Difference between revisions of "RFC5481"

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 +
Network Working Group                                          A. Morton
 +
Request for Comments: 5481                                    AT&T Labs
 +
Category: Informational                                        B. Claise
 +
                                                  Cisco Systems, Inc.
 +
                                                          March 2009
  
 +
          Packet Delay Variation Applicability Statement
  
 
 
 
 
Network Working Group                                          A. MortonRequest for Comments: 5481                                    AT&T LabsCategory: Informational                                        B. Claise                                                  Cisco Systems, Inc.                                                          March 2009
 
 
          Packet Delay Variation Applicability Statement
 
 
Status of This Memo
 
Status of This Memo
  
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document authors.  All rights reserved.
 
document authors.  All rights reserved.
  
This document is subject to [[BCP78|BCP 78]] and the IETF Trust's Legal
+
This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal
 
Provisions Relating to IETF Documents in effect on the date of
 
Provisions Relating to IETF Documents in effect on the date of
 
publication of this document (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info).
 
publication of this document (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info).
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it for publication as an RFC or to translate it into languages other
 
it for publication as an RFC or to translate it into languages other
 
than English.
 
than English.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
Abstract
 
Abstract
  
 
Packet delay variation metrics appear in many different standards
 
Packet delay variation metrics appear in many different standards
documents.  The metric definition in [[RFC3393|RFC 3393]] has considerable
+
documents.  The metric definition in RFC 3393 has considerable
 
flexibility, and it allows multiple formulations of delay variation
 
flexibility, and it allows multiple formulations of delay variation
 
through the specification of different packet selection functions.
 
through the specification of different packet selection functions.
Line 66: Line 50:
 
variation and their uses, and recommends which of the two forms is
 
variation and their uses, and recommends which of the two forms is
 
best matched to particular conditions and tasks.
 
best matched to particular conditions and tasks.
 +
 +
Table of Contents
 +
 +
1. Introduction ....................................................4
 +
  1.1. Requirements Language ......................................5
 +
  1.2. Background Literature in IPPM and Elsewhere ................5
 +
  1.3. Organization of the Memo ...................................6
 +
2. Purpose and Scope ...............................................7
 +
3. Brief Descriptions of Delay Variation Uses ......................7
 +
  3.1. Inferring Queue Occupation on a Path .......................7
 +
  3.2. Determining De-Jitter Buffer Size ..........................8
 +
  3.3. Spatial Composition .......................................10
 +
  3.4. Service-Level Comparison ..................................10
 +
  3.5. Application-Layer FEC Design ..............................10
 +
4. Formulations of IPDV and PDV ...................................10
 +
  4.1. IPDV: Inter-Packet Delay Variation ........................11
 +
  4.2. PDV: Packet Delay Variation ...............................11
 +
  4.3. A "Point" about Measurement Points ........................12
 +
  4.4. Examples and Initial Comparisons ..........................12
 +
5. Survey of Earlier Comparisons ..................................13
 +
  5.1. Demichelis' Comparison ....................................13
 +
  5.2. Ciavattone et al. .........................................15
 +
  5.3. IPPM List Discussion from 2000 ............................16
 +
  5.4. Y.1540 Appendix II ........................................18
 +
  5.5. Clark's ITU-T SG 12 Contribution ..........................18
 +
6. Additional Properties and Comparisons ..........................18
 +
  6.1. Packet Loss ...............................................18
 +
  6.2. Path Changes ..............................................19
 +
        6.2.1. Lossless Path Change ...............................20
 +
        6.2.2. Path Change with Loss ..............................21
 +
  6.3. Clock Stability and Error .................................22
 +
  6.4. Spatial Composition .......................................24
 +
  6.5. Reporting a Single Number (SLA) ...........................24
 +
  6.6. Jitter in RTCP Reports ....................................25
 +
 +
  6.7. MAPDV2 ....................................................25
 +
  6.8. Load Balancing ............................................26
 +
7. Applicability of the Delay Variation Forms and
 +
  Recommendations ................................................27
 +
  7.1. Uses ......................................................27
 +
        7.1.1. Inferring Queue Occupancy ..........................27
 +
        7.1.2. Determining De-Jitter Buffer Size (and FEC
 +
              Design) ............................................27
 +
        7.1.3. Spatial Composition ................................28
 +
        7.1.4. Service-Level Specification: Reporting a
 +
              Single Number ......................................28
 +
  7.2. Challenging Circumstances .................................28
 +
        7.2.1. Clock and Storage Issues ...........................28
 +
        7.2.2. Frequent Path Changes ..............................29
 +
        7.2.3. Frequent Loss ......................................29
 +
        7.2.4. Load Balancing .....................................29
 +
  7.3. Summary ...................................................30
 +
8. Measurement Considerations .....................................31
 +
  8.1. Measurement Stream Characteristics ........................31
 +
  8.2. Measurement Devices .......................................32
 +
  8.3. Units of Measurement ......................................33
 +
  8.4. Test Duration .............................................33
 +
  8.5. Clock Sync Options ........................................33
 +
  8.6. Distinguishing Long Delay from Loss .......................34
 +
  8.7. Accounting for Packet Reordering ..........................34
 +
  8.8. Results Representation and Reporting ......................35
 +
9. Security Considerations ........................................35
 +
10. Acknowledgments ...............................................35
 +
11. Appendix on Calculating the D(min) in PDV .....................35
 +
12. References ....................................................36
 +
  12.1. Normative References .....................................36
 +
  12.2. Informative References ...................................37
  
 
== Introduction ==
 
== Introduction ==
Line 116: Line 167:
 
     calculations in [RFC3550].
 
     calculations in [RFC3550].
  
