One document matched: draft-gomez-cellularip-perf-00.txt
INTERNET-DRAFT A. T. Cambell, S. Kim, J. Gomez, C-Y. Wan
Columbia University
Z. Turanyi, A. Valko
Ericsson
October 1999
<draft-gomez-cellularip-perf-00.txt>
Expires May 2000
Cellular IP Performance
Status of this Memo
This document is an Internet-Draft and is in full conformance with
all provisions of Section 10 of RFC 2026.
Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering
Task Force (IETF), its areas, and its working groups. Note that other
groups may also distribute working documents as Internet-Drafts.
Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months
vand 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."
The list of current Internet-Drafts can be accessed at
http://www.ietf.org/ietf/1id-abstracts.txt.
The list of Internet-Draft Shadow Directories can be accessed at
http://www.ietf.org/shadow.html.
Abstract
Cellular IP specifies a protocol that allows routing IP datagrams to
a mobile host. The protocol is intended to provide local mobility and
handoff support. It can interwork with Mobile IP [1] to provide wide
area mobility support. This I-D provides performance results based on
the implementation and analysis of Cellular IP as defined by draft
draft-valko-cellularip-01.txt [2]. The evaluation is focused on
handoff performance, optimum active-state-timeout choice and
scalability issues. The Cellular IP source code used for the
experimental results presented in this Internet-Draft is freely
available from comet.columbia.edu/cellularip.
Campbell, Gomez, Kim, Turanyi, Valko,Wan Expires May 2000 [Page 1]
INTERNET-DRAFT Cellular IP Performance 18 November 1999
Table of Contents
1. Introduction. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
2. Implementation 3
2.1. Node Module . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
2.2. Mobile Host Module. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
3. Evaluation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
3.1. The experiments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
3.2. Handoff Performance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
3.3. Active-state-timeout. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
3.4. Scalability Issues. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
References 11
Authors' Addresses 11
1. Introduction
Cellular IP inherits cellular technology principles for mobility
management, passive connectivity and handoff support, but implements
these around the IP paradigm. The universal component of a Cellular
IP network is the Cellular IP node that serves as wireless access
point but at the same time routes IP packets and integrates cellular
control functionality traditionally found in Mobile Switching Centers
(MSC) and Base Station Controllers (BSC). The nodes are built on
regular IP forwarding engine, but IP routing is replaced by Cellular
IP routing and location management. The Cellular IP network is
connected to the Internet via a gateway router. Mobile hosts attached
to the network use the IP address of the gateway as their Mobile IP
care-of address.
In Cellular IP, location management and handoff support are
integrated with routing. To minimize control messaging, regular data
packets transmitted by mobile hosts are used to establish host
location information. Uplink packets are routed from a mobile host to
a gateway on a hop-by-hop basis. The path taken by these packets is
cached in intermediate nodes. To route downlink packets addressed to
a mobile host the path used by recent packets transmitted by a mobile
host is reversed. When the mobile host has no data to send then it
transmits ICMP IP packets called route-updates to the gateway to
maintain its downlink routing soft-state. Following the principle of
passive connectivity commonly found in cellular systems mobile hosts
that have not received packets for some period of time allow their
downlink routes be cleared from the caches as dictated by soft-state
timers. In order to route packets to idle hosts a Cellular IP
mechanism called paging is used.
The source code for Cellular IP v1.0 [4] developed at Columbia
University is freely available (comet.columbia.edu/cellularip) for
experimentation. This Internet-Draft provides an overview of the
source code design and implementation. In addition, the experimental
results presented in this memo are based on the public domain source
code operating on a Cellular IP testbed built at Columbia University.
For a full discussion of Cellular IP see [3] and for a full
Campbell, Gomez, Kim, Turanyi, Valko,Wan Expires May 2000 [Page 2]
INTERNET-DRAFT Cellular IP Performance 18 November 1999
specification of the protocol see [2].
2. Implementation
Cellular IP is based on modular software design and is implemented on
FreeBSD 3.2 software platforms in user space. Cellular IP is
comprised two protocol modules: the node and mobile host modules.
