Network Working Group A.Morton Internet Draft L.Ciavattone Document: G.Ramachandran Category: Standards Track AT&T Labs S.Shalunov Internet2 J.Perser Consultant Packet Reordering Metric for IPPM Status of this Memo By submitting this Internet-Draft, each author represents that any applicable patent or other IPR claims of which he or she is aware have been disclosed, and any of which he or she becomes aware will be disclosed, in accordance with RFC 3668. Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF), its areas, and its working groups. Note that other groups may also distribute working documents as Internet- Drafts. Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any time. It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference material or to cite them other than as "work in progress." The list of current Internet-Drafts can be accessed at http://www.ietf.org/ietf/1id-abstracts.txt The list of Internet-Draft Shadow Directories can be accessed at http://www.ietf.org/shadow.html. Copyright Notice Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2004). Abstract This memo defines metrics to evaluate if a network has maintained packet order on a packet-by-packet basis. It provides motivations for the new metrics and discusses the measurement issues. The memo first defines a reordered singleton, and then uses it as the basis for sample metrics to quantify the extent of reordering in several useful dimensions for network characterization or receiver design. Additional metrics quantify the frequency of reordering and the distance between separate occurrences. We then define a metric with purely receiver analysis orientation. Several examples of evaluation using the various sample metrics are included. An Appendix gives extended definitions for evaluating order with packet fragmentation. Morton, et al. Standards Track exp. Feb 2005 Page 1 Packet Reordering Metric for IPPM August 2004 Contents Status of this Memo................................................1 Copyright Notice...................................................1 Abstract...........................................................1 1. Conventions used in this document...............................3 2. Introduction....................................................3 2.1 Motivation.....................................................4 2.2 Goals and Objectives...........................................5 3. A Reordered Packet Singleton Metric.............................5 3.1 Metric Name:...................................................6 3.2 Metric Parameters:.............................................6 3.3 Definition:....................................................6 3.4 Sequence Discontinuity Definition..............................7 3.5 Evaluation in Time or Byte Order...............................8 3.6 Discussion.....................................................8 4. Sample Metrics..................................................8 4.1 Reordered Packet Ratio.........................................9 4.1.1 Metric Name:.................................................9 4.1.2 Metric Parameters:...........................................9 4.1.3 Definition:..................................................9 4.1.4 Discussion...................................................9 4.2 Reordering Extent..............................................9 4.2.1 Metric Name:................................................10 4.2.2 Parameter Notation:.........................................10 4.2.3 Definition:.................................................10 4.2.4 Discussion:.................................................10 4.3 Reordering Late Time Offset...................................11 4.3.1 Metric Name:................................................11 4.3.2 Metric Parameters:..........................................11 4.3.3 Definition:.................................................11 4.3.4 Discussion..................................................12 4.4 Reordering Byte Offset........................................12 4.4.1 Metric Name:................................................12 4.4.2 Metric Parameters:..........................................12 4.4.3 Definition:.................................................12 4.4.4 Discussion..................................................13 4.5 Gaps between multiple Reordering Discontinuities..............13 4.5.1 Metric Name:................................................13 4.5.2 Parameters:.................................................13 4.5.3 Definition of Reordering Discontinuity:.....................13 4.5.4 Definition of Reordering Gap:...............................13 4.5.5 Discussion..................................................14 4.6 Reordering-free Runs..........................................14 4.6.1 Metric Name:................................................14 4.6.2 Parameters:.................................................14 4.6.3 Definition:.................................................15 4.6.4 Discussion:.................................................15 5. Metrics Focused on Receiver Assessment: A TCP-Relevant Metric..16 5.1 Metric Name:..................................................16 5.2 Parameter Notation:...........................................16 5.3 Definitions...................................................16 Morton, et al. Standards Track exp. Feb 2005 Page 2 Packet Reordering Metric for IPPM August 2004 5.4 Discussion:...................................................17 6. Measurement and Implementation Issues..........................18 7. Examples of Arrival Order Evaluation...........................20 7.1 Example with a single packet reordered........................20 7.2 Example with two packets reordered............................22 7.3 Example with three packets reordered..........................23 7.4 Example with Multiple Packet Reordering Discontinuities.......24 8. Security Considerations........................................24 8.1 Denial of Service Attacks.....................................24 8.2 User data confidentiality.....................................25 8.3 Interference with the metric..................................25 9. IANA Considerations............................................25 10. Normative References..........................................25 11. Informative References........................................25 12. Acknowledgments...............................................26 13. Appendix A Example Implementations in C (Informative).........27 14. Appendix B Fragment Order Evaluation (Informative)............29 14.1 Metric Name:.................................................29 14.2 Additional Metric Parameters:................................29 14.3 Definition:..................................................30 14.4 Discussion: Notes on Sample Metrics when evaluating Fragments31 15. Author's Addresses............................................31 Full Copyright Statement..........................................32 Intellectual Property.............................................32 Acknowledgement...................................................33 1. Conventions used in this document The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119 [1]. Although RFC 2119 was written with protocols in mind, the key words are used in this document for similar reasons. They are used to ensure the results of measurements from two different implementations are comparable, and to note instances when an implementation could perturb the network. 