 
+
2.  Packet Delay Variation, PDV, where a single reference is chosen
 
+
     from the stream based on specific criteria.  The most common
 
 
 
 
2.  Packet Delay Variation, PDV, where a single reference is chosen
 
     from the stream based on specific criteria.  The most common
 
 
     criterion for the reference is the packet with the minimum delay
 
     criterion for the reference is the packet with the minimum delay
 
     in the sample.  This term derives its name from a similar
 
     in the sample.  This term derives its name from a similar
Line 141: Line 188:
 
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
 
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
 
"SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this
 
"SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this
document are to be interpreted as described in [[RFC2119|RFC 2119]] [RFC2119].
+
document are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119 [RFC2119].
  
 
=== Background Literature in IPPM and Elsewhere ===
 
=== Background Literature in IPPM and Elsewhere ===
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their delay is undefined.  Guidance on setting the waiting time
 
their delay is undefined.  Guidance on setting the waiting time
 
threshold may be found in [RFC2680] and [IPPM-Reporting].
 
threshold may be found in [RFC2680] and [IPPM-Reporting].
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
Another fundamental metric is packet reordering as specified in
 
Another fundamental metric is packet reordering as specified in
Line 215: Line 255:
 
considerations.  Following the Security Considerations, there is an
 
considerations.  Following the Security Considerations, there is an
 
appendix on the calculation of the minimum delay for the PDV form.
 
appendix on the calculation of the minimum delay for the PDV form.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
== Purpose and Scope ==
 
== Purpose and Scope ==
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when a particular packet arrives.  If one assumes that at least one
 
when a particular packet arrives.  If one assumes that at least one
 
of the packets in a test stream encounters virtually empty queues all
 
of the packets in a test stream encounters virtually empty queues all
 
 
 
 
  
 
along the path (and the path is stable), then the additional delay
 
along the path (and the path is stable), then the additional delay
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source to destination, D_min, should spend the maximum time in a
 
source to destination, D_min, should spend the maximum time in a
  
 
+
de-jitter buffer, B_max.  The sum of D_min and B_max should equal the
 
 
 
 
 
 
de-jitter buffer, B_max.  The sum of D_min and B_max should equal the
 
 
sum of the maximum transit delay (D_max) and the minimum buffer time
 
sum of the maximum transit delay (D_max) and the minimum buffer time
 
(B_min).  We have
 
(B_min).  We have
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buffer, or packets with D_max may be arriving too late, and in either
 
buffer, or packets with D_max may be arriving too late, and in either
 
case, the packets would be discarded.
 
case, the packets would be discarded.
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
In summary, the range of transit delay variation is a critical factor
 
In summary, the range of transit delay variation is a critical factor
Line 430: Line 446:
 
some illustrative examples.  We use the basic singleton definition in
 
some illustrative examples.  We use the basic singleton definition in
 
[RFC3393] (which itself is based on [RFC2679]):
 
[RFC3393] (which itself is based on [RFC2679]):
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
"Type-P-One-way-ipdv is defined for two packets from Src to Dst
 
"Type-P-One-way-ipdv is defined for two packets from Src to Dst
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Type-P packet within the specified interval with the minimum one-way
 
Type-P packet within the specified interval with the minimum one-way
 
delay.
 
delay.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
Therefore, PDV(i) = D(i)-D(min) (using the nomenclature introduced in
 
Therefore, PDV(i) = D(i)-D(min) (using the nomenclature introduced in
Line 513: Line 515:
 
=== Examples and Initial Comparisons ===
 
=== Examples and Initial Comparisons ===
  
'''Note:''' This material originally presented in Slides 2 and 3 of
+
Note: This material originally presented in Slides 2 and 3 of
 
[Morton06].
 
[Morton06].
  
Line 519: Line 521:
 
PDV values, and depicts a histogram for each one.
 
PDV values, and depicts a histogram for each one.
  
 +
                    Packet #    1  2  3  4  5
 +
                    -------------------------------
 +
                    Delay, ms  20  10  20  25  20
  
 +
                    IPDV        U -10  10  5  -5
  
 +
                    PDV        10  0  10  15  10
  
 +
                      |                |
 +
                      4|                4|
 +
                      |                |
 +
                      3|                3|        H
 +
                      |                |        H
 +
                      2|                2|        H
 +
                      |                |        H
 +
              H  H  1|  H  H        1|H        H  H
 +
              H  H  |  H  H        |H        H  H
 +
              ---------+--------        +---------------
 +
            -10  -5  0  5  10          0  5  10  15
  
 +
                IPDV Histogram            PDV Histogram
  
 +
                  Figure 1: IPDV and PDV Comparison
  
 +
The sample of packets contains three packets with "typical" delays of
 +
20 ms, one packet with a low delay of 10 ms (the minimum of the
 +
sample) and one packet with 25 ms delay.
  
 +
As noted above, this example illustrates that IPDV may take on
 +
positive and negative values, while the PDV values are greater than
 +
or equal to zero.  The histograms of IPDV and PDV are quite different
 +
in general shape, and the ranges are different, too (IPDV range =
 +
20ms, PDV range = 15 ms).  Note that the IPDV histogram will change
 +
if the sequence of delays is modified, but the PDV histogram will
 +
stay the same.  PDV normalizes the one-way-delay distribution to the
 +
minimum delay and emphasizes the variation independent from the
 +
sequence of delays.
  
 +
== Survey of Earlier Comparisons ==
  
 +
This section summarizes previous work to compare these two forms of
 +
delay variation.
  
 +
=== Demichelis' Comparison ===
  
 +
In [Demichelis], Demichelis compared the early versions of two forms
 +
of delay variation.  Although the IPDV form would eventually see
 +
widespread use, the ITU-T work-in-progress he cited did not utilize
  
 +
the same reference packets as PDV.  Demichelis compared IPDV with the
 +
alternatives of using the delay of the first packet in the stream and
 +
the mean delay of the stream as the PDV reference packet.  Neither of
 +
these alternative references were used in practice, and they are now
 +
deprecated in favor of the minimum delay of the stream [Y.1540].
  