Both protocol modules rely on a common system module. The system
module filters IP packets from the physical medium and moves them to
user space and delivers packets processed in user space to the
required network interface. The system module uses the Berkeley
Packet Filter's Packet Capture library (PCAP). In what follows, we
describe the node and mobile host protocol modules.
2.1. Node Module
As described previously, the Cellular IP node serves as wireless
access point, router and location manager. In addition, our
implementation allows a node to also implement the gateway
functionality relying on the kernel's IP routing function. In our
implementation, the uplink and downlink neighbors are configured by
network management. This is in contrast to the gateway beacon
approach discussed in [2]. Along with the routing and (optional)
paging cache, the most important functions of the node include:
- a paging update function, which maintains the paging cache by
updating it for each uplink packet and by clearing expired mappings;
- a classifier, which parses uplink packets and selects those that
should update the routing cache (data, route-update and semisoft
packets);
- a route update function, which maintains the routing cache by
updating it for each packet selected by the classifier and clears
expired mappings;
- a routing cache lookup function, which parses downlink packets and
searches the routing cache for mapping(s) associated with the
destination mobile host;
- a paging cache lookup function, which searches the paging cache for
mappings if a routing cache mapping was not found;
- a forwarding engine, which forwards downlink packets to the
interface selected by routing cache lookup in the first instance and
by paging cache lookup if no route was found; and
- a delay device, which is temporarily inserted in the downlink route
if a semisoft handoff is in progress.
Our implementation uses 2 Mbps 2.4 GHz WaveLAN radio devices, but the
protocol module can transparently interwork with other radio
interfaces. Note that the source code also works with a variety of
higher speed radios (e.g., Aironet's 11 Mbps and WaveLAN IEEE 802.11
Campbell, Gomez, Kim, Turanyi, Valko,Wan Expires May 2000 [Page 3]
INTERNET-DRAFT Cellular IP Performance 18 November 1999
10/6 Mbps cards). A Cellular IP node may have multiple air interfaces
or no air interface at all if it serves as a concentrator node only.
In addition to the functions described above, the node contains a
beacon generator for each wireless interface. In Cellular IP, the
content of the beacon is similar to the standard WaveLAN beacon but
is extended with the gateway's IP address.
2.2. Mobile host module
The mobile host module is implemented as a deamon that in our
experimental testbed runs in user space. The standard IP protocol
stack is not touched by the Cellular IP deamon and applications are
unaware of mobility. The main elements of the deamon are as follows:
- a handoff controller, which keeps statistics of measured beacon
strengths and decides and performs handoff. Handoff mainly involves
the setting of radio frequency and changing the IP default route to a
new node's address. In the case of the semi-soft handoff mode, a
semi-soft packet is first transmitted to the new base station has
part of the mobile initiated handoff procedure and after a constant
time delay the handoff is completed to the new base station.
- a protocol state machine, which has two states: active and idle
state. In idle state, any incoming packet triggers a transition to
active state. At the same time, a timer is initiated that is reset by
each incoming packet. The expiration of the timer triggers the
transition to idle state.
- a control packet generator, which periodically transmits route-
update or paging-update packets as required by the state machine. The
packet generator also monitors outgoing packet to stop transmitting
control packets when data is being transmitted.
3. Evaluation
To evaluate Cellular IP performance we have built a testbed and
designed a set of experiments to analyze the Cellular IP algorithms
discussed in [2]. In what follows we describe our Cellular IP testbed
configuration and experimental results.
3.1 The Experiments
The goal of the experiments is to evaluate the performance and
scalability of the Cellular IP protocol. An important object of the
first experiment is to analyze the performance of hard and semi-soft
handoffs and to investigate the impact of handoff on TCP performance.
The second experiment investigates the cost of setting the active-
state-timeout. In the third and last experiment we investigate the
scalability limits of a node based on off the shelf multi-homed PC
hardware. This experiment provides some insight into what would be
achievable for a Cellular IP node built from commodity hardware,
operating systems and air-interfaces. The experimental results of the
Cellular IP node implementation are therefore conditioned more by the
technology used than the protocol itself.
