Re: [tsvwg] Warren Kumari's Discuss on draft-ietf-tsvwg-le-phb-09: (with DISCUSS and COMMENT)

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From: Ruediger.Geib@telekom.de
To: spencerdawkins.ietf@gmail.com, warren@kumari.net
CC: db3546@att.com, iesg@ietf.org, roland.bless@kit.edu, tsvwg-chairs@ietf.org, tsvwg@ietf.org
Thread-Topic: [tsvwg] Warren Kumari's Discuss on draft-ietf-tsvwg-le-phb-09: (with DISCUSS and COMMENT)
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Archived-At: <https://mailarchive.ietf.org/arch/msg/tsvwg/E193Kypw3vmJ5csjmnP5xvHz3Wk>
Subject: Re: [tsvwg] Warren Kumari's Discuss on draft-ietf-tsvwg-le-phb-09: (with DISCUSS and COMMENT)
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I’m generally not happy with a standardised approach allowing to downgrade traffic from default to LE anywhere along an end-to-end path. That’s why I liked the approach, that LE marked traffic may be forwarded as LE only if it was received as LE. To me, default transport is what is delivered without negotiation (I hope not misinterpret ‘default’ here, I’m not a native speaker).

Of course, any carrier has the means to downgrade default traffic anywhere in his network. A standard specifying LE without prior notice makes the latter approach standard conformant.

Regards,

Ruediger


Von: Spencer Dawkins at IETF <spencerdawkins.ietf@gmail.com>
Gesendet: Mittwoch, 27. Februar 2019 22:19
An: Warren Kumari <warren@kumari.net>
Cc: Geib, Rüdiger <Ruediger.Geib@telekom.de>; BRUNGARD, DEBORAH A <db3546@att.com>; IESG <iesg@ietf.org>; Roland Bless <roland.bless@kit.edu>; tsvwg-chairs <tsvwg-chairs@ietf.org>; tsvwg@ietf.org
Betreff: Re: [tsvwg] Warren Kumari's Discuss on draft-ietf-tsvwg-le-phb-09: (with DISCUSS and COMMENT)

Hi, Warren,

On Wed, Feb 27, 2019 at 3:10 PM Warren Kumari <warren@kumari.net<mailto:warren@kumari.net>> wrote:


On Wed, Feb 27, 2019 at 12:17 PM Spencer Dawkins at IETF <spencerdawkins.ietf@gmail.com<mailto:spencerdawkins.ietf@gmail.com>> wrote:
So, just to follow up,

On Mon, Feb 25, 2019 at 2:48 AM <Ruediger.Geib@telekom.de<mailto:Ruediger.Geib@telekom.de>> wrote:
Deborah, Warren,

IETF doesn't specify SLAs or related text, I agree. The LE performance is worse than default forwarding. I'm unhappy if my peer demotes my traffic to LE and points to an IETF standard allowing this.  What about:

DISCUSSED CHANGE so far:
Non-LE traffic (e.g., BE traffic) SHOULD NOT be
remarked to LE on a regular basis.

SOMEWHAT MORE PRECISELY DEFINED OPTION
Non-LE traffic (e.g., BE traffic) MUST NOT be
remarked to LE by default.

I'd like to avoid LE to result in a "default below default" and prefer IETF standards not allow fancy interpretations.

This document was approved on the last telechat, but we're having a Discuss-level discussion about it now, which means that I should be taking this conversation very seriously (because "new technical objections are always in order").

Am I understanding that

  *   Deborah (and, IIRC, Warren) are thinking that MUST is the wrong answer, because we don't tell operators how to mark traffic in their networks, but

Warren is thinking that, if you provide any sort of SHOULD/MUST guidance regarding when it is appropriate to mark "abnormal" traffic, you have to be able to define what you mean by normal and abnormal...