 +
Active measurements of a transcontinental path (Torino to Tokyo)
 +
provided the data for the comparison.  The Poisson test stream had
 +
0.764 second average inter-packet interval, with more than 58
 +
thousand packets over 13.5 hours.  Among Demichelis' observations
 +
about IPDV are the following:
  
 +
1.  IPDV is a measure of the network's ability to preserve the
 +
    spacing between packets.
  
 +
2.  The distribution of IPDV is usually symmetrical about the origin,
 +
    having a balance of negative and positive values (for the most
 +
    part).  The mean is usually zero, unless some long-term delay
 +
    trend is present.
  
 +
3.  IPDV singletons distinguish quick-delay variations (short-term,
 +
    on the order of the interval between packets) from longer-term
 +
    variations.
  
 +
4.  IPDV places reduced demands on the stability and skew of
 +
    measurement clocks.
  
 +
He also notes these features of PDV:
  
 +
1.  The PDV distribution does not distinguish short-term variation
 +
    from variation over the complete test interval.  (Comment: PDV
 +
    can be determined over any sub-intervals when the singletons are
 +
    stored.)
  
 +
2.  The location of the distribution is very sensitive to the delay
 +
    of the first packet, IF this packet is used as the reference.
 +
    This would be a new formulation that differs from the PDV
 +
    definition in this memo (PDV references the packet with minimum
 +
    delay, so it does not have this drawback).
  
 +
3.  The shape of the PDV distribution is identical to the delay
 +
    distribution, but shifted by the reference delay.
  
 +
4.  Use of a common reference over measurement intervals that are
 +
    longer than a typical session length may indicate more PDV than
 +
    would be experienced by streams that support such sessions.
  
 +
    (Ideally, the measurement interval should be aligned with the
 +
    session length of interest, and this influences determination of
 +
    the reference delay, D(min).)
  
 +
5.  The PDV distribution characterizes the range of queue occupancies
 +
    along the measurement path (assuming the path is fixed), but the
 +
    range says nothing about how the variation took place.
  
                    Packet #    1  2  3  4  5
+
The summary metrics used in this comparison were the number of values
                    -------------------------------
+
exceeding a +/-50ms range around the mean, the Inverse Percentiles,
                    Delay, ms  20  10  20  25  20
+
and the Inter-Quartile Range.
  
                    IPDV        U -10  10  5  -5
+
=== Ciavattone et al. ===
  
                    PDV         10  0  10  15  10
+
In [Cia03], the authors compared IPDV and PDV (referred to as delta)
 +
using a periodic packet stream conforming to [RFC3432] with inter-
 +
packet interval of 20 ms.
  
                      |                |
+
One of the comparisons between IPDV and PDV involves a laboratory
                      4|                4|
+
setup where a queue was temporarily congested by a competing packet
                      |                |
+
burst.  The additional queuing delay was 85 ms to 95 ms, much larger
                      3|                3|        H
+
than the inter-packet interval. The first packet in the stream that
                      |                |        H
+
follows the competing burst spends the longest time queued, and
                      2|                2|        H
+
others experience less and less queuing time until the queue is
                      |                |        H
+
drained.
              H  H 1|  H  H        1|H        H  H
 
              H  H  |  H  H        |H        H  H
 
              ---------+--------        +---------------
 
            -10  -5  0  5  10          0  5  10  15
 
  
                IPDV Histogram            PDV Histogram
+
The authors observed that PDV reflects the additional queuing time of
 
+
the packets affected by the burst, with values of 85, 65, 45, 25, and
                  Figure 1: IPDV and PDV Comparison
+
5 ms.  Also, it is easy to determine (by looking at the PDV range)
 +
that a de-jitter buffer of >85 ms would have been sufficient to
 +
accommodate the delay variation.  Again, the measurement interval is
 +
a key factor in the validity of such observations (it should have
 +
similar length to the session interval of interest).
 +
 
 +
The IPDV values in the congested queue example are very different:
 +
85, -20, -20, -20, -20, -5 ms.  Only the positive excursion of IPDV
 +
gives an indication of the de-jitter buffer size needed.  Although
 +
the variation exceeds the inter-packet interval, the extent of
 +
negative IPDV values is limited by that sending interval.  This
 +
preference for information from the positive IPDV values has prompted
 +
some to ignore the negative values, or to take the absolute value of
 +
each IPDV measurement (sacrificing key properties of IPDV in the
 +
process, such as its ability to distinguish delay trends).
  
The sample of packets contains three packets with "typical" delays of
+
Note that this example illustrates a case where the IPDV distribution
20 ms, one packet with a low delay of 10 ms (the minimum of the
+
is asymmetrical, because the delay variation range (85 ms) exceeds
sample) and one packet with 25 ms delay.
+
the inter-packet spacing (20 ms).  We see that the IPDV values 85,
 +
-20, -20, -20, -20, -5 ms have zero mean, but the left side of the
 +
distribution is truncated at -20 ms.
  
As noted above, this example illustrates that IPDV may take on
+
Elsewhere in the article, the authors considered the range as a
positive and negative values, while the PDV values are greater than
+
summary statistic for IPDV, and the 99.9th percentile minus the
or equal to zero.  The histograms of IPDV and PDV are quite different
+
minimum delay as a summary statistic for delay variation, or PDV.
in general shape, and the ranges are different, too (IPDV range =
 
20ms, PDV range = 15 ms).  Note that the IPDV histogram will change
 
if the sequence of delays is modified, but the PDV histogram will
 
stay the same. PDV normalizes the one-way-delay distribution to the
 
minimum delay and emphasizes the variation independent from the
 
sequence of delays.
 