Campbell, Gomez, Kim, Turanyi, Valko,Wan Expires May 2000 [Page 4]
INTERNET-DRAFT Cellular IP Performance 18 November 1999
|
_______ ___|___
| | | |
| Host | | Router|
|_______| LAN |_______|
_________|_______________________________|________
___|___
| | Gateway
| B1 |
|_______|
_________| |________
___|___ ___|___
| | | |
| B2 | | B3 |
|_______| |_______|
____
| |
| MH |
|____|
Figure 1. A Cellular IP Testbed
Figure 1. Cellular IP Testbed
URL:http://comet.columbia.edu/cellularip/publications/draft-gomez-
cellularip-perf-00.pdf
All of the experiments described below were conducted using the
configuration of shown in Figure 1. The Cellular IP network consists
of three nodes, all multi-homed 300 MHz Pentium PCs. One of the nodes
also serves as gateway router. 100 Mbps full duplex links
interconnects Cellular IP nodes and the gateway is connected to a 100
Mbps Ethernet LAN. In the experiments, the correspondent host is a
Sun SPARCstation 5 with Solaris operating system. The mobile host is
a 300 MHz Pentium PC notebook. The mobile host and the nodes are
equipped with WaveLAN 2.4 GHz radio interfaces. These devices can
operate at eight different frequencies to avoid interference between
adjacent cells. In the testbed the nodes stations are statically
assigned frequencies while the mobile can dynamically change
frequency to perform a handoff. Throughout the experiments the mobile
host is in the overlapping region of the cells which gave us full
control over handoffs. We have extended the mobile host's
implementation with a utility that can periodically trigger handoffs
regardless of the signal strength observed at the mobile host under
experiment. A handoff initiated by this utility tool is identical to
a handoff triggered by signal strength measurements at the mobile
host.
3.2. Handoff Performance
In this experiment we measured packet loss for hard and semi-soft
handoff. During these measurements the mobile host receives 100 byte
Campbell, Gomez, Kim, Turanyi, Valko,Wan Expires May 2000 [Page 5]
INTERNET-DRAFT Cellular IP Performance 18 November 1999
UDP packets at rates of 25 and 50 packets per second (pps) while
continually making handoffs between nodes B2 and B3 every 5 seconds.
The measurement results are shown in Table 1. Each point in the table
was obtained by averaging loss measurements over 50 consecutive
handoffs. To vary the round-trip time between the mobile host and B1,
we emulate an increasing load that results in an increased buffering
of downlink packets. Table 1 shows that hard handoff causes packet
losses proportional to the round-trip time and to the downlink packet
rate. Under these experimental conditions hard handoff results in at
least 1 packet loss for small mobile to gateway round-trip delays and
up to 4 packet losses for delays of 80 ms.
Packet Loss per Handoff
| Hard(25 pps) Hard(50 pps) Semi-soft(25 and 50 pps)
_________________|____________________________________________________
Mobile-GW 3 | 0.2 0.68 0
roud-trip 43 | 1.22 2.64 0
time [ms] 83 | 2.21 4.50 0
Table 1. Downlink Packet Loss during Handoff
Figure 2. Downlink Packet Loss during Handoff
URL:http://comet.columbia.edu/cellularip/publications/draft-gomez-
cellularip-perf-00.pdf
Table 1 also shows packet loss that results from using Cellular IP
semi-soft handoff [2]. The experimental conditions for semi-soft and
hard handoff were identical. In these experiments, the new downlink
packet stream was delayed by one buffer holding for each packet until
the arrival of the next downlink packet. See [3] for full details.
When the semi-soft handoff is complete, the last packet is cleared
from the delay device [3] buffer and is forwarded to the mobile host.
Table 1 illustrates that semi-soft handoff eliminated packet loss
entirely. Note that buffering a single packet in the delay element is
sufficient to eliminate loss even in the case of a large round-trip
time when hard handoff resulted in the loss of up to four packets.
