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Gadi, While it may be interesting to talk about what it means to make congestion management a layer 2 edge-to-edge service, this isn't really what we're set up to do. We may decide there are pieces of this effort that need to work edge-to-edge but it isn't the job of this 802.3 study group to figure that out. We're here to figure out if there is anything that 802.3 wants to do about this issue. This implies a clear understanding of what the problem is that 802.3 wants to do something about and then what that something is (in general terms at this point). A suggestion for an 802.1 project may very well come out of this study group but that's about as far as this particular study group can go. This does, however, bring up another interesting discussion. Both 802.3x MAC Control Frames (PAUSE) and 802.3ad Link Aggregation didn't have an accompanying 802.1 project. 802.3 provided a service that MAC Client implementations could use to differentiate themselves for customers. This may be a similar project if 802.1 doesn't find a component of this they want to standardize. Regards, Ben Gadi Lahat wrote: Glen I wanted to thank you for pointing to the important issues first, before we dive into the details devil. I would like to make it bolderIs CM supposed to control the link only ? Just the local link (hop) ?Be aware of the end to end path ? ORCM is supposed to be more network oriented, that is more likestandardizing a switch ( multiport bridge ...) core load management ? We can then consider if 802.1 is more appropriate than 802.3, and how speed matters. Thanks Gadi -----Original Message----- From: Glen Kramer [mailto:glen.kramer@TEKNOVUS.COM] Sent: Friday, 30 April, 2004 22:29 To: STDS-802-3-CM@listserv.ieee.org Subject: Re: [8023-CMSG] Purpose Jonathan,Improving performance is good, but how would one know if this isachieved. Very good point. This brings even more fundamental question: how do we know that there is a congestion in the first place. After all, 802.3 scope ends at MAC service interface. MAC is given one frame at a time, and while transmitting a frame, at best, it will know that another frame is waiting.Except for, perhaps, "Shall provide predictable, consistent network-wide operation" :-)Another related point: what is "network-wide" operation in the context of 802.3? Is it a station-to-station within a single access domain?Regarding 802.1 v 802.3, I am working on a presentation on this topic. So, in the end, what objectives would you recommend adding?I would be happy to collaborate on objectives and possible solutions. But I have difficulty understanding what can be done within 802.3. It would be more prudent to wait for your presentation explaining why this job should be done under 802.3 and not 802.1. GlenCongratulations! Without making any changes to 802.3 you may claim that all the CMSG objectives were already met.Except for, perhaps, "Shall provide predictable, consistent network-wide operation" :-) Yes, you are correct about my list being primarily about constraints. Your points are all worthy of study and discussion. Improving performance is good, but how would one know if this is achieved Implicit in your comment is that there are aspects of CM that are not defined. I would be surprised if any disagree there. One thing that isimplicit to me is that unlike PAUSE, CM will manage traffic flow to finer granularity than the link. On your second point, I thought that MPCP avoided specifying the method of doing rate control. I would love to see a presentation abouthow said simplification might be useful. Regarding 802.1 v 802.3, I am working on a presentation on this topic. So, in the end, what objectives would you recommend adding? jonathan-----Original Message----- From: owner-stds-802-3-cm@LISTSERV.IEEE.ORG [mailto:owner-stds-802-3-cm@LISTSERV.IEEE.ORG]On Behalf Of Glen Kramer Sent: Thursday, April 29, 2004 3:35 PM To: STDS-802-3-CM@LISTSERV.IEEE.ORG Subject: Re: [8023-CMSG] Purpose Jonathan, Congratulations! Without making any changes to 802.3 you may claim that all the CMSG objectives were already met. Indeed, current 802.3 (with upcoming additions) already supports copper and optical media, 100 Mb/s, 1 Gb/s, and 10 Gb/s rates, consistent with 802 architecture, provides predictable operation, and supports OAM. Anything else we should do? Seriously, I think your list of objectives is really just a set of constraints that should be observed. But what this study group wantsto achieve? What is missing? I am not certain that QoS should not be an objective. The very reasons to use congestion management are to get better performance than afforded by the best-effort operation. I agree that the term QoS is overloaded. So, let's talk about specific parameters: delay, jitter, frame loss, and may be bandwidth utilization as well. An attention should be given to decoupling of bandwidth and delay. Many time-division systems suffer from this. This group may do some interesting things that would improve performance. I will just list some general ideas and let the group decide if these are the worthy of studying further: 1. PAUSE frame provides ON/OFF control. It is known that such control methods do not easily achieve steady state behavior, especially is control loop delay is high. On the opposite, they tendto amplify traffic oscillation throughout the network, as a result increasing jitter and packet loss. One way to improve the performance is to change the rate control from ON/OFF paradigm to "adjust by delta" paradigm. (Add a new MAC Control message?) 