A Transparent Reordering Robust TCP Proxy To Allow Per-Packet Load Balancing in Core Networks
Title | A Transparent Reordering Robust TCP Proxy To Allow Per-Packet Load Balancing in Core Networks |
Publication Type | Conference Paper |
Year of Publication | 2018 |
Authors | Ayar, T., Budzisz, Ł, Rathke, B. |
Conference Name | 2018 9th International Conference on the Network of the Future (NOF) |
Date Published | Nov. 2018 |
Publisher | IEEE |
ISBN Number | 978-1-5386-8503-7 |
Keywords | coupled congestion control, end-to-end transparency, fixed network providers, high bandwidth utilization, Internet, Load management, load-balancers, low computational complexity, mobile network providers, multiple paths, ORTA, Out of order, packet level load balancing research, packet reordering problem, per-packet load balancing, Proposals, pubcrawl, receiver sides, Receivers, resilience, Resiliency, resource allocation, Robustness, Routing protocols, Scalability, TCP end-points, TCP packet reorderings, TCP sender end-hosts, TCP traffic, telecommunication congestion control, telecommunication traffic, Transparent reordering robust TCP proxy, transport protocols |
Abstract | The idea to use multiple paths to transport TCP traffic seems very attractive due to its potential benefits it may offer for both redundancy and better utilization of available resources by load balancing. Fixed and mobile network providers employ frequently load-balancers that use multiple paths on either per-flow or per-destination level, but very seldom on per-packet level. Despite of the benefits of packet-level load balancing mechanisms (e.g., low computational complexity and high bandwidth utilization) network providers can't use them mainly because of TCP packet reorderings that harm TCP performance. Emerging network architectures also support multiple paths, but they face with the same obstacle in balancing their load to multiple paths. Indeed, packet level load balancing research is paralyzed by the reordering vulnerability of TCP.A couple of TCP variants exist that deal with TCP packet reordering problem, but due to lack of end-to-end transparency they were not widely deployed and adopted. In this paper, we revisit TCP's packet reorderings problem and present a transparent and light-weight algorithm, Out-of-Order Robustness for TCP with Transparent Acknowledgment (ACK) Intervention (ORTA), to deal with out-of-order deliveries.ORTA works as a transparent thin layer below TCP and hides harmful side-effects of packet-level load balancing. ORTA monitors all TCP flow packets and uses ACK traffic shaping, without any modifications to either TCP sender or receiver sides. Since it is transparent to TCP end-points, it can be easily deployed on TCP sender end-hosts (EHs), gateway (GW) routers, or access points (APs). ORTA opens a door for network providers to use per-packet load balancing.The proposed ORTA algorithm is implemented and tested in NS-2. The results show that ORTA can prevent TCP performance decrease when per-packet load balancing is used. |
URL | https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/8597862 |
DOI | 10.1109/NOF.2018.8597862 |
Citation Key | ayar_transparent_2018 |
- TCP end-points
- receiver sides
- Receivers
- resilience
- Resiliency
- resource allocation
- Robustness
- Routing protocols
- Scalability
- pubcrawl
- TCP packet reorderings
- TCP sender end-hosts
- TCP traffic
- telecommunication congestion control
- telecommunication traffic
- Transparent reordering robust TCP proxy
- transport protocols
- coupled congestion control
- Proposals
- per-packet load balancing
- packet reordering problem
- packet level load balancing research
- Out of order
- ORTA
- multiple paths
- mobile network providers
- low computational complexity
- load-balancers
- Load management
- internet
- high bandwidth utilization
- fixed network providers
- end-to-end transparency