Q(i) is chosen
as a diagonal matrix with main diagonal elements given by
diag(Q(i)) = 30/(1000 * f_max)[10^-10 10^-2]^T
It is necessary to scale these filter parameters with the frame rate
to make the detector respond as quickly at low frame rates as at high
frame rates.
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3.2. Over-use detector
The offset estimate m(i) is compared with a threshold gamma_1. An
estimate above the threshold is considered as an indication of over-
use. Such an indication is not enough for the detector to signal
over-use to the rate control subsystem. Not until over-use has been
detected for at least gamma_2 milliseconds and at least gamma_3
frames, a definitive over-use will be signaled. However, if the
offset estimate m(i) was decreased in the last update, over-use will
not be signaled even if all the above conditions are met. Similarly,
the opposite state, under-use, is detected when m(i) < -gamma_1. If
neither over-use nor under-use is detected, the detector will be in
the normal state.
3.3. Rate control
The rate control at the receiving side is designed to increase the
available bandwidth estimate A_hat as long as the detected state is
normal. Doing that assures that we, sooner or later, will reach the
available bandwidth of the channel and detect an over-use.
As soon as over-use has been detected the available bandwidth
estimate is decreased. In this way we get a recursive and adaptive
estimate of the available bandwidth.
In this design description we make the assumption that the rate
control subsystem is executed periodically and that this period is
constant.
The rate control subsystem has 3 states: Increase, Decrease and Hold.
"Increase" is the state when no congestion is detected; "Decrease" is
the state where congestion is detected, and "Hold" is a state that
waits until built-up queues have drained before going to "increase"
state.
The state transitions (with blank fields meaning "remain in state")
are:
State ----> | Hold |Increase |Decrease
Signal-----------------------------------------
v | | |
Over-use | Decrease |Decrease |
-----------------------------------------------
Normal | Increase | |Hold
-----------------------------------------------
Under-use | |Hold |Hold
-----------------------------------------------
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The subsystem starts in the increase state, where it will stay until
over-use or under-use has been detected by the detector subsystem.
On every update the available bandwidth is increased with a factor
which is a function of the global system response time and the
estimated measurement noise variance var_v_hat. The global system
response time is the time from an increase that causes over-use until
that over-use can be detected by the over-use detector. The variance
var_v_hat affects how responsive the Kalman filter is, and is thus
used as an indicator of the delay inflicted by the Kalman filter.
A(i) = eta*A(i-1)
1.001+B
eta(RTT, var_v_hat) = ------------------------------------------
1+e^(b(d*RTT - (c1 * var_v_hat + c2)))
Here, B, b, d, c1 and c2 are design parameters.
Since the system depends on over-using the channel to verify the
current available bandwidth estimate, we must make sure that our
estimate doesn't diverge from the rate at which the sender is
actually sending. Thus, if the sender is unable to produce a bit
stream with the bit rate the receiver is asking for, the available
bandwidth estimate must stay within a given bound. Therefore we
introduce a threshold
A_hat(i) < 1.5 * R_hat(i)
where R_hat(i) is the incoming bit rate measured over a T seconds
window:
R_hat(i) = 1/T * sum(L(j)) for j from 1 to N(i)
N(i) is the number of frames received the past T seconds and L(j) is
the payload size of frame j.
When an over-use is detected the system transitions to the decrease
state, where the available bandwidth estimate is decreased to a
factor times the currently incoming bit rate.
A_hat(i) = alpha*R_hat(i)
alpha is typically chosen to be in the interval [0.8, 0.95].
When the detector signals under-use to the rate control subsystem, we
know that queues in the network path are being emptied, indicating
that our available bandwidth estimate is lower than the actual
available bandwidth. Upon that signal the rate control subsystem
will enter the hold state, where the available bandwidth estimate
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will be held constant while waiting for the queues to stabilize at a
lower level - a way of keeping the delay as low as possible. This
decrease of delay is wanted, and expected, immediately after the
estimate has been reduced due to over-use, but can also happen if the
cross traffic over some links is reduced. In either case we want to
measure the highest incoming rate during the under-use interval:
R_max = max{R_hat(i)} for i in 1..K
where K is the number of frames of under-use before returning to the
normal state. R_max is a measure of the actual bandwidth available
and is a good guess of what bit rate we should be able to transmit
at. Therefore the available bandwidth will be set to Rmax when we
transition from the hold state to the increase state.
4. Sender side control
An additional congestion controller resides at the sending side. It
bases its decisions on the round-trip time, packet loss and available
bandwidth estimates transmitted from the receiving side.
The available bandwidth estimates produced by the receiving side are
only reliable when the size of the queues along the channel are large
enough. If the queues are very short, over-use will only be visible
through packet losses, which aren't used by the receiving side
algorithm.
This algorithm is run every time a receive report arrives at the
sender, which will happen [[how often do we expect? and why?]]. If
no receive report is recieved within [[what timeout?]], the algorithm
will take action as if all packets in the interval have been lost.
[[does that make sense?]]
o If 2-10% of the packets have been lost since the previous report
from the receiver, the sender available bandwidth estimate As(i)
(As denotes 'sender available bandwidth') will be kept unchanged.
o If more than 10% of the packets have been lost a new estimate is
calculated as As(i)=As(i-1)(1-0.5p), where p is the loss ratio.
o As long as less than 2% of the packets have been lost As(i) will
be increased as As(i)=1.05(As(i-1)+1000)
The new send-side estimate is limited by the TCP Friendly Rate
Control formula [RFC3448] and the receive-side estimate of the
available bandwidth A(i):
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8 s
As(i) >= ----------------------------------------------------------
R*sqrt(2*b*p/3) + (t_RTO*(3*sqrt(3*b*p/8) * p * (1+32*p^2)))
As(i) <= A(i)
where b is the number of packets acknowledged by a single TCP
acknowledgement (set to 1 per TFRC recommendations), t_RTO is the TCP
retransmission timeout value in seconds (set to 4*R) and s is the
average packet size in bytes.