  
== Survey of Earlier Comparisons ==
+
=== IPPM List Discussion from 2000 ===
  
This section summarizes previous work to compare these two forms of
+
Mike Pierce made many comments in the context of a working version of
delay variation.
+
[RFC3393].  One of his main points was that a delay histogram is a
 +
useful approach to quantifying variation.  Another point was that the
 +
time duration of evaluation is a critical aspect.
  
=== Demichelis' Comparison ===
+
Carlo Demichelis then mailed his comparison paper [Demichelis] to the
 
+
IPPM list, as discussed in more detail above.
In [Demichelis], Demichelis compared the early versions of two forms
 
of delay variation.  Although the IPDV form would eventually see
 
widespread use, the ITU-T work-in-progress he cited did not utilize
 
  
 +
Ruediger Geib observed that both IPDV and the delay histogram (PDV)
 +
are useful, and suggested that they might be applied to different
 +
variation time scales.  He pointed out that loss has a significant
 +
effect on IPDV, and encouraged that the loss information be retained
 +
in the arrival sequence.
  
 +
Several example delay variation scenarios were discussed, including:
  
 +
      Packet #    1  2  3  4  5  6  7  8  9  10  11
 +
      -------------------------------------------------------
 +
      Ex. A
 +
      Lost
  
 +
      Delay, ms  100 110 120 130 140 150 140 130 120 110 100
  
the same reference packets as PDV. Demichelis compared IPDV with the
+
      IPDV        U  10  10  10  10 10 -10 -10 -10 -10 -10
alternatives of using the delay of the first packet in the stream and
+
 
the mean delay of the stream as the PDV reference packet. Neither of
+
      PDV         0  10  20 30  40  50  40  30  20  10  0
these alternative references were used in practice, and they are now
 
deprecated in favor of the minimum delay of the stream [Y.1540].
 
  
Active measurements of a transcontinental path (Torino to Tokyo)
+
      -------------------------------------------------------
provided the data for the comparison.  The Poisson test stream had
+
      Ex. B
0.764 second average inter-packet interval, with more than 58
+
      Lost                    L
thousand packets over 13.5 hours. Among Demichelis' observations
 
about IPDV are the following:
 
  
1. IPDV is a measure of the network's ability to preserve the
+
      Delay, ms 100 110 150  U 120 100 110 150 130 120 100
    spacing between packets.
 
  
2. The distribution of IPDV is usually symmetrical about the origin,
+
      IPDV        U  10  40  U  U -10 10 40 -20 -10 -20
    having a balance of negative and positive values (for the most
 
    part). The mean is usually zero, unless some long-term delay
 
    trend is present.
 
  
3. IPDV singletons distinguish quick-delay variations (short-term,
+
      PDV        0  10 50  U  20  0  10  50  30  20  0
    on the order of the interval between packets) from longer-term
 
    variations.
 
  
4.  IPDV places reduced demands on the stability and skew of
+
                      Figure 2: Delay Examples
    measurement clocks.
 
  
He also notes these features of PDV:
+
Clearly, the range of PDV values is 50 ms in both cases above, and
 
+
this is the statistic that determines the size of a de-jitter buffer.
1.  The PDV distribution does not distinguish short-term variation
+
The IPDV range is minimal in response to the smooth variation in
    from variation over the complete test interval.  (Comment: PDV
+
Example A (20 ms).  However, IPDV responds to the faster variations
    can be determined over any sub-intervals when the singletons are
+
in Example B (60 ms range from 40 to -20).  Here the IPDV range is
    stored.)
+
larger than the PDV range, and overestimates the buffer size
 
+
requirements.
2.  The location of the distribution is very sensitive to the delay
 
    of the first packet, IF this packet is used as the reference.
 
    This would be a new formulation that differs from the PDV
 
    definition in this memo (PDV references the packet with minimum
 
    delay, so it does not have this drawback).
 
 
 
3The shape of the PDV distribution is identical to the delay
 
    distribution, but shifted by the reference delay.
 
 
 
4.  Use of a common reference over measurement intervals that are
 
    longer than a typical session length may indicate more PDV than
 
    would be experienced by streams that support such sessions.
 
  
 +
A heuristic method to estimate buffer size using IPDV is to sum the
 +
consecutive positive or zero values as an estimate of PDV range.
 +
However, this is more complicated to assess than the PDV range, and
 +
has strong dependence on the actual sequence of IPDV values (any
 +
negative IPDV value stops the summation, and again causes an
 +
underestimate).
  
 +
IPDV values can be viewed as the adjustments that an adaptive de-
 +
jitter buffer would make, if it could make adjustments on a packet-
 +
by-packet basis.  However, adaptive de-jitter buffers don't make
 +
adjustments this frequently, so the value of this information is
 +
unknown.  The short-term variations may be useful to know in some
 +
other cases.
  
 +
=== Y.1540 Appendix II ===
  
 +
Appendix II of [Y.1540] describes a secondary terminology for delay
 +
variation.  It compares IPDV, PDV (referred to as 2-point PDV), and
 +
1-point packet delay variation (which assumes a periodic stream and
 +
assesses variation against an ideal arrival schedule constructed at a
 +
single measurement point).  This early comparison discusses some of
 +
the same considerations raised in Section 6 below.
  
 +
=== Clark's ITU-T SG 12 Contribution ===
  
 +
Alan Clark's contribution to ITU-T Study Group 12 in January 2003
 +
provided an analysis of the root causes of delay variation and
 +
investigated different techniques for measurement and modeling of
 +
"jitter" [COM12.D98].  Clark compared a metric closely related to
 +
IPDV, Mean Packet-to-Packet Delay Variation, MPPDV = mean(abs(D(i)-
 +
D(i-1))) to the newly proposed Mean Absolute Packet Delay Variation
 +
(MAPDV2, see [G.1020]).  One of the tasks for this study was to
 +
estimate the number of packet discards in a de-jitter buffer.  Clark
 +
concluded that MPPDV did not track the ramp delay variation he
 +
associated access link congestion (similar to Figure 2, Example A
 +
above), but MAPDV2 did.
  
