Internet DRAFT - draft-rauschenbach-alto-wireless-access
draft-rauschenbach-alto-wireless-access
ALTO Working Group U. Rauschenbach
Internet-Draft Nokia Networks
Intended status: Standards Track October 27, 2014
Expires: April 30, 2015
ALTO in wireless access networks
draft-rauschenbach-alto-wireless-access-00
Abstract
The Application-Layer Traffic Optimization (ALTO) specification
defines the concept of Provider-defined Identifiers (PIDs) as the
aggregation of network endpoints for network nodes. Each PID can be
associated with a set of endpoint addresses, e.g. aggregating
endpoints that use the same network access point.
This document focuses on mobile networks and introduces proposes the
toidea of using use cells of cellular access networks as an
aggregation points. This allows applications to make decisions based
on the path cost of using the current cell as a network attachment
point, or to even choose which network access points network
attachment point to select. Use cases are described which can
benefit from this. The draft elaborates on possible ALTO
modifications enabling such use cases. The intent of the draft is to
start discussion on the topic.
Requirements Language
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 [RFC2119].
Status of This Memo
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Table of Contents
1. Introduction
2. Problem statement
3. Use cases
3.1. Cell as aggregation point
3.2. Passive reaction to handovers
3.2.1. Cost calendar to extend battery life for background
tasks
3.2.2. Cost calendar to optimize application sessions
3.3. Connection management and traffic offload
4. Requirements and solution ideas
5. References
Author's Address
1. Introduction
The Application-Layer Traffic Optimization (ALTO) [RFC7285]
specification allows providing information about a network to support
applications in making decisions regarding the most optimal use of
the network. Originally geared towards supporting peer-to-peer
applications in IP networks, the ALTO WG has recently broadened its
scope.
ALTO defines the concept of Provider-defined Identifiers (PIDs) to
aggregate network endpoints. Each PID can be associated with a set
of endpoint addresses. The concept of PIDs is generic and
potentially allows many types of endpoint addresses - the ALTO
specification mentions IP addresses, overlay IDs and MAC addresses.
However, RFC 7285 only defines address types for IPv4 and IPv6
addresses and leaves it to additional documents to define additional
types.
This document introduces a number of use cases occurring in wireless
networks which benefit from associating a cell or access point with a
PID. In such scenarios, the cell or access point through which
network attachment occurs or may occur in the future needs to be
identifiable by the ALTO client. Wireless access points provide
information such as cell ID to identify them. However, currently
ALTO provides only IP addresses for endpoints, and arbitrary strings
as PID values. Allowing an ALTO map to provide information about an
actual cell or access point can benefit use cases when the terminal
needs metrics describing the path cost of using a particular cell or
access point before the terminal attaches to the network via that
cell or access point, as well as for using a cell ID to aggregate
information about all endpoints attached to that cell or access
point.
2. Problem statement
ALTO defines the concept of PIDs which can be used to aggregate
network nodes. A PID can aggregate e.g. cover all nodes connected to
the network via a particular POP. It is assumed that in fixed
networks, the actual POP via which an endpoint is connected to the
network rarely changes. In cellular wireless networks, the situation
is different. Network access happens through cells. Nodes
frequently change cells when they move. Traffic conditions and other
costs may vary widely from cell to cell. Therefore, it makes sense
to include information about actual cells through which network
attachment happens in the ALTO maps. However, currently this is not
possible in the ALTO data entities. Similarly, access to WiFi
networks happens through wireless access points which are currently
also not considered in ALTO.
3. Use cases
3.1. Cell as aggregation point
Wireless terminals connect to a cellular network through different
cells, and to Wi-Fi networks through different wireless access
points. The quality of network access may vary greatly from
connection point to connection point, e.g. due to congestion or the
differing capacity of backhaul (connection point is used to refer to
both cells and access points from now on). In particular in cellular
networks, the connection point actually used frequently changes.
If the ALTO information model would be able to identify the
connection point with a PID, then different costs could be provided
for different map paths to the connection points. Also, there may
potentially be a large number of cellular subscribers connected to a
typical cell. It may not matter which endpoint addresses they use,
but only via which connection point they are attached to the network.
Exploiting this may greatly reduce map size as numerous endpoints
under a connection point can be aggregated into a PID, and also
reduce the number of map updates as endpoints move so that they can
be attached via different connection points due to endpoint movement
or handovers.
3.2. Passive reaction to handovers
Applications can benefit from knowledge or assumption about the cells
a terminal is connected to or will with some probability be connected
to in the near future.
Applications may know which cells a terminal typically connects
throughout a day e.g. from observing daily commute patterns. They
may also be provided candidate cells with favorable conditions by
including in the ALTO response a set of non-congested cells in the
vicinity of a queried cell. Once the terminal connects to such a
cell while moving, the application can execute tasks which require
e.g. higher throughput.
Also, if non-congested and congested cells overlap (such as e.g. a
non-congested small cell or WiFi hotspot and a congested macro cell)
and the terminal is in motion, an application can make assumptions
about future congestion and prepare / react accordingly.
Finally, applications may obtain candidate cells by accessing
information about neighboring cells through the APIs provided by
modern smartphones.
Based on such knowledge, the following two classes of use cases can
be distinguished.
3.2.1. Cost calendar to extend battery life for background tasks
Large fractions of Internet traffic today occur over wireless
systems. Not all traffic is real-time and many tasks can be
performed in the background. In particular, clients that download
large volumes of data (e.g., mail applications or social network
clients) can choose the time when they will actually download large
items such as attachments or video clips.