This is because semi-soft buffering is only used to compensate for
the difference between the transmission times along the old and new
paths and not for the entire round-trip time between the mobile and
the cross-over point.
In the next experiment, we studied the impact of handoff performance
on TCP Reno throughput. The mobile host performed continuous handoff
between B2 and B3 at fixed time intervals. We measured TCP throughput
using ttcp by downloading 16 MBytes of data from the correspondent
host to the mobile host. Each data point represents an average of 6
independent measurements. TCP throughput to a mobile host performing
hard handoff is shown in Table 2. The throughput measured at zero
handoff frequency (i.e., under no handoff conditions) is slightly
less than the 1.6 Mbps achieved using standard IP forwarding in the
same configuration. This difference between IP and Cellular IP
Campbell, Gomez, Kim, Turanyi, Valko,Wan Expires May 2000 [Page 6]
INTERNET-DRAFT Cellular IP Performance 18 November 1999
forwarding is attributed to the fact that IP is implemented in the
kernel and Cellular IP in user space. In addition, Cellular IP uses
PCAP to forward packets, which is not optimized for IP forwarding. We
observe that the performance of TCP degrades as the handoff frequency
increases due to packet loss. As the handoff rate increases TCP has
less time to recover from loss forcing it to operate below its
optimal point and resulting in a significant drop in performance as
the handoff rate moves toward one per second.
The next experiment investigated the improvement gained using the
semi-soft handoff. The experimental condition for the semi-soft and
hard handoff measurements were identical. Table 2 also shows TCP
throughput to a mobile host that performs semi-soft handoffs at
increasing rates. Semi-soft handoff reduced packet loss and
significantly improved the throughput in relation to hard handoff.
Downlink TCP throughput [kbps]
| Hard Semi-soft Semi-soft
| (1 buffer) (8 buffer)
____________|_____________________________________________
0 | 1500 1510 1560
2 | 1423 1426 1530
Number of 3 | 1193 1411 1520
handoffs 5 | 1120 1350 1500
per minute 10 | 1082 1345 1490
20 | 966 1300 1480
30 | 891 1232 1470
60 | 519 1036 1430
Table 2. Throughput of TCP Donwload
Figure 3. Throughput of TCP Download
URL:http://comet.columbia.edu/cellularip/publications/draft-gomez-
cellularip-perf-00.pdf
However, unlike in the UDP traffic experiment, packet loss is not
entirely eliminated which is reflected in the decline of throughput
at increasing handoff frequency. We attribute this to the fact that
the delay we inserted in the downlink packet stream by buffering
packets is tied to the packet inter-arrival time which is both
shorter and more irregular in a TCP flow than in our UDP example. To
introduce sufficient delay even if a few packets arrive back-to-back,
we changed the semi-soft delay element to an 8-packet circular
buffer. Table 2 shows the performance results using this delay
element. Here, packet loss at handoff is entirely eliminated and a
slight disturbance only remains due to the transmission delay
variations encountered at handoff. We point out that even for one
handoff per second, the throughput is almost identical to that
observed for a static host. This result looks very promising.
Campbell, Gomez, Kim, Turanyi, Valko,Wan Expires May 2000 [Page 7]
INTERNET-DRAFT Cellular IP Performance 18 November 1999
3.3. Active-State-Timeout
Now we analyze the tradeoff involved in the setting of the active-
state-timeout. In Table 3, we show paging traffic rate measured in
the testbed using a set of typical Internet applications. It must be
noted that these values depend heavily on the user behavior and this
data is presented for illustrative purposes only.
Our measurements involved 4 minute sessions where the route-update
time is 100 ms and a recently created route has a validity time of
300 ms. In the telnet and WWW sessions the mobile host is the client.