    (Ideally, the measurement interval should be aligned with the
+
Clark also briefly looked at PDV (as described in the 2002 version of
    session length of interest, and this influences determination of
+
[Y.1541]).  He concluded that if PDV was applied to a series of very
    the reference delay, D(min).)
+
short measurement intervals (e.g., 200 ms), it could be used to
 +
determine the fraction of intervals with high packet discard rates.
  
5.  The PDV distribution characterizes the range of queue occupancies
+
== Additional Properties and Comparisons ==
    along the measurement path (assuming the path is fixed), but the
 
    range says nothing about how the variation took place.
 
  
The summary metrics used in this comparison were the number of values
+
This section treats some of the earlier comparison areas in more
exceeding a +/-50ms range around the mean, the Inverse Percentiles,
+
detail and introduces new areas for comparison.
and the Inter-Quartile Range.
 
  
=== Ciavattone et al. ===
+
=== Packet Loss ===
  
In [Cia03], the authors compared IPDV and PDV (referred to as delta)
+
The measurement of packet loss is of great influence for the delay
using a periodic packet stream conforming to [RFC3432] with inter-
+
variation results, as displayed in the Figures 3 and 4 (L means Lost
packet interval of 20 ms.
+
and U means Undefined).  Figure 3 shows that in the extreme case of
 +
every other packet loss, the IPDV metric doesn't produce any results,
 +
while the PDV produces results for all arriving packets.
 +
 
 +
              Packet #  1  2  3  4  5  6  7  8  9 10
 +
              Lost          L    L    L    L    L
 +
              ---------------------------------------
 +
              Delay, ms 3  U  5  U  4  U  3  U  4  U
  
One of the comparisons between IPDV and PDV involves a laboratory
+
              IPDV       U U U  U  U  U  U  U  U  U
setup where a queue was temporarily congested by a competing packet
 
burst. The additional queuing delay was 85 ms to 95 ms, much larger
 
than the inter-packet interval. The first packet in the stream that
 
follows the competing burst spends the longest time queued, and
 
others experience less and less queuing time until the queue is
 
drained.
 
  
The authors observed that PDV reflects the additional queuing time of
+
              PDV       0 U  2  U  1  U  0  U  1 U
the packets affected by the burst, with values of 85, 65, 45, 25, and
 
5 ms. Also, it is easy to determine (by looking at the PDV range)
 
that a de-jitter buffer of >85 ms would have been sufficient to
 
accommodate the delay variation. Again, the measurement interval is
 
a key factor in the validity of such observations (it should have
 
similar length to the session interval of interest).
 
  
The IPDV values in the congested queue example are very different:
+
              Figure 3: Path Loss Every Other Packet
85, -20, -20, -20, -20, -5 ms.  Only the positive excursion of IPDV
 
gives an indication of the de-jitter buffer size needed.  Although
 
the variation exceeds the inter-packet interval, the extent of
 
negative IPDV values is limited by that sending interval.  This
 
preference for information from the positive IPDV values has prompted
 
some to ignore the negative values, or to take the absolute value of
 
each IPDV measurement (sacrificing key properties of IPDV in the
 
process, such as its ability to distinguish delay trends).
 
  
 +
In case of a burst of packet loss, as displayed in Figure 4, both the
 +
IPDV and PDV metrics produce some results.  Note that PDV still
 +
produces more values than IPDV.
  
 +
              Packet #  1  2  3  4  5  6  7  8  9 10
 +
              Lost            L  L  L  L  L
 +
              ---------------------------------------
 +
              Delay, ms  3  4  U  U  U  U  U  5  4  3
  
 +
              IPDV      U  1  U  U  U  U  U  U -1 -1
  
 +
              PDV        0  1  U  U  U  U  U  2  1  0
  
 +
                  Figure 4: Burst of Packet Loss
  
 +
In conclusion, the PDV results are affected by the packet-loss ratio.
 +
The IPDV results are affected by both the packet-loss ratio and the
 +
packet-loss distribution.  In the extreme case of loss of every other
 +
packet, IPDV doesn't provide any results.
  
 +
=== Path Changes ===
  
 +
When there is little or no stability in the network under test, then
 +
the devices that attempt to characterize the network are equally
 +
stressed, especially if the results displayed are used to make
 +
inferences that may not be valid.
  
 +
Sometimes the path characteristics change during a measurement
 +
interval.  The change may be due to link or router failure,
 +
administrative changes prior to maintenance (e.g., link-cost change),
 +
or re-optimization of routing using new information.  All these
 +
causes are usually infrequent, and network providers take appropriate
 +
measures to ensure this.  Automatic restoration to a back-up path is
 +
seen as a desirable feature of IP networks.
  
Note that this example illustrates a case where the IPDV distribution
+
Frequent path changes and prolonged congestion with substantial
is asymmetrical, because the delay variation range (85 ms) exceeds
+
packet loss clearly make delay variation measurements challenging.
the inter-packet spacing (20 ms).  We see that the IPDV values 85,
 
-20, -20, -20, -20, -5 ms have zero mean, but the left side of the
 
distribution is truncated at -20 ms.
 
  
Elsewhere in the article, the authors considered the range as a
+
Path changes are usually accompanied by a sudden, persistent increase
summary statistic for IPDV, and the 99.9th percentile minus the
+
or decrease in one-way delay.  [Cia03] gives one such example. We
minimum delay as a summary statistic for delay variation, or PDV.
+
assume that a restoration path either accepts a stream of packets or
 +
is not used for that particular stream (e.g., no multi-path for
 +
flows).
  
