On the Bottleneck Structure of Congestion-Controlled Networks

Author:

Ros-Giralt Jordi1,Bohara Atul1,Yellamraju Sruthi1,Langston M. Harper1,Lethin Richard1,Jiang Yuang2,Tassiulas Leandros2,Li Josie3,Tan Yuanlong3,Veeraraghavan Malathi3

Affiliation:

1. Reservoir Labs, New York City, NY, USA

2. Yale University, New Haven, CT, USA

3. University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA, USA

Abstract

In this paper, we introduce theTheory of Bottleneck Ordering, a mathematical framework that reveals the bottleneck structure of data networks. This theoretical framework provides insights into the inherent topological properties of a network in at least three areas: (1) It identifies the regions of influence of each bottleneck; (2) it reveals the order in which bottlenecks (and flows traversing them) converge to their steady state transmission rates in distributed congestion control algorithms; and (3) it provides key insights into the design of optimized traffic engineering policies. We demonstrate the efficacy of the proposed theory in TCP congestion-controlled networks for two broad classes of algorithms: Congestion-based algorithms (TCP BBR) and loss-based additive-increase/multiplicative-decrease algorithms (TCP Cubic and Reno). Among other results, our network experiments show that: (1) Qualitatively, both classes of congestion control algorithms behave as predicted by the bottleneck structure of the network; (2) flows compete for bandwidth only with other flows operating at the same bottleneck level; (3) BBR flows achieve higher performance and fairness than Cubic and Reno flows due to their ability to operate at the right bottleneck level; (4) the bottleneck structure of a network is continuously changing and its levels can be folded due to variations in the flows' round trip times; and (5) against conventional wisdom, low-hitter flows can have a large impact to the overall performance of a network.

Funder

DOE Advanced Scientific Computing Research

Publisher

Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)

Subject

General Medicine

Reference33 articles.

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2. Neal Cardwell Yuchung Cheng C. Stephen Gunn Soheil Hassas Yeganeh and Van Jacobson. 2016. BBR: Congestion- Based Congestion Control. ACM Queue 14 5 Article 50 (October 2016) 34 pages. https://doi.org/10.1145/3012426.3022184 Neal Cardwell Yuchung Cheng C. Stephen Gunn Soheil Hassas Yeganeh and Van Jacobson. 2016. BBR: Congestion- Based Congestion Control. ACM Queue 14 5 Article 50 (October 2016) 34 pages. https://doi.org/10.1145/3012426.3022184

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