Principles for Measurability in Protocol Design

被引:12
作者
Allman, Mark [1 ]
Beverly, Robert [2 ]
Trammell, Brian [3 ]
机构
[1] Int Comp Sci Inst, Berkeley, CA 94704 USA
[2] Naval Postgrad Sch, Monterey, CA USA
[3] ETH Zuich, Zurich, Switzerland
基金
欧盟地平线“2020”; 美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
Internet protocols; protocol design; network measurement;
D O I
10.1145/3089262.3089264
中图分类号
TP [自动化技术、计算机技术];
学科分类号
0812 ;
摘要
Measurement has become fundamental to the operation of networks and at-scale services-whether for management, security, diagnostics, optimization, or simply enhancing our collective understanding of the Internet as a complex system. Further, measurements are useful across points of view-from end hosts to enterprise networks and data centers to the wide area Internet. We observe that many measurements are decoupled from the protocols and applications they are designed to illuminate. Worse, current measurement practice often involves the exploitation of side-effects and unintended features of the network; or, in other words, the artful piling of hacks atop one another. This state of a. airs is a direct result of the relative paucity of diagnostic and measurement capabilities built into today's network stack. Given our modern dependence on ubiquitous measurement, we propose measurability as an explicit low-level goal of current protocol design, and argue that measurements should be available to all network protocols throughout the stack. We seek to generalize the idea of measurement within protocols, e.g., the way in which TCP relies on measurement to drive its end-to-end behavior. Rhetorically, we pose the question: what if the stack had been built with measurability and diagnostic support in mind? We start from a set of principles for explicit measurability, and define primitives that, were they supported by the stack, would not only provide a solid foundation for protocol design going forward, but also reduce the cost and increase the accuracy of measuring the network.
引用
收藏
页码:3 / 12
页数:10
相关论文
共 41 条
[1]  
Allman M., 2009, RFC 5681
[2]  
Alt L., 2014, P 30 ACSAC
[3]  
[Anonymous], 2016, 7872 RFC
[4]  
[Anonymous], P 2 ACM SIGCOMM WORK
[5]  
[Anonymous], 2006, 4656 RFC
[6]  
[Anonymous], 2017, QUIC UDP BASED MULTI
[7]  
[Anonymous], 2007, RFC, DOI DOI 10.17487/RFC4782
[8]  
[Anonymous], 2014, ACM CONEXT
[9]  
Augustin B., 2006, ACM SIGCOMM INT MEAS
[10]  
Baker F, 1995, 1812 RFC