=== IPPM List Discussion from 2000 ===
+
In any case, a change in the Time to Live (TTL) (or Hop Limit) of the
 +
received packets indicates that the path is no longer the same.
 +
Transient packet reordering may also be observed with path changes,
 +
due to use of non-optimal routing while updates propagate through the
 +
network (see [Casner] and [Cia03] )
  
Mike Pierce made many comments in the context of a working version of
+
Many, if not all, packet streams experience packet loss in
[RFC3393]One of his main points was that a delay histogram is a
+
conjunction with a path change.  However, it is certainly possible
useful approach to quantifying variation.  Another point was that the
+
that the active measurement stream does not experience lossThis
time duration of evaluation is a critical aspect.
+
may be due to use of a long inter-packet sending interval with
 +
respect to the restoration time, and it becomes more likely as "fast
 +
restoration" techniques see wider deployment (e.g., [RFC4090]).
  
Carlo Demichelis then mailed his comparison paper [Demichelis] to the
+
Thus, there are two main cases to consider, path changes accompanied
IPPM list, as discussed in more detail above.
+
by loss, and those that are lossless from the point of view of the
 
+
active measurement stream. The subsections below examine each of
Ruediger Geib observed that both IPDV and the delay histogram (PDV)
+
these cases.
are useful, and suggested that they might be applied to different
 
variation time scales.  He pointed out that loss has a significant
 
effect on IPDV, and encouraged that the loss information be retained
 
in the arrival sequence.
 
 
 
Several example delay variation scenarios were discussed, including:
 
  
 +
==== Lossless Path Change ====
  
 +
In the lossless case, a path change will typically affect only one
 +
IPDV singleton.  For example, the delay sequence in the Figure below
 +
always produces IPDV=0 except in the one case where the value is 5
 +
(U, 0, 0, 0, 5, 0, 0, 0, 0).
  
 +
                Packet #  1  2  3  4  5  6  7  8  9
 +
                Lost
 +
                ------------------------------------
 +
                Delay, ms  4  4  4  4  9  9  9  9  9
  
 +
                IPDV      U  0  0  0  5  0  0  0  0
  
 +
                PDV        0  0  0  0  5  5  5  5  5
  
 +
                  Figure 5: Lossless Path Change
  
 +
However, if the change in delay is negative and larger than the
 +
inter-packet sending interval, then more than one IPDV singleton may
 +
be affected because packet reordering is also likely to occur.
  
 +
The use of the new path and its delay variation can be quantified by
 +
treating the PDV distribution as bi-modal, and characterizing each
 +
mode separately.  This would involve declaring a new path within the
 +
sample, and using a new local minimum delay as the PDV reference
 +
delay for the sub-sample (or time interval) where the new path is
 +
present.
  
 +
The process of detecting a bi-modal delay distribution is made
 +
difficult if the typical delay variation is larger than the delay
 +
change associated with the new path.  However, information on a TTL
 +
(or Hop Limit) change or the presence of transient reordering can
 +
assist in an automated decision.
  
 +
The effect of path changes may also be reduced by making PDV
 +
measurements over short intervals (minutes, as opposed to hours).
 +
This way, a path change will affect one sample and its PDV values.
 +
Assuming that the mean or median one-way delay changes appreciably on
 +
the new path, then subsequent measurements can confirm a path change
 +
and trigger special processing on the interval to revise the PDV
 +
result.
  
 +
Alternatively, if the path change is detected, by monitoring the test
 +
packets TTL or Hop Limit, or monitoring the change in the IGP link-
 +
state database, the results of measurement before and after the path
 +
change could be kept separated, presenting two different
 +
distributions.  This avoids the difficult task of determining the
 +
different modes of a multi-modal distribution.
  
 +
==== Path Change with Loss ====
  
 +
If the path change is accompanied by loss, such that there are no
 +
consecutive packet pairs that span the change, then no IPDV
 +
singletons will reflect the change.  This may or may not be
 +
desirable, depending on the ultimate use of the delay variation
 +
measurement.  Figure 6, in which L means Lost and U means Undefined,
 +
illustrates this case.
  
 +
                Packet #  1  2  3  4  5  6  7  8  9
 +
                Lost                  L  L
 +
                ------------------------------------
 +
                Delay, ms  3  4  3  3  U  U  8  9  8
  
 +
                IPDV      U  1 -1  0  U  U  U  1 -1
  
 +
                PDV        0  1  0  0  U  U  5  6  5
  
 +
                  Figure 6: Path Change with Loss
  
 +
PDV will again produce a bi-modal distribution.  But here, the
 +
decision process to define sub-intervals associated with each path is
 +
further assisted by the presence of loss, in addition to TTL,
 +
reordering information, and use of short measurement intervals
 +
consistent with the duration of user sessions.  It is reasonable to
 +
assume that at least loss and delay will be measured simultaneously
 +
with PDV and/or IPDV.
  
 +
IPDV does not help to detect path changes when accompanied by loss,
 +
and this is a disadvantage for those who rely solely on IPDV
 +
measurements.
  
 +
=== Clock Stability and Error ===
  
 +
Low cost or low complexity measurement systems may be embedded in
 +
communication devices that do not have access to high stability
 +
clocks, and time errors will almost certainly be present.  However,
 +
larger time-related errors (~1 ms) may offer an acceptable trade-off
 +
for monitoring performance over a large population (the accuracy
 +
needed to detect problems may be much less than required for a
 +
scientific study, ~0.01 ms for example).
  
 +
Maintaining time accuracy <<1 ms has typically required access to
 +
dedicated time receivers at all measurement points.  Global
 +
positioning system (GPS) receivers have often been installed to
 +
support measurements.  The GPS installation conditions are fairly
 +
restrictive, and many prospective measurement efforts have found the
 +
deployment complexity and system maintenance too difficult.
  
 +
As mentioned above, [Demichelis] observed that PDV places greater
 +
demands on clock synchronization than for IPDV.  This observation
 +
deserves more discussion.  Synchronization errors have two
 +
components: time-of-day errors and clock-frequency errors (resulting
 +
in skew).
  