Personally I would think that just: "Non-LE traffic (e.g., BE traffic) SHOULD NOT be remarked to LE." (or MUST NOT) without any qualifiers would be best -- we are not the protocol police and don't have an enforcement arm, so we cannot really stop it. Where I think we run into trouble is saying "It is OK to do this on Thursdays when there is a half moon and the wind blows from the South-East, but not at other times" (what if these is only a slight breeze? Thursday where? or a waxing gibbous moon?) - I  think we should just say "You shouldn't remark",with the understanding that some will and not open the "under these circumstances" can of worms at all.

Given that no one around here gets paid by the BCP14 keyword ... when I've gotten involved in previous conversations like this, one of the ways out was not to SHOULD/MUST at all, but to explain clearly what happens if someone does what they SHOULD NOT/MUST NOT do. Is that more helpful, or more unhelpful?

I'll wait for Ruediger to surface, but I'm imagining that he might say "but someone might say, that's only a SHOULD NOT, so I'm conforming to IETF standards-track documents, so It Sucks To Be My Neighbor, but I don't care".

Spencer


  *   Ruediger is thinking that SHOULD is the wrong answer, because that allows LE to be a "default below default"?
W

Let's start and see if I got that right.

Spencer

Regards,

Ruediger

-----Ursprüngliche Nachricht-----
Von: tsvwg <tsvwg-bounces@ietf.org<mailto:tsvwg-bounces@ietf.org>> Im Auftrag von BRUNGARD, DEBORAH A
Gesendet: Samstag, 23. Februar 2019 17:33
An: Roland Bless <roland.bless@kit.edu<mailto:roland.bless@kit.edu>>; Warren Kumari <warren@kumari.net<mailto:warren@kumari.net>>; The IESG <iesg@ietf.org<mailto:iesg@ietf.org>>
Cc: tsvwg-chairs@ietf.org<mailto:tsvwg-chairs@ietf.org>; tsvwg@ietf.org<mailto:tsvwg@ietf.org>
Betreff: Re: [tsvwg] Warren Kumari's Discuss on draft-ietf-tsvwg-le-phb-09: (with DISCUSS and COMMENT)

Hi Roland,

On your comment:
"In former times P2P file sharing traffic was throttled by some ISPs without telling the users. The danger is that the same thing happens with remarking traffic as LE, so IMHO the user should be informed at least that traffic is downgraded. Maybe consent is too strong, so I propose to delete "consent", but stay with "without knowledge of the user" or I will rephrase it accordingly. However, it's still a SHOULD NOT only."

I can not comment on what some ISPs do and what is in their service contracts. I am fine with this as a "SHOULD NOT". I am not fine with saying anything about what a service operator needs to do regarding a service contract. IETF hasn't in the past made these statements (btw - ITU-T does not touch this either). Hint: I don't think pointing to this RFC will help you.

As Brian suggested, just keep the first part of the sentence.

Thanks!
Deborah


-----Original Message-----
From: Roland Bless <roland.bless@kit.edu<mailto:roland.bless@kit.edu>>
Sent: Saturday, February 23, 2019 6:30 AM
To: BRUNGARD, DEBORAH A <db3546@att.com<mailto:db3546@att.com>>; Warren Kumari <warren@kumari.net<mailto:warren@kumari.net>>; The IESG <iesg@ietf.org<mailto:iesg@ietf.org>>
Cc: tsvwg-chairs@ietf.org<mailto:tsvwg-chairs@ietf.org>; tsvwg@ietf.org<mailto:tsvwg@ietf.org>
Subject: Re: [tsvwg] Warren Kumari's Discuss on draft-ietf-tsvwg-le-phb-09: (with DISCUSS and COMMENT)

Hi Deborah,

On 22.02.19 at 18:14 BRUNGARD, DEBORAH A wrote:
>> The main idea is that applications/users decide what traffic should go to the "background", i.e., which packet are marked as LE (end-to-end argument as hint: the >network lacks usually the application knowledge).
>
> I'll take the opportunity to jump in here😊
>
> This was my comment, I was confused, as there's a couple of places in this document which infer much more than previous RFCs on what a "user" can do vs. what a network operator can do. In my comment, I noted the sentence:

Sorry, for causing confusion :-)
I was trying to answer the IESG comments one by one and didn't arrive at yours yet, so I also jump in.