2. Introduction Ordered delivery is a property of successful packet transfer attempts, where the packet sequence ascends for each arriving packet and there are no backward steps. An explicit sequence number, such as an incrementing message number or the packet sending time carried in each packet, establishes the Source Sequence. The detection of reordering at the Destination is based on packet arrival order in comparison with a non-reversing reference value. Morton, et al. Standards Track exp. Feb 2005 Page 3 Packet Reordering Metric for IPPM August 2004 This metric is consistent with RFC 2330 [2], and classifies arriving packets with sequence numbers smaller than their predecessors as out-of-order, or reordered. For example, if sequentially numbered packets arrive 1,2,4,5,3, then packet 3 is reordered. This is equivalent to Paxon's reordering definition in [3], where "late" packets were declared reordered. The alternative is to emphasize "premature" packets instead (4 and 5 in the example), but only the arrival of packet 3 distinguishes this circumstance from packet loss. Focusing attention on late packets allows us to maintain orthogonality with the packet loss metric. The metric's construction is very similar to the sequence space validation for received segments in RFC793 [4]. Earlier work to define ordered delivery includes [5], [6], [7], [8], [9] and [10]. 2.1 Motivation A reordering metric is relevant for most applications, especially when assessing network support for Real-Time media streams. The extent of reordering may be sufficient to cause a received packet to be discarded by functions above the IP layer. Packet order is not expected to change during transfer, but several specific path characteristics can cause order to change. Examples are: * When two paths, one with slightly longer transfer time, support a single packet stream or flow, then packets traversing the longer path may arrive out-of-order. Multiple paths may be used to achieve load balancing, or may arise from route instability. * To increase capacity, a network device designed with multiple processors serving a single port may reorder as a byproduct. * A layer 2 retransmission protocol that compensates for an error- prone link may cause packet reordering. * If for any reason, the packets in a buffer are not serviced in the order of their arrival, their order will change. * If packets in a flow are assigned to multiple buffers (following evaluation of traffic characteristics, for example), and the buffers have different occupations and/or service rates, then order will likely change. When one or more of the above path characteristics are present continuously, then reordering may be present on a steady-state basis. The steady-state reordering condition typically causes an appreciable fraction of packets to be reordered. This form of reordering is most easily detected by minimizing the spacing between test packets. Transient reordering may occur in response to network instability; temporary routing loops can cause periods of extreme reordering. This condition is characterized by long in-order streams with occasional instances of reordering, sometimes with extreme correlation. However, we do not expect packet delivery in a completely random order, where for example, the last packet or the first packet in a sample is equally likely to arrive at the Morton, et al. Standards Track exp. Feb 2005 Page 4 Packet Reordering Metric for IPPM August 2004 destination first. Thus we expect at least a minimal degree of order in the packet arrivals, as exhibited in real networks. The ability to restore order at the destination will likely have finite limits. Practical hosts have receiver buffers with finite size in terms of packets, bytes, or time (such as de-jitter buffers). Once the initial determination of reordering is made, it is useful to quantify the extent of reordering, or lateness, in all meaningful dimensions. 2.2 Goals and Objectives The definitions below intend to satisfy the goals of: 1. Determining whether or not packet reordering has occurred. 2. Quantifying the degree of reordering (achieving this second goal requires assumptions of upper layer functions and capabilities to restore order, and therefore several solutions). Reordering Metrics MUST: + have one or more relevant applications, such as receiver design or network characterization. + be computable "on the fly" + work with Poisson and Periodic test streams + work even if the stream has duplicate or lost packets It is desirable for Reordering Metrics to have one or more of the following attributes: + have concatenating results for segments measured separately + have simplicity for easy consumption and understanding + have relevance to TCP performance + have relevance to Real-time application performance The current set of metrics meet all the requirements above, and provides all but the concatenation attribute (except in the case where segments exhibit no reordering, and one may estimate that the segment concatenation would also exhibit this desirable outcome). However, satisfying these goals limits the set of metrics to those that provide some clear insight into network characterization or receiver design, and they are not likely to be exhaustive in their coverage of the applications with respect to packet reordering effects. Likewise, additional measurements may be possible. 3. A Reordered Packet Singleton Metric The IPPM framework RFC 2330 [2] describes the notions of singletons, samples, and statistics. For easy reference: Morton, et al. Standards Track exp. Feb 2005 Page 5 Packet Reordering Metric for IPPM August 2004 By a 'singleton' metric, we refer to metrics that are, in a sense, atomic. For example, a single instance of "bulk throughput capacity" from one host to another might be defined as a singleton metric, even though the instance involves measuring the timing of a number of Internet packets. The evaluation of packet order requires several supporting concepts. The first is a sequence number applied to packets at the source to uniquely identify the order of packet transmission. The sequence number may be established by a simple message number, a byte stream number, or it may be the actual time when each packet departs from the Source. The second supporting concept is a stored value which is the "next expected" packet number. Under normal conditions, the value of Next Expected (NextExp) is the sequence number of the previous packet plus 1 (for message numbering). Each packet within a packet stream can be evaluated with this order singleton metric. 3.1 Metric Name: Type-P-Reordered 3.2 Metric Parameters: + Src, the IP address of a host + Dst, the IP address of a host + SrcTime, the time of packet emission from the Source (or wire time) + s, the packet sequence number applied at the Source, in units of messages. + SrcByte, the packet sequence number applied at the Source, in units of payload bytes. + NextExp, the Next Expected Sequence number at the Destination, in units of messages, time, or bytes. + PayloadSize, the number of bytes contained in the information field and referred to when the SrcByte sequence is based on byte transfer. 