 +
Both IPDV and PDV are sensitive to time-of-day errors when attempting
 +
to align measurement intervals at the source and destination.  Gross
 +
misalignment of the measurement intervals can lead to lost packets,
 +
for example, if the receiver is not ready when the first test packet
 +
arrives.  However, both IPDV and PDV assess delay differences, so the
 +
error present in any two one-way-delay singletons will cancel as long
 +
as the error is constant.  So, the demand for NTP or GPS
 +
synchronization comes primarily from one-way-delay measurement time-
 +
of-day accuracy requirements.  Delay variation and measurement
 +
interval alignment are relatively less demanding.
  
 +
Skew is a measure of the change in clock time over an interval with
 +
respect to a reference clock.  Both IPDV and PDV are affected by
 +
skew, but the error sensitivity in IPDV singletons is less because
 +
the intervals between consecutive packets are rather small,
 +
especially when compared to the overall measurement interval.  Since
 +
PDV computes the difference between a single reference delay (the
 +
sample minimum) and all other delays in the measurement interval, the
 +
constraint on skew error is greater to attain the same accuracy as
 +
IPDV.  Again, use of short PDV measurement intervals (on the order of
 +
minutes, not hours) provides some relief from the effects of skew
 +
error.  Thus, the additional accuracy demand of PDV can be expressed
 +
as a ratio of the measurement interval to the inter-packet spacing.
  
      Packet #    1  2  3  4  5  6  7  8  9  10  11
+
A practical example is a measurement between two hosts, one with a
      -------------------------------------------------------
+
synchronized clock and the other with a free-running clock having 50
      Ex. A
+
parts per million (ppm) long term accuracy.
      Lost
 
 
 
      Delay, ms  100 110 120 130 140 150 140 130 120 110 100
 
 
 
      IPDV        U  10  10  10  10  10 -10 -10 -10 -10 -10
 
  
      PDV        0  10  20  30  40  50  40  30  20 10   0
+
o If IPDV measurements are made on packets with a 1 second spacing,
 +
  the maximum singleton error will be 1 x 5 x 10^-5 seconds, or 0.05
 +
  ms.
  
      -------------------------------------------------------
+
o  If PDV measurements are made on the same packets over a 60 second
      Ex. B
+
  measurement interval, then the delay variation due to the max
      Lost                    L
+
  free-running clock error will be 60 x 5 x 10-5 seconds, or 3 ms
 +
  delay variation error from the first packet to the last.
  
      Delay, ms 100 110 150  U 120 100 110 150 130 120 100
+
Therefore, the additional accuracy required for equivalent PDV error
 +
under these conditions is a factor of 60 more than for IPDV. This is
 +
a rather extreme scenario, because time-of-day error of 1 second
 +
would accumulate in ~5.5 hours, potentially causing the measurement
 +
interval alignment issue described above.
  
      IPDV        U  10  40  U  U -10  10 40 -20 -10 -20
+
If skew is present in a sample of one-way delays, its symptom is
 +
typically a nearly linear growth or decline over all the one-way-
 +
delay values. As a practical matter, if the same slope appears
 +
consistently in the measurements, then it may be possible to fit the
 +
slope and compensate for the skew in the one-way-delay measurements,
 +
thereby avoiding the issue in the PDV calculations that follow.  See
 +
[RFC3393] for additional information on compensating for skew.
  
      PDV        0  10 50  U  20  0  10  50  30  20  0
+
Values for IPDV may have non-zero mean over a sample when clock skew
 +
is present. This tends to complicate IPDV analysis when using the
 +
assumptions of a zero mean and a symmetric distribution.
  
                      Figure 2: Delay Examples
+
There is a third factor related to clock error and stability: this is
 
+
the presence of a clock-synchronization protocol (e.g., NTP) and the
Clearly, the range of PDV values is 50 ms in both cases above, and
+
time-adjustment operations that resultWhen a time error is
this is the statistic that determines the size of a de-jitter buffer.
+
detected (typically on the order of a few milliseconds), the host
The IPDV range is minimal in response to the smooth variation in
 
Example A (20 ms). However, IPDV responds to the faster variations
 
in Example B (60 ms range from 40 to -20)Here the IPDV range is
 
larger than the PDV range, and overestimates the buffer size
 
requirements.
 
 
 
A heuristic method to estimate buffer size using IPDV is to sum the
 
consecutive positive or zero values as an estimate of PDV range.
 
However, this is more complicated to assess than the PDV range, and
 
has strong dependence on the actual sequence of IPDV values (any
 
negative IPDV value stops the summation, and again causes an
 
underestimate).
 
 
 
IPDV values can be viewed as the adjustments that an adaptive de-
 
jitter buffer would make, if it could make adjustments on a packet-
 
by-packet basis.  However, adaptive de-jitter buffers don't make
 
adjustments this frequently, so the value of this information is
 
unknown.  The short-term variations may be useful to know in some
 
other cases.
 
  
 +
clock frequency is continuously adjusted to reduce the time error.
 +
If these adjustments take place during a measurement interval, they
 +
may appear as delay variation when none was present, and therefore
 +
are a source of error (regardless of the form of delay variation
 +
considered).
  
 +
=== Spatial Composition ===
  
 +
ITU-T Recommendation [Y.1541] gives a provisional method to compose a
 +
PDV metric using PDV measurement results from two or more sub-paths.
 +
Additional methods are considered in [IPPM-Spatial].
  
 +
PDV has a clear advantage at this time, since there is no validated
 +
method to compose an IPDV metric.  In addition, IPDV results depend
 +
greatly on the exact sequence of packets and may not lend themselves
 +
easily to the composition problem, where segments must be assumed to
 +
have independent delay distributions.
  
