Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://idr.l2.nitk.ac.in/jspui/handle/123456789/16836
Title: Mitigating The Bufferbloat Problem To Reduce Internet Transport Latency
Authors: Patil, Sachin Dattatraya.
Supervisors: Tahiliani, Mohit P.
Keywords: Department of Computer Science & Engineering;Bufferbloat;Active Queue Management;CoDel;PIE
Issue Date: 2020
Publisher: National Institute of Technology Karnataka, Surathkal
Abstract: There has been a proliferation of high capacity routers on the Internet to appropriately utilize the high-speed data links. These routers typically consist of very large buffers because the memory prices have fallen sharply. Due to surplus buffering, packets experience an excessive queuing delay which leads to a significant degradation in the overall performance and largely reduces the quality of service for time-critical applications. The above-mentioned problem is known as bufferbloat. Active Queue Management (AQM) is a promising technique to minimize the impact of Bufferbloat and improve the quality of service for time-critical applications. Several AQM algorithms have been designed to monitor and limit the growth of the queue at routers. Controlled Delay (CoDel) and Proportional Integral controller Enhanced (PIE) are two popular AQM algorithms which are designed to address the problem of bufferbloat. One of the vital characteristics of AQM algorithms is to maintain a proper trade-off between queue delay and bottleneck link utilization. However, maintaining this trade-off becomes challenging when unresponsive flows crossing the router do not respond to congestion notifications, e.g., congestion agnostic UDP flows. Unresponsive flows increase queue delay, affect the queue stability and lead to more packet losses. Additionally, AQM algorithms do not provide adequate fairness when responsive flows and unresponsive flows share the same bottleneck link. Unresponsive flows tend to dominate the bandwidth consumption due to lack of congestion control. This leads to fairness problems and subsequently, the performance of responsive flows degrades significantly. One of the potential approaches to resolve the problem of unfairness between responsive and unresponsive flows is to provide flow protection by integrating AQM algorithms with packet scheduling algorithms, such as Deficit Round Robin (DRR). The main goal of this work is to enhance the robustness of AQM algorithms against unresponsive traffic and provide fairness when responsive and unresponsive flows coexist. Along these lines, this thesis makes the following contributions: we propose Modified iCoDel and Minstrel PIE as enhancements to CoDel and PIE, respectively to increase their robustness against unresponsive flows. Subsequently, we propose Flow Queue Minstrel PIE (FQ-Minstrel PIE) to address the concern of fairness among responsive and unresponsive flows. Besides these primary contributions, we have developed a fluid model to obtain an in-depth understanding of working of CoDel and Modified CoDel, aligned the implementation of PIE in Linux kernel to RFC 8033 and implemented a new model for Flow Queue PIE (FQ-PIE) in the Linux kernel. Extensive evaluations conducted through mathematical modeling, simulations and real-time experiments show that Modified CoDel achieves better performance against unresponsive flows. However, we note that Modified CoDel is not scalable and fails to perform due to inherent limitations in the design of CoDel. Conversely, it is observed that Minstrel PIE, a minor enhancement of PIE, offers significant performance improvements against unresponsive traffic, and FQ-Minstrel PIE resolves the fairness problem between responsive and unresponsive flows. The work on aligning the PIE implementation in Linux kernel with RFC 8033 is merged in the mainline of Linux kernel since v5.1 and the FQ-PIE algorithm is merged in the mainline of Linux kernel since v5.5.
URI: http://idr.nitk.ac.in/jspui/handle/123456789/16836
Appears in Collections:1. Ph.D Theses

Files in This Item:
File Description SizeFormat 
138039CS13F07.pdf4.7 MBAdobe PDFThumbnail
View/Open


Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.