3.3 Definition: If a packet is found to be reordered by comparison with the Next Expected value, its Type-P-Reordered = TRUE; otherwise Type-P- Reordered = FALSE, as defined below: Morton, et al. Standards Track exp. Feb 2005 Page 6 Packet Reordering Metric for IPPM August 2004 The value of Type-P-Reordered is defined as TRUE if s < NextExp (the packet is reordered). In this case, NextExp value does not change. The value of Type-P-Reordered is defined as FALSE if s >= NextExp (the packet is in-order). In this case, NextExp is set to s+1. Since the Next Expected value cannot decrease, it provides a non- reversing order criterion to identify reordered packets. This definition can also be specified in pseudo-code. On successful arrival of a packet with sequence number s: if s >= NextExp then /* s is in-order */ NextExp = s + 1; Type-P-Reordered = False; else /* when s < NextExp */ Type-P-Reordered = True 3.4 Sequence Discontinuity Definition Packets with s > NextExp are a special case of in-order delivery. This condition indicates a sequence discontinuity, either because of packet loss or reordering. Reordered packets must arrive for the sequence discontinuity to be defined as a reordering discontinuity (see section 4). We define two different states for in-order packets. When s = NextExp, the original sequence has been maintained, and there is no discontinuity present. When s > NextExp, some packets in the original sequence have not yet arrived, and there is a sequence discontinuity associated with packet s. The size of the discontinuity is s - NextExp, equal to the number of packets presently missing, either reordered or lost. In pseudo-code: On successful arrival of a packet with sequence number s: if s >= NextExp, then /* s is in-order */ if s > NextExp then SequenceDiscontinuty = True; SeqDiscontinutySize = s - NextExp; else SequenceDiscontinuty = False; NextExp = s + 1; Type-P-Reordered = False; else /* when s < NextExp */ Type-P-Reordered = True; SequenceDiscontinuty = False; Morton, et al. Standards Track exp. Feb 2005 Page 7 Packet Reordering Metric for IPPM August 2004 Discontinuities are easiest to detect with message numbering or payload byte numbering where payload size is constant (and retransmissions are distinguished), and may be possible with Periodic Streams and Source Time numbering. 3.5 Evaluation in Time or Byte Order For the alternate sequence dimensions, in-order packets have byte stream numbers or Source times greater than or equal to the value of NextExp. Each new in-order packet will increase the NextExp to SrcTime plus 1 clock tick when using Source times, or to SrcByte plus the payload size plus 1 for byte numbering. In the pseudo-code of section 3.3, SrcByte (or SrcTime) replaces the sequence number s, and we have: if SrcByte >= NextExp then /* packet is in-order */ NextExp = SrcByte + PayloadSize + 1; Type-P-Reordered = False; When using Source time, PayloadSize=0 (or a fixed time increment, if using a reliable periodic packet source). 3.6 Discussion Any arriving packet bearing a sequence number from the sequence that establishes the Next Expected value can be evaluated to determine whether it is in-order or reordered, based on a previous packet's arrival. In the case where Next Expected is Undefined (because the arriving packet is the first successful transfer), the packet is designated in-order. This metric assumes re-assembly of packet fragments before evaluation. In principle, it is possible to use the Type-P-Reordered metric to evaluate reordering among packet fragments, but each fragment must contain source sequence information. See the Appendix on fragment order evaluation for more detail. If duplicate packets (multiple non-corrupt copies) arrive at the destination, they MUST be noted and only the first to arrive is considered for further analysis (copies would be declared reordered according to the definition above). This requirement has the same storage implications as earlier IPPM metrics, and follows the precedent of RFC 2679. We provide a suggestion to minimize storage size needed in the section on Measurement and Implementation Issues. 4. Sample Metrics In this section, we define metrics applicable to a sample of packets from a single Source sequence number system. When reordering occurs, it is highly desirable to assert the degree to which a packet is Morton, et al. Standards Track exp. Feb 2005 Page 8 Packet Reordering Metric for IPPM August 2004 out-of-order, or reordered with respect other packets. This section defines several metrics that quantify the extent of reordering in various units of measure. Each metric highlights a relevant use. The metrics in the sub-sections below have a network characterization orientation, but also have relevance to receiver design where reordering compensation is of interest. We begin with a simple ratio metric indicating the reordered portion of the sample. 4.1 Reordered Packet Ratio 4.1.1 Metric Name: Type-P-Reordered-Ratio-Stream 4.1.2 Metric Parameters: The parameter set includes Type-P-Reordered singleton parameters, the parameters unique to Poisson or Periodic Streams (as in RFC 2330 and RFC3432), plus the following: + T0, a start time + Tf, an end time + dT, a waiting time for each packet to arrive 4.1.3 Definition: For the packets arriving successfully between T0 and Tf+dT, the ratio of reordered packets in the sample is (Total of Reordered packets) / (Total packets received) This fraction may be expressed as a percentage (multiply by 100%). Note that in the case of duplicate packets, only the first copy is used. 4.1.4 Discussion When the Type-P-Reordered-Ratio-Stream is zero, no further reordering metrics need be examined for that sample. Therefore, the value of this metric is its simple ability to summarize the results for a reordering-free sample. 4.2 Reordering Extent This section defines the extent to which packets are reordered, and associates a specific sequence discontinuity with each reordered packet. Morton, et al. Standards Track exp. Feb 2005 Page 9 Packet Reordering Metric for IPPM August 2004 4.2.1 Metric Name: Type-P-packet-Reordering-Extent-Stream 4.2.2 Parameter Notation: Given a stream of packets sent from a source to a destination, let K be the total number of packets in that stream. Assign each packet a sequence number, a consecutive integer from 1 to K in the order of packet transmission (at the source). Let L be the total number of packets received out of the K packets sent. Recall that identical copies (duplicates) have been removed, so L<=K. Let s[1], s[2], ..., s[L], represent the original sequence numbers associated with the packets in order of arrival. Consider a reordered packet (as identified in section 3) with arrival index i and source sequence number s[i]. There exists a set of indexes j (1<=j s[i]. 4.2.3 Definition: The reordering extent, e, of packet s[i] is defined to be i-j for the smallest value of j when s[j] > s[i]. Informally, the reordering extent is the maximum distance, in packets, from a reordered packet to the earliest packet received that has a larger sequence number. If a packet is in-order, its reordering extent is undefined. The first packet to arrive is in- order by definition, and has undefined reordering extent. Comment on the definition of extent: For some arrival orders, the assignment of a simple position/distance as the reordering extent tends to overestimate the receiver storage needed to restore order. A more accurate and complex procedure to calculate packet storage would be to subtract any earlier reordered packets that the receiver could pass on to the upper layers. With the bias understood, this definition is deemed sufficient, especially for those who demand "on the fly" calculations. 