2. 802.3ah P2MP STF introduced Multi-Point Control Protocol that performed explicit rate control for multiple devices. It can be extended (actually simplified) to be used on P2P links. One question that is not completely clear to me is why 802.3 and not802.1? Cheers, Glen-----Original Message----- From: owner-stds-802-3-cm@listserv.ieee.org[mailto:owner-stds-802-3-cm@listserv.ieee.org] On Behalf Of Jonathan Thatcher Sent: Thursday, April 29, 2004 3:35 PM To: STDS-802-3-CM@listserv.ieee.org Subject: Re: [8023-CMSG] Purpose Okay, I'll take a shot at the objectives: First, my list of anti-objectives: -- No support for half-duplex -- No changes to PCSs / PMAs / PMDs -- No simultaneous support for PAUSE and CM -- Not end-to-end flow control (no transaction layer) -- No traffic classification (e.g. looking at L3/L4/L5...)*** -- No reordering within class (e.g. by priority within class) -- Not QoS**** Objectives: -- Shall support up to 100 m of media (copper or optical)***** -- Shall support 100 Mb/s, 1 Gb/s, and 10 Gb/s -- Shall be consistent with IEEE 802.3 and IEEE 802.1 layerarchitecture-- Shall provide predictable, consistent network-wide operation -- Shall be consistent with slow protocols (e.g. OAM) Questions: -- Maximum supported latency across link (MAC to MAC)? -- Support of FEC? *** this does not mean that there isn't some traffic classidentifierprovided by L2 and used within L2. It means that L2 doesnot classify theflow and associate it with the identifier. **** QoS is an ambiguous, overloaded term. In most cases,it is associatedwith a contract with a user rather than a feature orfunction provided toa higher layer. Frequently it includes policies, shaping,rate limits, etc.Congestion management has little to nothing to do with this. ***** not necessarily all media!-----Original Message----- From: owner-stds-802-3-cm@listserv.ieee.org [mailto:owner-stds-802-3-cm@listserv.ieee.org]On BehalfOf BenjaminBrown Sent: Thursday, April 22, 2004 8:09 AM To: STDS-802-3-CM@listserv.ieee.org Subject: [8023-CMSG] Purpose Hi, I thought I'd try to kick start some discussions around the Congestion Management Study Group's purpose for existence. We have 3 tasks to accomplish between now and the May interim. We need to develop a PAR, 5 Criteria and a list of objectives. Ideally we can accomplish this in May in order to pre-circulate the PAR and 5 Criteria so that we can formally request StandardsBoard approval in the July meeting. During the July meeting, we'll refine the objectives and hopefully not change the PAR and5 Criteria so the Standards Board is approving the same thing wepre-circulated. If we miss this May deadline, things get ugly. I'd rather not go into those details, mostly because I don't know them well enough to talk to but also because it sidetracks the discussion. The bottom line is that we need to work on those 3 items. The PAR and 5 Criteria are used to get support from the Standards Board. The objectives are used by WG 802.3 in order tovalidate the 5 Criteria. I intend to begin working on the 5 Criteria and posting them to this reflector, probably using individual threads. I would really appreciate some discussion around them now since we've only got about a day and a half at the May meeting. If we wait until then to even see them, we may not be able to make the progress we'd like to make. The implication of the above is that now is not the time to propose solutions. That is the work for the task force. If we can't get the above 3 items completed in order to become a task force, the best solution in the world doesn't help us. There will be time for solution proposals. If anyone has ideas or suggestions for objectives or any of the 5 Criteria, please don't hesitate to start a thread on them. Remember, I'm just the moderator of this process. I need all of you participants to show that you're sufficientlyinterestedto actually participate. In fact, this is one of theCriteria - BroadMarket Potential - Multiple vendors, multiple users! Regards, Ben -- ----------------------------------------- Benjamin Brown 178 Bear Hill Road Chichester, NH 03258 603-491-0296 - Cell 603-798-4115 - Office benjamin-dot-brown-at-ieee-dot-org (Will this cut down on my spam???) ----------------------------------------- -- ----------------------------------------- Benjamin Brown 178 Bear Hill Road Chichester, NH 03258 603-491-0296 - Cell 603-798-4115 - Office benjamin-dot-brown-at-ieee-dot-org (Will this cut down on my spam???) ----------------------------------------- |