> "However, non-LE traffic (e.g., BE traffic) SHOULD NOT be remarked to
> LE on a regular basis without consent or knowledge of the user."
>
> I scanned other RFCs, I don't see this requirement that an operator needs to have the consent/knowledge of the user before remarking? Suggest simply dropping the "without consent..." from the sentence.

Your impression is probably right that this is not really consistent, because some of the text stems from RFC 3662 and some was added within this I-D.
At the time of RFC 3662, the view was probably more toward: LE is mainly a tool for network operators.
Yes, it is, but it's also a different question _who_ is actually deciding what traffic is classified as LE. In the light of net neutrality debates, it would be fair if the user classifies its traffic as LE if it is eligible and I find it reasonable that providers should be transparent: if they use LE as tool and downgrade users' traffic, they should say so, e.g., inform the user that they downgrade under certain conditions.

In former times P2P file sharing traffic was throttled by some ISPs without telling the users. The danger is that the same thing happens with remarking traffic as LE, so IMHO the user should be informed at least that traffic is downgraded. Maybe consent is too strong, so I propose to delete "consent", but stay with "without knowledge of the user" or I will rephrase it accordingly. However, it's still a SHOULD NOT only.

> And the sentence in the abstract "Ideally, applications mark their packets as LE traffic, since they know the urgency of flows." You answered Warren "The main idea is that applications/users decide what traffic should go to the "background", i.e., which packet are marked as LE (end-to-end argument..". This is very confusing as it contradicts other RFCs where marking/re-markings are tools for a network operator.

Besides the net-neutrality argument, the e2e argument is another good reason to only let user decide, what should go into this class. The user cannot harm the network this way, so there is no reason for the Diffserv domain to distrust this marking coming from the end-system.
For other Diffserv PHBs this IS different, because they are elevated services (i.e., better than best-effort): a Diffserv domain should either do the initial marking or at least apply policing at the ingress boundary nodes - otherwise QoS guarantees may be at risk; here the markings from end-systems cannot be trusted at least policing is required that may include re-marking. So for the EF PHB for example, admission control and policing are essential.

> It directly contradicts RFC8325/section 5.4:
> "An alternative option to mapping is for the administrator to treat the wireless edge as the edge of the Diffserv domain and explicitly set (or reset) DSCP markings in the upstream direction according to administrative policy.  This option is RECOMMENDED over mapping, as this typically is the most secure solution because the network administrator directly enforces the Diffserv policy across the IP network (versus an application developer and/or the developer of the operating system of the wireless endpoint device, who may be functioning completely independently of the network administrator)."

Yes, that's exactly what I explained in the preceding text above:
normally a Diffserv domain must strictly protect its network at the boundary.

> I recognize this RFC maintains "no harm" saying "There is no incentive for DS domains to distrust this initial marking, because letting LE traffic enter a DS domain causes no harm.  Thus, any policing such as limiting the rate of LE traffic is not necessary at the DS boundary." I'm a bit nervous on that assumption, I think most operators would agree with Warren's title, "hysterical raisins"😊 Can IETF really maintain (this is PS), "no worries"?

Maybe I don't get the point. Under the assumption that this LE traffic would have been injected as normal default BE traffic otherwise, I don't see any negative consequences for the provider. It is a different thing if the user would refrain from injecting this traffic, because he/she wants to really only transmit this as background/scavenger traffic.
But compared to the alternative that this traffic would traverse the domain as BE traffic otherwise, I would confirm the "no worries"
property.