4.2.4 Discussion: The packet with index j (s[j], identified in the Definition above) is the reordering discontinuity associated with packet with index i (s[i]). This definition is formalized below. Morton, et al. Standards Track exp. Feb 2005 Page 10 Packet Reordering Metric for IPPM August 2004 Note that the K packets in the stream could be some subset of a larger stream, but L is still the total number of packets received out of the K packets sent in that subset. A receiver must possess storage to restore order to packets that are reordered. For cases with single reordered packets, the extent e gives the number of packets that must be held in the receiver's buffer while waiting for the reordered packet to complete the sequence. For more complex scenarios, the extent may be an overestimate of required storage (see the Examples section). Knowledge of the reordering extent e is particularly useful for determining the portion of reordered packets that can or cannot be restored to order in a typical receiver buffer based on their arrival order alone (and without the aid of retransmission). A sample's reordering extents may be expressed as a histogram, to easily summarize the frequency of various extents. 4.3 Reordering Late Time Offset Reordered packets can be assigned offset values indicating their lateness in terms of buffer time that a receiver must possess to accommodate them. Offset metrics are calculated only on reordered packets, as identified by the reordered packet singleton metric in Section 3. 4.3.1 Metric Name: Type-P-packet-Late-Time-Stream 4.3.2 Metric Parameters: In addition to the parameters defined for Type-P-Reordered, we specify: + DstTime, the time that each packet in the stream arrives at the destination 4.3.3 Definition: Lateness in time is calculated using destination times. When received packet i is reordered, and has a reordering extent e, then: LateTime(i) = DstTime(i)-DstTime(i-e) Alternatively, using similar notation to that of section 4.2, an equivalent definition is: LateTime(i) = DstTime(i)-DstTime(j), for min{j|1<=js[i], or SrcTime[j]>SrcTime[i]. Morton, et al. Standards Track exp. Feb 2005 Page 11 Packet Reordering Metric for IPPM August 2004 4.3.4 Discussion The offset metrics can help predict whether reordered packets will be useful in a general receiver buffer system with finite limits. The limit may be the time of storage prior to a cyclic play-out instant (as with de-jitter buffers). Note that the One-way IPDV [11] gives the delay variation for a packet w.r.t. the preceding packet in the source sequence. Lateness and IPDV give an indication of whether a buffer at the destination has sufficient storage to accommodate the network's behavior and restore order. When an earlier packet in the Source sequence is lost, IPDV will necessarily be undefined for adjacent packets, and Late Time may provide the only way to evaluate the usefulness of a packet. In the case of de-jitter buffers, there are circumstances where the receiver employs loss concealment at the intended play-out time of a late packet. However, if this packet arrives out of order, the Late Time determines whether the packet is still useful. IPDV no longer applies, because the receiver establishes a new play-out schedule with additional buffer delay to accommodate similar events in the future (this requires very minimal processing). 4.4 Reordering Byte Offset Reordered packets can be assigned offset values indicating the storage in bytes that a receiver must possess to accommodate them. The various offset metrics are calculated only on reordered packets, as identified by the reordered packet singleton metric in Section 3. 4.4.1 Metric Name: Type-P-packet-Byte-Offset-Stream 4.4.2 Metric Parameters: We use the same parameters defined earlier. 4.4.3 Definition: Byte stream offset is the sum of the payload sizes of intervening in-order packets between the reordered packet and the discontinuity (including the packet at the discontinuity). For reordered packet i with a reordering extent e: ByteOffset(i) = Sum[in-order packets back to reordering discon.] = Sum[PayloadSize(packet at i-1 if in-order), PayloadSize(packet at i-2 if in-order), ... PayloadSize(packet at i-e if in-order)] Morton, et al. Standards Track exp. Feb 2005 Page 12 Packet Reordering Metric for IPPM August 2004 4.4.4 Discussion The byte offset metric can help predict whether reordered packets will be useful in a general receiver buffer system with finite limits. The limit is expressed as the number of bytes the buffer can store. When packets in the stream have variable sizes, it may be most useful to characterize offset in terms of the payload size(s) of stored packets, using the Type-P-packet-Byte-Offset-Stream metric and byte stream numbering. 4.5 Gaps between multiple Reordering Discontinuities 4.5.1 Metric Name: Type-P-packet-Reordering-Gap-Stream 4.5.2 Parameters: No new parameters. 4.5.3 Definition of Reordering Discontinuity: All reordered packets are associated with a packet at a reordering discontinuity, defined as the in-order packet s[j] that arrived at the minimum value of j (1<=j s[i]. Note that s[j] will have been found to cause a sequence discontinuity, where s > NextExp when evaluated with the reordered singleton metric as described in section 3.4. Recall that i - e = min(j). Subsequent reordered packets may be associated with the same s[j], or with a different discontinuity. This definition is used in the definition of the Reordering Gap, below. 4.5.4 Definition of Reordering Gap: A reordering gap is the distance between successive reordering discontinuities. Type-P-packet-Reordering-Gap-Stream assigns a value to (all) packets in a stream. If: The packet s[j'] is found to be a reordering discontinuity, based on the arrival of reordered packet s[i'] with extent e', and an earlier reordering discontinuity s[j], based on the arrival of reordered packet s[i] with extent e was already detected, and Morton, et al. Standards Track exp. Feb 2005 Page 13 Packet Reordering Metric for IPPM August 2004 i' > i, and there are no reordering discontinuities between j and j', then the Reordering Gap for packet s[j'] is the difference between the arrival positions the reordering discontinuities, as shown below: Gap(j') = (j') - (j) Otherwise: The Type-P-packet-Reordering-Gap-Stream for the packet is 0. Gaps may also be expressed in time: GapTime(j') = DstTime(j') - DstTime(j) 4.5.5 Discussion When separate reordering discontinuities can be distinguished, then a count may also be reported (along with the discontinuity description, such as the number of reordered packets associated with that discontinuity and their extents and offsets). The Gaps between a sample's reordering discontinuities may be expressed as a histogram, to easily summarize the frequency of various gaps. Reporting the mode, average, range, etc. may also summarize the distributions. The Gap metric may help to correlate the frequency of reordering discontinuities with their cause. Gap lengths are also informative to receiver designers, revealing the period of reordering discontinuities. The combination of reordering gaps and extent reveals whether receivers will be required to handle cases of overlapping reordered packets. 4.6 Reordering-free Runs This section defines a metric based on a count of consecutive packets between reordered packets. 