We collected data from two sets of measurements for two different
active-state-timeout values. As discussed in [2], this parameter
determines the time a mobile host maintains its routing cache
mappings after receiving a packet. In other words, the active-state-
timeout reflects the expectation that one downlink packet may with
high probability be soon followed by another and that it is worth
keeping up-to-date routing information for some time, despite the
cost associated with transmitting route-update packets. Indeed, as
Table 3 shows, taking a larger active-state-timeout decreases the
paging traffic for all applications. The difference between
applications is also intuitive. An interactive application (e.g.,
telnet) sends one or more packets to the server triggering some
action on the server side. This in turn results in new packet(s)
being sent back. In the case of a local server, paging only occurs
when the time to process the request exceeds the active-state-
timeout. This is rare, hence the low paging rate for local telnet
sessions. The packet round-trip time adds to the server processing
time for remote sessions. Table 3 shows that in some cases the total
response time exceeded 1 sec in this example.
Rate of Paging Traffic to Mobile [bps]
| telnet telnet WWW WWW VIC VIC
| local remote local remote to mobile from mobile
________________|____________________________________________________
Active 100 ms | 79 391 118 1507 800 39
state 1 sec | 2 94 47 438 61 3
timeout
Table 3. Paging Traffic Rate Generate by Some Applications
Figure 4. Paging Traffic Rate Generated by Some Applications
URL:http://comet.columbia.edu/cellularip/publications/draft-gomez-
cellularip-perf-00.pdf
A similar difference can be observed between the local and remote WWW
sessions. In this case paging occurs when the response time exceeded
the active-state-timeout. We observe that this is rare when accessing
a local server but frequent in the case of remote communications. In
addition, when large amounts of data are downloaded TCP sometimes
stalls which also resulted in paging being triggered for any pauses
that exceeded the active-state-timeout. Our final example application
is VIC. With the mobile host being the receiver of the video stream,
Campbell, Gomez, Kim, Turanyi, Valko,Wan Expires May 2000 [Page 8]
INTERNET-DRAFT Cellular IP Performance 18 November 1999
we note that the state machine at the mobile host rarely moves to
idle state since each incoming packet resets the active-state-
timeout. Because of the relatively large data rate (500 kbps) in our
experiment the paging rate is significant, however. We observed that
when the mobile host transmits packet video then the downlink packets
only carry quality of service information and paging rate is
negligible.
3.4. Scalability
The main concern in terms of scalability is the use of per-host
routes. We believe that there has to be per-host state in the access
network to support high performance handoff. In Cellular IP
scalability is achieved despite per host routes by separating the
location management of idle from active mobile hosts. Data packets
are normally routed by route cache mappings. The size of the route
cache is determined by the number of mobile hosts in active state at
any one time. This way the Cellular IP network can accommodate very
large number of mobile hosts without having to search large data
bases for each packet and This separation principle is fundamental to
scalability as per-host state is to handoff performance in a Cellular
IP network.
In following experiment we investigate the performance of our node
implementation. Table 4 shows the node throughput for linear and
binary-tree search algorithms measured on a multi-homed 300 MHz
Pentium PC using ttcp and 1500 byte packets. In these measurements we
substituted a 100 Mbps Ethernet connection for the radio interface
and created routing cache mappings for random IP addresses to emulate
a large active user population. The fact that the throughput curve is
hardly decreasing with increasing routing cache size (binary-tree
search) suggests that in the studied scenarios the performance
bottleneck was not the cache lookup time. To verify this assumption
we also measured the throughput that a single traffic stream achieved
using standard IP forwarding through the multi-homed PC. As shown in
Table 4, the Cellular IP node throughput is somewhat below the
standard IP throughput due to the additional packet processing
involved with PCAP and additional packet copies across kernel and
user space domains. In our implementation, the routing cache is
stored in a binary tree to achieve fast lookups. We also measured the
performance of the search algorithm and found that the maximum packet
rate can be well approximated as
2,500,000
______________
1 + 2 log(n)
where n is the number of mappings in the cache. This explains that
the performance bottleneck was found to be the network interface
throughput rather then the search time over the range measured. For
significantly larger user populations the cache lookup would likely
become a bottleneck too. We did not, however, verify this thesis due
to memory size constraints and unavailability of network interfaces
that operated in excess of 100 Mbps. To illustrate this phenomenon we
Campbell, Gomez, Kim, Turanyi, Valko,Wan Expires May 2000 [Page 9]
INTERNET-DRAFT Cellular IP Performance 18 November 1999
also experimented with linear search instead of the binary tree. The
throughput measured for the linear case is presented in Table 4 and
shows that when the user population exceeds 100 the cache lookup
becomes the bottleneck. When the user population reaches 5000 the
maximum throughput obtained is drastically diminished.