Best regards,
 Roland

> -----Original Message-----
> From: iesg <iesg-bounces@ietf.org<mailto:iesg-bounces@ietf.org>> On Behalf Of Bless, Roland (TM)
> Sent: Thursday, February 21, 2019 10:04 AM
> To: Warren Kumari <warren@kumari.net<mailto:warren@kumari.net>>; The IESG <iesg@ietf.org<mailto:iesg@ietf.org>>
> Cc: David Black <david.black@dell.com<mailto:david.black@dell.com>>; tsvwg-chairs@ietf.org<mailto:tsvwg-chairs@ietf.org>;
> tsvwg@ietf.org<mailto:tsvwg@ietf.org>
> Subject: Re: Warren Kumari's Discuss on draft-ietf-tsvwg-le-phb-09:
> (with DISCUSS and COMMENT)
>
> Hi Warren,
>
> Am 20.02.19 um 18:16 schrieb Warren Kumari:
>> ---------------------------------------------------------------------
>> -
>> DISCUSS:
>> ---------------------------------------------------------------------
>> -
>>
>> I believe that this should be trivial DISCUSS to address, but I
>> thought it important enough to warrant it. I'm OK with basically
>> whatever you answer, I just wanted to make sure this had been seen and considered.
>>
>> "An LE PHB SHOULD NOT be used for a customer’s "normal Internet"
>>    traffic nor should packets be "downgraded" to the LE PHB instead of
>>    being dropped, particularly when the packets are unauthorized
>>    traffic.  "
>
> This was actually directly copied from RFC 3662.
>
>> Great, sounds good to me -- but in the USA at least, there is are
>> many cell phone plans which are "unlimited", but after some amount of
>> traffic (e.g 22GB) your connection gets throttled to a lower data
>> rate. Is this traffic still 'a customer's "normal Internet" traffic"?
>> Is it appropriate (whatever that means) to downgrade this traffic to
>> the LE PHB? I understand not wanting to touch this issue with  a 10
>> foot pole (and I don't know what the right answer is!), but you *did*
>> open this can of worms by talking about what classification user traffic should have.
>>
>> Note: I'm happy to clear my DISCUSS no matter what the answer is, I
>> just want to make sure it has been considered / discussed.
>
> The main idea is that applications/users decide what traffic should go to the "background", i.e., which packet are marked as LE (end-to-end argument as hint: the network lacks usually the application knowledge).
> Operators must have good reasons to deliberately downgrade users' normal traffic. In case of throttled traffic, this would still be considered as being normal BE traffic. One case for downgrading BE traffic could be non-admitted multicast replication traffic as described in RFC 3754.
>
>> ---------------------------------------------------------------------
>> -
>> COMMENT:
>> ---------------------------------------------------------------------
>> -
>>
>> Major:
>> "Some network providers keep link utilization below 50% to ensure
>> that all traffic is forwarded without loss after rerouting caused by
>> a link failure (cf.Section 6 of [RFC3439]).  LE marked traffic can
>> utilize the normally unused capacity and will be preempted
>> automatically in case of link failure when 100% of the link capacity
>> is required for all other traffic. " Yup - very true. But I think it
>> needs to be mentioned that the provider will need to upgrade their
>> monitoring / management system so that they can see the traffic lass.
>> If they monitoring circuit utilization using e.g interface counters
>> (and not by traffic class), a link may have 1% "real" traffic and 90%
>> LE traffic, and it will look like it it 91% "full". I don't have any
>> suggested text to address this (and this is just a comment, so "well,
>> duh, they should know that anyway!" is a fine
>> answer.)
>
> Thanks for the hint, valid point, but indeed: if they use Diffserv, they should also monitor the resource shares for each PHB individually.
>
>> Nits:
>> "A main problem is that multicast" -- I'm not sure you can say "A
>> main" - main implies singular.; I'd suggest "The main" or "A major".
>
> Right.
>
>> "However,using the Lower Effort PHB for multicast requires to pay
>> special" -- "requires paying"...
>
> Done.
>
> Regards
>  Roland
>


--
I don't think the execution is relevant when it was obviously a bad idea in the first place.
This is like putting rabid weasels in your pants, and later expressing regret at having chosen those particular rabid weasels and that pair of pants.
   ---maf