(The multiplication by 8 comes because TFRC is computing bandwidth in
bytes, while this document computes bandwidth in bits.)
In words: The sender-side estimate will never be larger than the
receiver-side estimate, and will never be lower than the estimate
from the TFRC formula.
We motivate the packet loss thresholds by noting that if we have
small amount of packet losses due to over-use, that amount will soon
increase if we don't adjust our bit rate. Therefore we will soon
enough reach above the 10 % threshold and adjust As(i). However if
the packet loss rate does not increase, the losses are probably not
related to self-induced channel over-use and therefore we should not
react on them.
5. Interoperability Considerations
There are three scenarios of interest, and one included for reference
o Both parties implement the algorithms described here
o Sender implements the algorithm described in section Section 4,
recipient does not implement Section 3
o Recipient implements the algorithm in section Section 3, sender
does not implement Section 4.
In the case where both parties implement the algorithms, we expect to
see most of the congestion control response to slowly varying
conditions happen by TMMBR messages from recipient to sender. At
most times, the sender will send less than the congestion-inducing
bandwidth limit C, and when he sends more, congestion will be
detected before packets are lost.
If sudden changes happen, packets will be lost, and the sender side
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control will trigger, limiting traffic until the congestion becomes
low enough that the system switches back to the receiver-controlled
state.
In the case where sender only implements, we expect to see somewhat
higher loss rates and delays, but the system will still be overall
TCP friendly and self-adjusting; the governing term in the
calculation will be the TFRC formula.
In the case where recipient implements this algorithm and sender does
not, congestion will be avoided for slow changes as long as the
sender understands and obeys TMMBR; there will be no backoff for
packet-loss-inducing changes in capacity. Given that some kind of
congestion control is mandatory for the sender according to the TMMBR
spec, this case has to be reevaluated against the specific congestion
control implemented by the sender.
6. Implementation Experience
This algorithm has been implemented in the open-source WebRTC
project.
7. Further Work
This draft is offered as input to the congestion control discussion.
Work that can be done on this basis includes:
o Consideration of timing info: It may be sensible to use the
proposed TFRC RTP header extensions
[I-D.gharai-avtcore-rtp-tfrc]to carry per-packet timing
information, which would both give more data points and a
timestamp applied closer to the network interface.
o Considerations of cross-channel calculation: If all packets in
multiple streams follow the same path over the network, congestion
or queueing information should be considered across all packets
between two parties, not just per media stream.
o Considerations of cross-channel balancing: The decision to slow
down sending in a situation with multiple media streams should be
taken across all media streams, not per stream.
o Considerations of additional input: How and where packet loss
detected at the recipient can be added to the algorithm.
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o Considerations of locus of control: Whether the sender or the
recipient is in the best position to figure out which media
streams it makes sense to slow down, and therefore whether one
should use TMMBR to slow down one channel, signal an overall
bandwidth change and let the sender make the decision, or signal
the (possibly processed) delay info and let the sender run the
algorithm.
These are matters for further work; since some of them involve
extensions that have not yet been standardized, this could take some
time, and it's important to consider when this work can be completed.
8. IANA Considerations
This document makes no request of IANA.
Note to RFC Editor: this section may be removed on publication as an
RFC.
9. Security Considerations
An attacker with the ability to insert or remove messages on the
connection will, of course, have the ability to mess up rate control,
causing people to send either too fast or too slow, and causing
congestion.
In this case, the control information is carried inside RTP, and can
be protected against modification or message insertion using SRTP,
just as for the media. Given that timestamps are carried in the RTP
header, which is not encrypted, this is not protected against
disclosure, but it seems hard to mount an attack based on timing
information only.
10. Acknowledgements
11. References
11.1. Normative References
[RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.
[RFC3448] Handley, M., Floyd, S., Padhye, J., and J. Widmer, "TCP
Friendly Rate Control (TFRC): Protocol Specification",
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RFC 3448, January 2003.
[RFC3550] Schulzrinne, H., Casner, S., Frederick, R., and V.
Jacobson, "RTP: A Transport Protocol for Real-Time
Applications", STD 64, RFC 3550, July 2003.
[RFC5104] Wenger, S., Chandra, U., Westerlund, M., and B. Burman,
"Codec Control Messages in the RTP Audio-Visual Profile
with Feedback (AVPF)", RFC 5104, February 2008.
11.2. Informative References
[I-D.gharai-avtcore-rtp-tfrc]
Gharai, L. and C. Perkins, "RTP with TCP Friendly Rate
Control", draft-gharai-avtcore-rtp-tfrc-00 (work in
progress), March 2011.
[RFC2914] Floyd, S., "Congestion Control Principles", BCP 41,
RFC 2914, September 2000.
Authors' Addresses
Henrik Lundin
Google
Kungsbron 2
Stockholm 11122
Sweden
Stefan Holmer
Google
Kungsbron 2
Stockholm 11122
Sweden
Email: holmer@google.com
Harald Alvestrand (editor)
Google
Kungsbron 2
Stockholm 11122
Sweden
Email: harald@alvestrand.no
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