4.6.1 Metric Name: Type-P-packet-Reordering-Free-Run-Stream 4.6.2 Parameters: r, the run counter n, the number of runs a, the accumulator of in-order packets p, the number of packets Morton, et al. Standards Track exp. Feb 2005 Page 14 Packet Reordering Metric for IPPM August 2004 q, the squared sum of the run counters 4.6.3 Definition: As packets in a sample arrive at the Destination, the count of packets to the next reordered packet is a Reordering-Free run. Note that the minimum run-length is one according to this definition. A pseudo code example follows: r = 0; /* r is the run counter */ n = 0; /* n is the number of runs */ a = 0; /* a is the accumulator of in order packets */ p = 0; /* p is the number of packets */ q = 0; /* q is the squared sum of the run counters */ while(packets arrive with sequence number s) { p++; if (s >= NextExp) /* s is in-order */ then r++; a++; else /* s is reordered */ q+= r*r; r = 1; n++; } Each in-order arrival increments the run counter and the accumulator of in order packets, each reordered packet resets the run counter after adding it to the accumulator. Each arrival of a reordered packet yields a new count in the Run vector. Long runs accompany periods where order was maintained, while short runs indicate frequent, or multi-packet reordering. The percent of packets in-order is 100*a/p The average Reordering-Free run length is a/n The q counter gives an indication of variation of the Reordering- Free runs from the average by comparing q/a to a/n ((q/a)/(a/n)) 4.6.4 Discussion: Type-P-packet-Reordering-Free-Run-Stream parameters give a brief summary of the stream's reordering characteristics including the average reordering-free run length, and the variation of run lengths, therefore a key application of this metric is network evaluation. For example for 36 packets with 3 runs of 11 in-order packets we have: Morton, et al. Standards Track exp. Feb 2005 Page 15 Packet Reordering Metric for IPPM August 2004 p = 36 n = 3 a = 33 q = 3 * (11*11) = 363 ave reordering-free run = 11 q/a = 11 (q/a)/ave = 1.0 For 36 packets with 3 runs, 2 of length 1 and one of length 31 p = 36 n = 3 a = 33 q = 1 + 1 + 961 = 963 ave reordering-free run = 11 q/a = 29.18 (q/a)/ave = 2.65 5. Metrics Focused on Receiver Assessment: A TCP-Relevant Metric 5.1 Metric Name: Type-P-packet-n-Reordering-Stream 5.2 Parameter Notation: Let n be a positive integer (a parameter). Let k be a positive integer equal to the number of packets sent (sample size). Let l be a non-negative integer representing the number of packets that were received out of the k packets sent. (Note that there is no relationship between k and l: on one hand, losses can make l less than k; on the other hand, duplicates can make l greater than k.) Assign each sent packet a sequence number, 1 to k, in order of packet emission. Let s[1], s[2], ..., s[l] be the original sequence numbers of the received packets, in the order of arrival. 5.3 Definitions Definition 1: Received packet number i (n < i <= l), with source sequence number s[i], is n-reordered if and only if for all j such that i-n <= j < i, s[j] > s[i]. Claim: If by this definition, a packet's reordering is n and 0 < n' < n, then the packet is also reordered to the n' extent. Note: This definition is illustrated by C code in Appendix A. It determines the n-reordering for a value of n=3 (when actually writing applications that would report the metric, one would probably report it for several values of n, such as 1, 2, 3, 4 -- and maybe a few more consecutive values). Morton, et al. Standards Track exp. Feb 2005 Page 16 Packet Reordering Metric for IPPM August 2004 This definition does not assign an n to all reordered packets as defined by the singleton metric, in particular when blocks of successive packets are reordered. (In the arrival sequence s={1,2,3,7,8,9,4,5,6}, packets 4, 5, and 6 are reordered, but only packet 4 is n-reordered, with n=3.) Definition 2: The degree of n-reordering of the sample is m/l, where m is the number of n-reordered packets in the sample. Definition 3: The degree of "monotonic reordering" of the sample is its degree of 1-reordering. Definition 4: A sample is said to have no reordering if its degree of n-reordering is 0. 5.4 Discussion: The degree of n-reordering may be expressed as a percentage, in which case the number from Definition 2 is multiplied by 100%. Knowledge of n-reordering is particularly useful for determining the portion of reordered packets that can or cannot be restored to order in a typical TCP receiver buffer based on their arrival order alone (and without the aid of retransmission). Important special cases are n=1 and n=3: - For n=1, absence of 1-reordering means the sequence numbers that the receiver sees are monotonically increasing with respect to the previous arriving packet. - For n=3, a NewReno TCP sender would retransmit 1 packet in response to an instance of 3-reordering and therefore consider this packet lost for the purposes of congestion control (the sender will half its congestion window). Detecting instances of 3-reordering is useful for determining the portion of reordered packets that are in fact as good as lost. A sample's n-reordering may be expressed as a histogram, to summarize the frequency for each value of n. We note that the definition of n-reordering cannot predict the exact number of packets unnecessarily retransmitted by a TCP sender under some circumstances, such as cases with closely-spaced reordered singletons. The definition is less complicated than a TCP implementation where both time and position influence the sender's behavior. A packet's n-reordering is sometimes equal to its reordering extent, e. n-reordering is different in the following ways: Morton, et al. Standards Track exp. Feb 2005 Page 17 Packet Reordering Metric for IPPM August 2004 1. n is a count of early packets with consecutive arrival positions at the receiver. 2. Reordered packets may not be n-reordered, but will have an extent, e (see the examples). 6. Measurement and Implementation Issues The results of tests will be dependent on the time interval between measurement packets (both at the Source, and during transport where spacing may change). Clearly, packets launched infrequently (e.g., 1 per 10 seconds) are unlikely to be reordered. Test stream designers may prefer to use a periodic sending interval so that a known temporal bias is maintained, also bringing simplified results analysis (as described in RFC 3432 [12]). In this case, the periodic sending interval should be chosen to reproduce the closest Source packet spacing expected (down to the link speed serialization time limit). Use of the closest possible spacing should reveal the greatest extent of steady-state reordering on the path. Of course, packet spacing is likely to vary as the stream traverses the test path. Packet lengths might also be varied to attempt to detect instances of parallel processing (they may cause steady state reordering). For example, a line-speed burst of the longest (MTU-length) packets followed by a burst of the shortest possible packets may be an effective detecting pattern. Other size patterns are possible. The non-reversing order criterion and all metrics described above remain valid and useful when a stream of packets experiences packet loss, or both loss and reordering. In other words, losses alone do not cause subsequent packets to be declared reordered. Assuming that the necessary sequence information (sequence number and/or source time stamp) is included in the packet payload (possibly in application headers such as RTP), packet sequence may be evaluated in a passive measurement arrangement. Also, it is possible to evaluate sequence at a single point along a path, since the usual need for synchronized Src and Dst Clocks may be relaxed to some extent. When the Src sequence is based on byte stream, or payload numbering, care must be taken to avoid declaring retransmitted packets reordered. The additional reference of Src Time is one way to avoid this ambiguity. Since this metric definition may use sequence numbers with finite range, it is possible that the sequence numbers could reach end-of- range and roll over to zero during a measurement. By definition, the Next Expected value cannot decrease, and all packets received Morton, et al. Standards Track exp. Feb 2005 Page 18 Packet Reordering Metric for IPPM August 2004 after a roll-over would be declared reordered. Sequence number roll-over can be avoided by using combinations of counter size and test duration where roll-over is impossible (and sequence is reset to zero at the start). Also, message-based numbering results in slower sequence consumption. There may still be cases where methodological mitigation of this problem is desirable (e.g., long- term testing). The elements of mitigation are: 1. There must be a test to detect if a roll-over has occurred. It would be nearly impossible for the sequence numbers of successive packets to jump by more than half the total range, so these large discontinuities are designated as roll-over. 2. All sequence numbers used in computations are represented in a sufficiently large precision. The numbers have a correction applied (equivalent to adding a significant digit) whenever roll-over is detected. 