Re: [Masque] MASQUE extensibility

David Schinazi <dschinazi.ietf@gmail.com> Wed, 06 January 2021 09:07 UTC

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From: David Schinazi <dschinazi.ietf@gmail.com>
Date: Wed, 06 Jan 2021 10:06:48 +0100
Message-ID: <CAPDSy+5hJvP=i5SEzMczsxT-OixwU54sdCJoAd6Nmrfj-OBc4A@mail.gmail.com>
To: Christopher Wood <caw@heapingbits.net>
Cc: Martin Duke <martin.h.duke@gmail.com>, Mirja Kuehlewind <mirja.kuehlewind=40ericsson.com@dmarc.ietf.org>, "masque@ietf.org" <masque@ietf.org>
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Subject: Re: [Masque] MASQUE extensibility
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Hi Chris,

Thanks for your note, I think that we should strive to reach consensus on
extensibility goals, requirements, and means around our upcoming interim.
However, I don't understand all of your individual questions (for example,
I don't understand what the word "fixed" means in the first question).
Perhaps allow me to try to phrase these questions differently, to attempt
to distill fundamental concepts.

What we're mainly building is a way to convey data (e.g. the payload of a
UDP packet) and metadata (e.g. the UDP port number); I'll further subdivide
metadata into two categories: repeatable-metadata (e.g. the IP address of
the target-server, ECN-ECT(0) vs CE) and non-repeatable-metadata (e.g. the
timestamp of when the UDP packet was received). One way we could have built
CONNECT-UDP was to send all repeatable-metadata and non-repeatable-metadata
in every single packet, i.e. every single DATAGRAM frame carries the
target-server IP and port. But, in order to improve efficiency and simplify
management on the proxy, we decided to associate repeatable-metadata with a
flow ID, and then only transmit the flow ID in DATAGRAM frames. This
introduced the need for managing lifetimes (how long does the proxy
maintain the mapping between flow ID and target-server IP+port?). We
decided to tie this lifetime to the existence of the bidirectional stream
that carried the CONNECT-UDP request. We did this because it resembled how
CONNECT worked, but also because it was efficient and relatively simple to
implement.

Now, to dive into your questions, let's focus on the example of CONNECT-UDP
with ECN support. ECN adds two more bits of metadata per packet, and those
bits are repeatable-metadata. From my point of view, the most logical way
to encode those is to reuse the mechanism we built for vanilla CONNECT-UDP:
we associate this repeatable-metadata with a flow ID. The latest version of
the drafts (see links below) does this by having the CONNECT-UDP
request/response negotiate four flow IDs. But we could have built this
differently.

Question 1: should repeatable-metadata be sent in each DATAGRAM frame, or
associated with something like a flow ID?
    The efficiency benefits lead me to conclude that associated is
preferable.

Question 2: should the lifetimes of these mapping be distinct or tied?
I.e., should we be able to get in a state where we have a mapping for
ECN-CE but not for ECN-ECT(0)?
    Separate lifetimes can lead to odd bugs, so I'd prefer to tie them.
This means not using four bidirectional streams per CONNECT-UDP with ECN
flow.

Question 3: Where do we encode this mapping? Flow ID or new QUIC or H3
frames?
    The flow ID is a simple concept that is simple to implement, especially
if you don't control the underlying QUIC stack, so I prefer those.

With this reasoning, I think that the current proposal is a good solution
to our constraints. But if someone disagrees with these conclusions, please
let me know - perhaps there are other concerns that I'm not aware of.

draft-schinazi-masque-h3-datagram-04
<https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-schinazi-masque-h3-datagram-04>
draft-ietf-masque-connect-udp-03
<https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-masque-connect-udp-03>
draft-schinazi-masque-connect-udp-ecn-01
<https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-schinazi-masque-connect-udp-ecn-01>

Cheers,
David

On Tue, Jan 5, 2021 at 9:05 PM Christopher Wood <caw@heapingbits.net> wrote:

> Happy New Year, all!
>
> Thanks to everyone who chimed in on this thread! To summarize responses we
> received so far, it seems clear that we want extensibility for CONNECT-UDP
> and the future IP proxying mechanism, and that these should exist in
> separate documents. David’s draft specifying an ECN extension [1] is one
> such example. It also seems clear that HTTP headers make for a perfectly
> fine extension point for CONNECT-X requests.
>
> What remains unclear is how to support extensions within a proxy context,
> i.e., a CONNECT-UDP stream. Martin nicely outlined some of the variants,
> such as encoding things in per-datagram framing bits, negotiating and
> encoding information in flow IDs, or using different frame types entirely.
> We should try to converge on which of these options we need for generic
> tunneling or proxying use cases.
>
> To that end, here’s a couple questions that might help us get there:
>
> - Should flow ID interpretation be negotiated as part of an extension, or
> should it be fixed for CONNECT-UDP? (The latter is the approach taken in
> [1].)
> - What are the tradeoffs between per-datagram signalling state versus,
> say, a different datagram frame type for different use cases? And which of
> these is maximally useful for CONNECT-UDP use cases?
> - What are the tradeoffs between per-datagram and flow ID signalling?
>
> We hope these (or related questions) can be discussed before and during
> the interim.
>
> Thanks,
> Chris and Eric
>
> [1] https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-schinazi-masque-connect-udp-ecn-00
>
> On Wed, Dec 9, 2020, at 12:03 PM, Martin Duke wrote:
> > Thanks for starting this discussion, Chris.
> >
> > With my AD hat on, I would personally interpret the charter to allow
> > CONNECT-UDP to provide all the functionality one might have in a UDP
> > socket, except those (like multicast) explicitly forbidden. This
> > includes ECN, DSCP, etc, although the WG is welcome to decide that some
> > or all of these functions aren't important. As AD, I don't have a
> > strong opinion today as to whether these end up as one draft or
> > multiple drafts. Certainly, it makes sense to spell out the design in a
> > separate draft first and later decide whether or not to integrate it
> > into the base design, as quicwg did with the spin bit and ECN support.
> >
> > If the CONNECT-UDP method is designed so as to be literally not
> > extensible to support these use cases, I would consider that a
> > significant flaw. I don't think that's the case.
> >
> > Speaking as an individual, the hardest extensibility problem would seem
> > to be per-datagram information. There are four different resources we
> > could use for this:
> > - an additional QUIC frame type codepoint, with the second type having
> > additional per-datagram information
> > - an additional H3 frame type codepoint, with the second type having
> > additional per-datagram information
> > - flow ID codepoints, as David suggests. If we want to support DSCP,
> > this means we need 8 bits per flow just for this (but then, we have
> > 2^62 of them!)
> > - Make every H3 datagram frame encode this information -- if we were to
> > choose this option, we will probably end up using more H3 frame types
> > as Webtransport, etc. will probably not want the overhead.
> >
> > To me, the first two are the least profligate, and the second option
> > (another H3 frame) is the right layer to do it. But none of these
> > resources are scarce and this is mainly an aesthetic preference.
> >
> > Broadening from the per-datagram issue, we are likely filling up some
> > sort of HTTP or H3 registry with whatever extension points we specify,
> > so that community's opinion is valuable here.
> >
> > Martin
> >
> > On Wed, Dec 9, 2020 at 10:01 AM Mirja Kuehlewind
> > <mirja.kuehlewind=40ericsson.com@dmarc.ietf.org> wrote:
> > > 1) Yes, every new protocol should be extensible. Lucas and others
> mentioned that H3 provides already some extensibility, however, as soon as
> you have send the CONNECT there is not much H3 "left" and therefore we
> should make sure that we consider options for additional extension
> mechanisms later in the life time of a CONNECT request.
> > >
> > > 2) People did mention in-stream (or I would say
> in-forwarding-association - I  think we need to agree on terminology here
> to make sure we talk about the same thing) control data. So I think there
> is information that you want to signal that is associated to a forwarding
> stream or even a certain packet, where it probably make sense to send this
> data within the respective forwarding stream, however, there might be other
> cases where you want to signal something based on some event in the proxy,
> including negotiation when or before the CONNECT is sent, or general
> information about proxy state or capabilities which maybe be independent of
> any active forwarding association. We also need to consider appropriate
> ways to signal such information and I think all (new) signaling we define
> should be extensible.
> > >
> > > 3) I think the extension points itself need to be described in the
> base spec. I also still think that ECN handling should be part of the base
> spec as this is an important functionality that is in my view not optional
> if we ever want to see it used. However we can of course start with
> separate documents and merge in when ready. Still, we first must agree
> about the kind of extension points we want to use.
> > >
> > > Mirja
> > >
> > >
> > > On 04.12.20, 21:19, "Masque on behalf of Christopher Wood" <
> masque-bounces@ietf.org on behalf of caw@heapingbits.net> wrote:
> > >
> > >     One point raised during our IETF 109 meeting was extensibility. A
> number of different extensions have already been discussed, including: IP
> header compression, ECN signals, and QUIC-aware proxy support. It seems
> clear that the MASQUE use-cases require some amount of extensibility in the
> core mechanism. What we’d like to determine is how much extensibility is
> needed.
> > >
> > >     Given that our charter is somewhat vague on what extensions are in
> scope [1], there seem to be (at least) three questions we should answer if
> we are to embark on this extension work:
> > >
> > >     1) Do we want CONNECT-UDP and a future mechanism for IP proxying
> to be extensible?
> > >     2) If yes, which parts of each protocol need extensibility, and to
> what extent?
> > >     3) If yes, do we want to adopt these extensions as distinct
> documents? (An ECN signal, for example, might be included as an extension
> in the CONNECT-UDP document, or it might be part of a separate document.
> Conversely, extensions for QUIC-aware proxying seem likely to be a separate
> document.)
> > >
> > >     We'd like to hear answers to these three questions from the WG.
> Converging here will help us better determine what is in scope going
> forward. To that end, please share your thoughts on these questions before
> December 18. We'll assess and see where we are at that time.
> > >
> > >     Thanks,
> > >     Chris and Eric
> > >
> > >     [1] Relevant text in the charter (
> https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/charter-ietf-masque/) reads as follows:
> > >
> > >     The primary goal of this working group is to develop mechanism(s)
> that allow configuring and concurrently running multiple proxied stream-
> and datagram-based flows inside an HTTPS connection. These mechanism(s) are
> collectively called MASQUE. ***The group will specify HTTP and/or HTTP/3
> extensions to enable this functionality.***
> > >
> > >     (emphasis ours)
> > >
> > >     --
> > >     Masque mailing list
> > >     Masque@ietf.org
> > >     https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/masque
> > >
> > > --
> > > Masque mailing list
> > > Masque@ietf.org
> > > https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/masque
>
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