Throughput [Mbps]
| Linear Binary
| Search Search
_____________________|_________________________________
1 | 65 63
11 | 64 62
101 | 63 62
Number of 301 | 55 62
entries in 1001 | 44 61
routing cache 4001 | 22 61
6001 | 14 61
100001 | - 60
1000001 | - 59
IP forwarding throughput = 73 Mbps.
Table 4. Node Throughput.
Figure 5. Node Throughput
URL:http://comet.columbia.edu/cellularip/publications/draft-gomez-
cellularip-perf-00.pdf
The advantage of using paging is now clear from the results. If for
example, a network serves n mobile hosts at a time, 0.1*n active at a
time, then we can scale up the results obtained in Table 4 by a
factor of 10 for example. In addition, with state-of-the-art L2
hardware Cellular IP will out perform these results in terms of the
number of users that can be supported. This means that scalability
limits are promising, but no doubt there are limits. However this is
the price paid for the simplicity of the protocol design and smooth
handoff support. This confirms the strength of Cellular IP as an
access technology that can interwork with Mobile IP to provide global
mobility.
Another way to leverage the scalability problem created by using
per-host routes is to shorten the validity times of active entries in
the routing cache and/or reducing the duration that a mobile host
actively keeps its route updated as in the case of active state.
These two procedures further limit the number of valid entries in a
routing cache thus reducing route searching times to a minimum for
incoming packets. Shortening validity times of routing entries can
only be achieved at the expense of increasing the transmission rate
of route-update packets in mobile hosts. On the other hand, by
reducing the active-state-timeout value the mobile host can limit the
period of time it keeps its route updated (e.g., transmit route-
update packets) after it received the last packet. Therefore a
compromise between the size of the routing cache and the load of
Campbell, Gomez, Kim, Turanyi, Valko,Wan Expires May 2000[Page 10]
INTERNET-DRAFT Cellular IP Performance 18 November 1999
control packets in the access network is important.
For full details associated with the evaluation of Cellular IP
draft-valko-cellularip-01.txt see [3]
References
[1] "IP Mobility Support," C. Perkins, ed., IETF RFC 2002, October
1996.
[2] "Cellular IP," A. Valko, Z. Turanyi, A.T. Campbell, J. Gomez,
Internet Draft, draft-valko-cellularip-01.txt, October 1999, Work in
Progress.
[3] "Performance of a Cellular IP", A. T. Campbell, J. Gomez, S. Kim,
A. Valko, Z. Turanyi and C.-Y. Wan October 1999 (submitted for
publication).
[4] Cellular IP Source Code Distribution,
comet.columbia.edu/cellularip, November, 1999.
Authors' Addresses
Andrew T. Campbell, Sanghyo Kim, Javier Gomez, Chieh-Yih Wan
Department of Electrical Engineering, Columbia University
Rm. 801 Schapiro Research Building
530 W. 120th Street, New York, N.Y. 10027
phone: (212) 854 3109
fax : (212) 316 9068
email: [javierg,campbell,shkim2,wan]@comet.columbia.edu
Zoltan R. Turanyi, Andras G. Valko
Ericsson Traffic Analysis and Network Performance Laboratory
H-1300 Bp.3.P.O.Box 197, Hungary
phone: +36 1 437 7774
fax : +36 1 437 7219
email: andras.valko,@lt.eth.ericsson.se,
Zoltan.Turanyi@eth.ericsson.se
Campbell, Gomez, Kim, Turanyi, Valko,Wan Expires May 2000[Page 11]
| PAFTECH AB 2003-2026 | 2026-04-22 13:22:43 |