3. Reordered packets coincident with sequence numbers reaching end- of-range must also be detected for proper application of correction factor. Ideally, the test instrument would have the ability to use all earlier packets at any point in the test stream. In practice, there will be limited ability to determine reordering extent, due to the storage requirements for previous packets. Saving only packets that indicate discontinuities (and their arrival positions) will reduce storage volume. Another solution is to use a sliding history window of packets, where the window size would be determined by an upper bound on the useful reordering extent. This bound could be several packets or several seconds-worth of packets, depending on the intended analysis. When discarding all stream information beyond the window, the reordering extent or degree of n-reordering may need to be expressed as greater than the window length if the reordering discontinuity information has been discarded, and Gap calculations would not be possible. The requirement to ignore duplicate packets also mandates storage. Here, tracking the sequence numbers of missing packets may minimize storage size. Missing packets may eventually be declared lost, or reordered if they arrive. The missing packet list and the largest sequence number received thus far (NextExp - 1) are sufficient information to determine if a packet is a duplicate (assuming a manageable storage size for packets that are missing due to loss). Some in-order packet arrivals may not be useful to TCP receivers, due to the receiver window. Sequence Discontinuities and their size are defined in section 3.4, and this information may be useful to determine whether a packet is useful or not. Morton, et al. Standards Track exp. Feb 2005 Page 19 Packet Reordering Metric for IPPM August 2004 When in-order packet s arrives and represents a Sequence Discontinuity, If SeqDiscontinutySize >= (number of packets needed to exceed TCP Receive window) then s will not be acknowledged until the TCP window fills and slides over. If s is sufficiently beyond the window and the path is congested such that intermediate packets never arrive, s will be discarded and the TCP connection may drop. Last, we note that determining reordering extents and gaps is tricky when there are overlapped or nested events. Test instrument complexity and reordering complexity are directly correlated. 7. Examples of Arrival Order Evaluation This section provides some examples to illustrate how the non- reversing order criterion works, how n-reordering works in comparison, and the value of viewing reordering in all the dimensions of time, bytes, and position. Throughout this section, we will refer to packets by their source sequence number, except where noted. So "Packet 4" refers to the packet with source sequence number 4, and the reader should refer to the tables in each example to determine packet 4's arrival index number, if needed. 7.1 Example with a single packet reordered Table 1 gives a simple case of reordering, where one packet is reordered, Packet 4. Packets are listed according to their arrival, and message numbering is used. Table 1 Example with Packet 4 Reordered, Sending order(SrcNum@Src): 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10 s Src Dst Dst Byte Late @Dst NextExp Time Time Delay IPDV Order Offset Time 1 1 0 68 68 1 2 2 20 88 68 0 2 3 3 40 108 68 0 3 5 4 80 148 68 -82 4 6 6 100 168 68 0 5 7 7 120 188 68 0 6 8 8 140 208 68 0 7 4 9 60 210 150 82 8 400 62 9 9 160 228 68 0 9 10 10 180 248 68 0 10 Each column gives the following information: Morton, et al. Standards Track exp. Feb 2005 Page 20 Packet Reordering Metric for IPPM August 2004 s Packet sequence number at the Source. NextExp The value of NextExp when the packet arrived(before update). SrcTime Packet time stamp at the Source, ms. DstTime Packet time stamp at the Destination, ms. Delay 1-way delay of the packet, ms. IPDV IP Packet Delay Variation, ms IPDV = Delay(SrcNum)-Delay(SrcNum-1) DstOrder Order in which the packet arrived at the Destination. Byte Offset The Byte Offset of a reordered packet, in bytes. LateTime The lateness of a reordered packet, in ms. We can see that when Packet 4 arrives, NextExp=9, and it is declared reordered. We compute the extent of reordering as follows: Using the notation , the received packets are represented as: \/ s = 1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 7, 8, 4, 9, 10 i = 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 /\ when j=7, 8 > 4, so the reordering extent is 1 or more. when j=6, 7 > 4, so the reordering extent is 2 or more. when j=5, 6 > 4, so the reordering extent is 3 or more. when j=4, 5 > 4, so the reordering extent is 4 or more. when j=3, but 3 < 4, and 4 is the maximum extent, e=4 (assuming there are no earlier sequence discontinuities, as in this example). Further, we can compute the Late Time (210-148=62ms using DstTime) compared to Packet 5's arrival. If the receiver has a de-jitter buffer that holds more than 4 packets, or at least 62 ms storage, Packet 4 may be useful. Note that 1-way delay and IPDV also indicate unusual behavior for Packet 4. Also, if Packet 4 had arrived at least 62ms earlier, it would have been in-order in this example. If all packets contained 100 byte payloads, then Byte Offset is equal to 400 bytes. Following the definitions of section 5.1, Packet 4 is defined to be 4-reordered. Morton, et al. Standards Track exp. Feb 2005 Page 21 Packet Reordering Metric for IPPM August 2004 7.2 Example with two packets reordered Table 2 Example with Packets 5 and 6 Reordered, Sending order(s @Src): 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10 s Src Dst Dst Byte Late @Dst NextExp Time Time Delay IPDV Order Offset Time 1 1 0 68 68 1 2 2 20 88 68 0 2 3 3 40 108 68 0 3 4 4 60 128 68 0 4 7 5 120 188 68 -22 5 5 8 80 189 109 41 6 100 1 6 8 100 190 90 -19 7 100 2 8 8 140 208 68 0 8 9 9 160 228 68 0 9 10 10 180 248 68 0 10 Table 2 shows a case where Packets 5 and 6 arrive just behind Packet 7, so both 5 and 6 are reordered. The Late times (189-188=1, 190- 188=2) are small. Using the notation , the received packets are represented as: \/ \/ s = 1, 2, 3, 4, 7, 5, 6, 8, 9, 10 i = 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 /\ /\ Considering Packet 5 first: when j=5, 7 > 5, so the reordering extent is 1 or more. when j=4, but 4 < 5, so 1 is its maximum extent, and e=1. Considering Packet 6 next: when j=6, 5 < 6, the extent is not yet defined. when j=5, 7 > 6, so the reordering extent is i-j=2 or more. when j=4, 4 < 6, and we find 2 is its maximum extent, and e=2. We can also associate each of these reordered packets with a reordering discontinuity. We find the minimum j=5 (for both packets) according to Section 4.2.3. So Packet 6 is associated with the same reordering discontinuity as Packet 5, at Packet 7. This is a case where reordering extent e would over-estimate the packet storage required to restore order. Only one packet storage is required (to hold Packet 7), but e=2 for Packet 6. Following the definitions of section 5, Packet 5 is defined to be 1- reordered, but Packet 6 is not qualified n-reordered. Morton, et al. Standards Track exp. Feb 2005 Page 22 Packet Reordering Metric for IPPM August 2004 A hypothetical sender/receiver pair may retransmit Packet 5 unnecessarily, since it is 1-reordered (in agreement with the singleton metric). Though Packet 6 may not be unnecessarily retransmitted, the receiver cannot advance Packet 7 to the higher layers until after Packet 6 arrives. Therefore, the singleton metric correctly determined that Packet 6 is reordered. 