If a cost calendar does include information that a client can use to
compute the achievable throughput of a service via different cells
(e.g. based on information about available bandwidth or congestion
information per cell), it can initiate or schedule large downloads to
take place when it can connect to a cell that currently allows high
throughput.
If a high throughput cell is used for background downloads, the
battery life can be extended as the terminal spends less time in
battery-consuming states with the processor busy and the radio on and
instead spends more time in battery-conserving idle modes.
3.2.2. Cost calendar to optimize application sessions
Cost and other metrics usually fluctuate over time e.g. based on the
day of week. Such knowledge can be used to provide hints to
applications how to adapt proactively. For instance, during (or
prior to) user mobility (e.g. a commute), an application may make use
of such heuristic information to prefetch farther in advance (beyond
just in time) more items within an ongoing streaming session at times
of low congestion, prior to it entering time intervals or cells with
higher congestion etc. Such knowledge can also contribute to picking
a suitable video rate in progressive streaming. In a video telephony
session, applications may proactively switch to audio-only calls in
congested areas. This use case is somewhat related to the previous
one; however, it focuses on optimizing the user experience of
foreground tasks, rather than on scheduling background tasks.
3.3. Connection management and traffic offload
The previouis use cases have focussed on the application reacting on
a change in network access point. However, often various connection
points of different wireless networks are available to which an
endpoint may actively attach. As mobile endpoints get more
intelligent, functions for connection management and traffic offload
can consider not only the quality of the radio connection when doing
access selection and traffic offload, but also other properties such
as cost parameters and additional metrics provided by ALTO. Also,
when multiple different wireless access options are available,
traffic may be distributed between these options based on ALTO cost
maps so the network can be used more optimally. However, this
requires that the wireless terminal can associate ALTO map entries
with actual cell identifiers in the wireless networks.
4. Requirements and solution ideas
This section elaborates solution ideas as a starting point for the
technical discussion.
Aggregation in ALTO is modeled by a PID which represents a group of
nodes. A PID is identified by a provider-defined string with no
general meaning, and an endpoint is identified by its IP address.
Cellular networks use a cell identifier (cell ID) to identify the
cells through which network attachment happens. In Public Land
Mobile Networks (PLMNs) based on E-UTRAN [TS36.311], the Cell ID is
composed of the PLMN ID and the ECI, which in turn are composite
identifiers. The PLMN ID (Public Land Mobile Network IDentifier)
identifies a wireless communications system. It consists of the 3
digit Mobile Country Code (MCC) and the 3 digit Mobile Network Code
(MNC). ECI is the E-UTRAN Cell Identifier which identifies a Cell
within a PLMN. An ECI is composed of eNB ID and Cell ID. The eNB ID
(20 bits) is the eNodeB IDentifier which identifies an eNB within a
PLMN. The Cell ID (8 bits) identifies a (sub)cell within a
particular eNodeB.
WiFi-based wireless networks provide data such as SSID, access point
MAC address and other values that allow to identify the network
access point. Note that the Hotspot 2.0 specification [HS2.0] allows
a terminal querying a number of parameters prior to connecting to an
access point (such as Venue Name, Roaming Consortium, IP Address Type
Availability, 3GPP Cellular Network, Domain Name, Hotspot Query List,
Hotspot Capability List and others). The terminal searching for a
particular network access can retrieve the information elements
through the IEEE 802.11 ANQP from the access point prior to
connection establishment. However, once connected to an access
point, the terminal has to retrieve the information of other access
points in the area by virtually detaching from the access point and
running access network discovery over the air to the other access
points. It would be beneficial when the terminal would be able to
retrieve the information of adjacent access points and access
networks by way of e.g. an ALTO query over the existing connection.
In order to enable the use cases defined above in ALTO, the IDs which
identify the wireless connection point would have to be added to the
ALTO data model.
To support the use cases above, two things are required:
1. To enable querying properties of a certain cell such as bandwidth
or degree of congestion. Such queries could be supported through
the mechanism of endpoint property queries (RFC7285 section
11.4). Possible solutions are:
* Solution A: The cellular access point would need to be defined
as an additional endpoint inside the group aggregated by a
PID, i.e. a new address type that represents a cell ID would
be required.
* Solution B: A property query would be needed for the PID, plus
a property that represents the cell identifier.
2. To enable cells as identifiable aggregation points, the notion of
a PID (which is now just a string) would need to be extended by
including cell identification. Assigning different PIDs to
different cells would then allow to create different cost map
sections for paths of access through different cells (e.g., costs
would be higher for access through congested cells than for
access through non-congested cells).
* Solution: A PID would need to be extended by a cell identifier
(related to Solution B above)
5. References
[HS2.0] The WiFi Alliance, "Hotspot 2.0 (Release 2) Technical
Specification, Version 1.0.0", August 2014.
[RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.
[RFC7285] Alimi, R., Penno, R., Yang, Y., Kiesel, S., Previdi, S.,
Roome, W., Shalunov, S., and R. Woundy, "Application-Layer
Traffic Optimization (ALTO) Protocol", RFC 7285, September
2014.
[TS36.311]
Third Generation Partnership Project, "3GPP TS 36.331 V12:
Technical Specification Group Radio Access Network;
Evolved Universal Terrestrial Radio Access (E-UTRA); Radio
Resource Control (RRC); Protocol specification (Release
12)", September 2014.
Author's Address
Uwe Rauschenbach
Nokia Networks
Email: uwe.rauschenbach@nsn.com