7.3 Example with three packets reordered Table 3 Example with Packets 4, 5, and 6 reordered Sending order(s @Src): 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11 s Src Dst Dst Byte Late @Dst NextExp Time Time Delay IPDV Order Offset Time 1 1 0 68 68 1 2 2 20 88 68 0 2 3 3 40 108 68 0 3 7 4 120 188 68 -88 4 8 8 140 208 68 0 5 9 9 160 228 68 0 6 10 10 180 248 68 0 7 4 11 60 250 190 122 8 400 62 5 11 80 252 172 -18 9 400 64 6 11 100 256 156 -16 10 400 68 11 11 200 268 68 0 11 The case in Table 3 is where three packets in sequence have long transit times (Packets with s = 4,5,and 6). Delay, Late time, and Byte Offset capture this very well, and indicate variation in reordering extent, while IPDV indicates that the spacing between packets 4,5,and 6 has changed. The histogram of Reordering extents (e) would be: Bin 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Frequency 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 Using the notation , the received packets are represented as: s = 1, 2, 3, 7, 8, 9,10, 4, 5, 6, 11 i = 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10,11 We first calculate the n-reordering. Considering Packet 4 first: when n=1, 7<=j<8, and 10> 4, so the packet is 1-reordered. when n=2, 6<=j<8, and 9 > 4, so the packet is 2-reordered. when n=3, 5<=j<8, and 8 > 4, so the packet is 3-reordered. when n=4, 4<=j<8, and 7 > 4, so the packet is 4-reordered. when n=5, 3<=j<8, but 3 < 4, and 4 is the maximum n-reordering. Considering packet 5[9] next: Morton, et al. Standards Track exp. Feb 2005 Page 23 Packet Reordering Metric for IPPM August 2004 when n=1, 8<=j<9, but 4 < 5, so the packet at i=9 is not qualified as n-reordered. We find the same to for Packet 6. We now consider whether reordered Packets 5 and 6 are associated with the same reordering discontinuity as Packet 4. Using the test of Section 4.2.3, we find that the minimum j=4 for all three packets. They are all associated with the reordering discontinuity at Packet 7. This example shows again that the n-reordering definition identifies a single Packet (4) with a sufficient degree of reordering to result in one unnecessary packet retransmission by the New Reno TCP sender. Also, the reordered arrival of Packets 5 and 6 will allow the receiver process to pass Packets 7 through 10 up the protocol stack (the singleton metric indicates 5 and 6 are reordered, and they are all associated with a single reordering discontinuity). 7.4 Example with Multiple Packet Reordering Discontinuities Table 4 Example with Multiple Packet Reordering Discontinuities Sending order(s @Src): 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16 Discontinuity Discontinuity |---------Gap---------| s = 1, 2, 3, 6, 7, 4, 5, 8, 9, 10, 12, 13, 11, 14, 15, 16 i = 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16 r = 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 1, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 1, 2, 3, 4, ... n = 1 2 3 end r counts = 5 1 6 Packet 4 has extent e=2, Packet 5 has extent e=3, and Packet 11 has e=2. There are two different reordering discontinuities, one at Packet 6 (where j=4) and one at Packet 12 (where j'=11). According to the definition of Reordering Gap Gap(j') = (j') - (j) Gap(11) = (11) - (4) = 7 We also have three reordering-free runs of lengths 5, 1, and 6. The differences between these two multiple-event metrics are evident here. Gaps are the distance between sequence discontinuities that are subsequently defined as reordering discontinuities, while reordering-free runs capture the distance between reordered packets. 8. Security Considerations 8.1 Denial of Service Attacks Morton, et al. Standards Track exp. Feb 2005 Page 24 Packet Reordering Metric for IPPM August 2004 This metric requires a stream of packets sent from one host (source) to another host (destination) through intervening networks. This method could be abused for denial of service attacks directed at destination and/or the intervening network(s). Administrators of source, destination, and the intervening network(s) should establish bilateral or multi-lateral agreements regarding the timing, size, and frequency of collection of sample metrics. Use of this method in excess of the terms agreed between the participants may be cause for immediate rejection or discard of packets or other escalation procedures defined between the affected parties. 8.2 User data confidentiality Active use of this method generates packets for a sample, rather than taking samples based on user data, and does not threaten user data confidentiality. Passive measurement must restrict attention to the headers of interest. Since user payloads may be temporarily stored for length analysis, suitable precautions MUST be taken to keep this information safe and confidential. 8.3 Interference with the metric It may be possible to identify that a certain packet or stream of packets is part of a sample. With that knowledge at the destination and/or the intervening networks, it is possible to change the processing of the packets (e.g. increasing or decreasing delay) that may distort the measured performance. It may also be possible to generate additional packets that appear to be part of the sample metric. These additional packets are likely to perturb the results of the sample measurement. To discourage the kind of interference mentioned above, packet interference checks, such as cryptographic hash, may be used. 9. IANA Considerations Since this metric does not define a protocol or well-known values, there are no IANA considerations in this memo. 10. Normative References 1 Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels", RFC 2119, March 1997. 2 Paxson, V., Almes, G., Mahdavi, J., and Mathis, M., "Framework for IP Performance Metrics", RFC 2330, May 1998. 11. Informative References Morton, et al. Standards Track exp. Feb 2005 Page 25 Packet Reordering Metric for IPPM August 2004 3 V.Paxson, "Measurements and Analysis of End-to-End Internet Dynamics," Ph.D. dissertation, U.C. Berkeley, 1997, ftp://ftp.ee.lbl.gov/papers/vp-thesis/dis.ps.gz. 4 Postel, J., "Transmission Control Protocol", STD 7, RFC 793, September 1981. Obtain via: http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc793.txt 5 L.Ciavattone and A.Morton, "Out-of-Sequence Packet Parameter Definition (for Y.1540)", Contribution number T1A1.3/2000-047, October 30, 2000. ftp://ftp.t1.org/pub/t1a1/2000-A13/0a130470.doc 6 J.C.R.Bennett, C.Partridge, and N.Shectman, "Packet Reordering is Not Pathological Network Behavior," IEEE/ACM Transactions on Networking, vol.7, no.6, pp.789-798, December 1999. 7 D.Loguinov and H.Radha, "Measurement Study of Low-bitrate Internet Video Streaming", Proceedings of the ACM SIGCOMM Internet Measurement Workshop 2001 November 1-2, 2001, San Francisco, USA. 8 J.Bellardo and S.Savage, "Measuring Packet Reordering," Proceedings of the ACM SIGCOMM Internet Measurement Workshop 2002, November 6-8, Marseille, France. 9 S.Jaiswal et al., "Measurement and Classification of Out-of- Sequence Packets in a Tier-1 IP Backbone," Proceedings of the ACM SIGCOMM Internet Measurement Workshop 2002, November 6-8, Marseille, France. 10 L.Ciavattone, A.Morton, and G.Ramachandran, "Standardized Active Measurements on a Tier 1 IP Backbone," IEEE Communications Mag., pp 90-97, June 2003. 11 Demichelis, C., and Chimento, P., "IP Packet Delay Variation Metric for IP Performance Metrics (IPPM)", RFC 3393, November 2002. 12 Raisanen, V., Grotefeld, G., and Morton, A., "Network performance measurement with periodic streams", RFC 3432, November 2002. 12. Acknowledgments The authors would like to acknowledge many helpful discussions with Matt Zekauskas, Jon Bennett (who authored the sections on Reordering-Free Runs), and Matt Mathis. We thank David Newman and Henk Uijterwall for their reviews and suggestions, and Michal Przybylski for sharing implementation experiences with us on the ippm-list. We gratefully acknowledge the foundation laid by the authors of the IP performance Framework [2]. Morton, et al. Standards Track exp. Feb 2005 Page 26 Packet Reordering Metric for IPPM August 2004 13. Appendix A Example Implementations in C (Informative) Two example c-code implementations of reordering definitions follow: Example 1 n-reordering ============================================ #include #define MAXN 100 #define min(a, b) ((a) < (b)? (a): (b)) #define loop(x) ((x) >= 0? x: x + MAXN) /* * Read new sequence number and return it. Return a sentinel value * of EOF (at least once) when there are no more sequence numbers. * In this example, the sequence numbers come from stdin; * in an actual test, they would come from the network. * */ int read_sequence_number() { int res, rc; rc = scanf("%d\n", &res); if (rc == 1) return res; else return EOF; } int main() { int m[MAXN]; /* We have m[j-1] == number of * j-reordered packets. */ int ring[MAXN]; /* Last sequence numbers seen. */ int r = 0; /* Ring pointer for next write. */ int l = 0; /* Number of sequence numbers read. */ int s; /* Last sequence number read. */ int j; for (j = 0; j < MAXN; j++) m[j] = 0; for (;(s = read_sequence_number())!= EOF;l++,r=(r+1)%MAXN) { for (j=0; j #define MAXN 100 #define min(a, b) ((a) < (b)? (a): (b)) #define loop(x) ((x) >= 0? x: x + MAXN) /* Global counters */ int receive_packets=0; /* number of recieved */ int reorder_packets=0; /* number of reordered packets */ /* function to test if current packet has been reordered * returns 0 = not reordered * 1 = reordered */ int testorder1(int seqnum) // Al { static int NextExp = 1; int iReturn = 0; if (seqnum >= NextExp) { NextExp = seqnum+1; } else { iReturn = 1; } return iReturn; } int testorder2(int seqnum) // Stanislav { static int ring[MAXN]; /* Last sequence numbers seen. */ static int r = 0; /* Ring pointer for next write */ int l = 0; /* Number of sequence numbers read. */ int j; int iReturn = 0; l++; r = (r+1) % MAXN; for (j=0; j= NextExp, * AND the fragment offset FragOffset >= NextExpFrag However, it more efficient to define reordered conditions exactly, and designate Type-P-Reordered as False otherwise. The value of Type-P-Reordered is defined as True (the packet is reordered) under the conditions below. In these cases, the NextExp value does not change. Case 1: if s < NextExp Case 2: if s < FragSeq# Case 3: if s>= NextExp AND s = FragSeq# AND FragOffset < NextExpFrag This definition can also be illustrated in pseudo-code. A draft version of the code follows, and some simplification may be possible. A challenging aspect surrounds the housekeeping for the new parameters. NextExp=0; NextExpFrag=0; FragSeq#=0; while(packets arrive with s, MoreFrag, FragOffset) { if (s>=NextExp AND MoreFrag==0 AND s>=FragSeq#){ /* a normal packet or last frag of an in-order packet arrived */ NextExp = s+1; FragSeq# = 0; NextExpFrag = 0; Reordering = False; } if (s>=NextExp AND MoreFrag==1 AND s>FragSeq#>=0){ /* a fragment of a new packet arrived, possibly with a Morton, et al. Standards Track exp. Feb 2005 Page 30 Packet Reordering Metric for IPPM August 2004 higher sequence number than the current fragmented packet */ FragSeq# = s; NextExpFrag = FragOffset+1; Reordering = False; } if (s>=NextExp AND MoreFrag==1 AND s==FragSeq#){ /* a fragment of the "current packet s" arrived */ if (FragOffset >= NextExpFrag){ NextExpFrag = FragOffset+1; Reordering = False; } else{ Reordering = True; /* fragment reordered */ } } if (s>=NextExp AND MoreFrag==1 AND s < FragSeq#){ /* case where a late fragment arrived, for illustration only, redundant with else below*/ Reordering = True; } else { /* when s < NextExp, or MoreFrag==0 AND s < FragSeq# */ Reordering = True; } } A working version of the code would include a check to ensure that all fragments of a packet arrive before using the Reordered status further, such as in sample metrics. 14.4 Discussion: Notes on Sample Metrics when evaluating Fragments All fragments with the same Source Sequence Number are assigned the same Source Time. Evaluation with byte stream numbering may be simplified if the fragment offset is simply added to the SourceByte of the first packet (with fragment offset = 0), keeping the 8 octet units of the offset in mind. 15. Author's Addresses Al Morton AT&T Labs Room D3 - 3C06 200 Laurel Ave. South Middletown, NJ 07748 USA Phone +1 732 420 1571 EMail: Len Ciavattone AT&T Labs Morton, et al. Standards Track exp. Feb 2005 Page 31 Packet Reordering Metric for IPPM August 2004 Room C4 - 2B29 200 Laurel Ave. South Middletown, NJ 07748 USA Phone +1 732 420 1239 EMail: Gomathi Ramachandran AT&T Labs Room C4 - 3D22 200 Laurel Ave. South Middletown, NJ 07748 USA Phone +1 732 420 2353 EMail: Stanislav Shalunov Internet2 200 Business Park Drive, Suite 307 Armonk, NY 10504 Phone: + 1 914 765 1182 EMail: Jerry Perser Consultant Calabasas, CA 91302 USA Phone: + 1 EMail: Full Copyright Statement Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2004). This document is subject to the rights, licenses and restrictions contained in BCP 78 and except as set forth therein, the authors retain all their rights. This document and the information contained herein are provided on an "AS IS" basis and THE CONTRIBUTOR, THE ORGANIZATION HE/SHE REPRESENTS OR IS SPONSORED BY (IF ANY), THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING TASK FORCE DISCLAIM ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. Intellectual Property The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any Intellectual Property Rights or other rights that might be claimed to pertain to the implementation or use of the technology described in this document or the extent to which any license under such rights might or might not be available; nor does it represent that Morton, et al. Standards Track exp. Feb 2005 Page 32 Packet Reordering Metric for IPPM August 2004 it has made any independent effort to identify any such rights. Information on the procedures with respect to rights in RFC documents can be found in BCP 78 and BCP 79. Copies of IPR disclosures made to the IETF Secretariat and any assurances of licenses to be made available, or the result of an attempt made to obtain a general license or permission for the use of such proprietary rights by implementers or users of this specification can be obtained from the IETF on-line IPR repository at http://www.ietf.org/ipr. The IETF invites any interested party to bring to its attention any copyrights, patents or patent applications, or other proprietary rights that may cover technology that may be required to implement this standard. Please address the information to the IETF at ietf- ipr@ietf.org. Acknowledgement Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the Internet Society. Morton, et al. Standards Track exp. Feb 2005 Page 33