 +
=== Reporting a Single Number (SLA) ===
  
 +
Despite the risk of over-summarization, measurements must often be
 +
displayed for easy consumption.  If the right summary report is
 +
prepared, then the "dashboard" view correctly indicates whether there
 +
is something different and worth investigating further, or that the
 +
status has not changed.  The dashboard model restricts every
 +
instrument display to a single number.  The packet network dashboard
 +
could have different instruments for loss, delay, delay variation,
 +
reordering, etc., and each must be summarized as a single number for
 +
each measurement interval.  The single number summary statistic is a
 +
key component of SLAs, where a threshold on that number must be met
 +
x% of the time.
  
 +
The simplicity of the PDV distribution lends itself to this
 +
summarization process (including use of the percentiles, median or
 +
mean).  An SLA of the form "no more than x% of packets in a
 +
measurement interval shall have PDV >= y ms, for no less than z% of
 +
time" is relatively straightforward to specify and implement.
 +
[Y.1541] introduced the notion of a pseudo-range when setting an
 +
objective for the 99.9th percentile of PDV.  The conventional range
 +
(max-min) was avoided for several reasons, including stability of the
 +
maximum delay.  The 99.9th percentile of PDV is helpful to
 +
performance planners (seeking to meet some user-to-user objective for
 +
delay) and in design of de-jitter buffer sizes, even those with
 +
adaptive capabilities.
  
 +
IPDV does not lend itself to summarization so easily.  The mean IPDV
 +
is typically zero.  As the IPDV distribution will have two tails
 +
(positive and negative), the range or pseudo-range would not match
  
=== Y.1540 Appendix II ===
+
the needed de-jitter buffer size.  Additional complexity may be
 +
introduced when the variation exceeds the inter-packet sending
 +
interval, as discussed above (in Sections 5.2 and 6.2.1).  Should the
 +
Inter-Quartile Range be used?  Should the singletons beyond some
 +
threshold be counted (e.g., mean +/- 50 ms)?  A strong rationale for
 +
one of these summary statistics has yet to emerge.
  
Appendix II of [Y.1540] describes a secondary terminology for delay
+
When summarizing IPDV, some prefer the simplicity of the single-sided
variation.  It compares IPDV, PDV (referred to as 2-point PDV), and
+
distribution created by taking the absolute value of each singleton
1-point packet delay variation (which assumes a periodic stream and
+
result, abs(D(i)-D(i-1)). This approach sacrifices the two-sided
assesses variation against an ideal arrival schedule constructed at a
+
inter-arrival spread information in the distribution.  It also makes
single measurement point).  This early comparison discusses some of
+
the evaluation using percentiles more confusing, because a single
the same considerations raised in Section 6 below.
+
late packet that exceeds the variation threshold will cause two pairs
 +
of singletons to fail the criteria (one positive, the other negative
 +
converted to positive).  The single-sided PDV distribution is an
 +
advantage in this category.
  
=== Clark's ITU-T SG 12 Contribution ===
+
=== Jitter in RTCP Reports ===
  
Alan Clark's contribution to ITU-T Study Group 12 in January 2003
+
Section 6.4.1 of [RFC3550] gives the calculation of the "inter-
provided an analysis of the root causes of delay variation and
+
arrival jitter" field for the RTP Control Protocol (RTCP) report,
investigated different techniques for measurement and modeling of
+
with a sample implementation in an Appendix.
"jitter" [COM12.D98]. Clark compared a metric closely related to
 
IPDV, Mean Packet-to-Packet Delay Variation, MPPDV = mean(abs(D(i)-
 
D(i-1))) to the newly proposed Mean Absolute Packet Delay Variation
 
(MAPDV2, see [G.1020]).  One of the tasks for this study was to
 
estimate the number of packet discards in a de-jitter buffer.  Clark
 
concluded that MPPDV did not track the ramp delay variation he
 
associated access link congestion (similar to Figure 2, Example A
 
above), but MAPDV2 did.
 
  
Clark also briefly looked at PDV (as described in the 2002 version of
+
The RTCP "interarrival jitter" value can be calculated using IPDV
[Y.1541])He concluded that if PDV was applied to a series of very
+
singletonsIf there is packet reordering, as defined in [RFC4737],
short measurement intervals (e.g., 200 ms), it could be used to
+
then estimates of Jitter based on IPDV may vary slightly, because
determine the fraction of intervals with high packet discard rates.
+
[RFC3550] specifies the use of receive-packet order.
 
 
== Additional Properties and Comparisons ==
 
 
 
This section treats some of the earlier comparison areas in more
 
detail and introduces new areas for comparison.
 
 
 
=== Packet Loss ===
 
 
 
The measurement of packet loss is of great influence for the delay
 
variation results, as displayed in the Figures 3 and 4 (L means Lost
 
and U means Undefined).  Figure 3 shows that in the extreme case of
 
every other packet loss, the IPDV metric doesn't produce any results,
 
while the PDV produces results for all arriving packets.
 
  
 +
Just as there is no simple way to convert PDV singletons to IPDV
 +
singletons without returning to the original sample of delay
 +
singletons, there is no clear relationship between PDV and [RFC3550]
 +
"interarrival jitter".
  
 +
=== MAPDV2 ===
  
 +
MAPDV2 stands for Mean Absolute Packet Delay Variation (version) 2,
 +
and is specified in [G.1020].  The MAPDV2 algorithm computes a
 +
smoothed running estimate of the mean delay using the one-way delays
 +
of 16 previous packets.  It compares the current one-way delay to the
 +
estimated mean, separately computes the means of positive and
 +
negative deviations, and sums these deviation means to produce
 +
MAPVDV2.  In effect, there is a MAPDV2 singleton for every arriving
 +
packet, so further summarization is usually warranted.
  
 +
Neither IPDV or PDV forms assist in the computation of MAPDV2.
  
 +
=== Load Balancing ===
  
 +
Network traffic load balancing is a process to divide packet traffic
 +
in order to provide a more even distribution over two or more equally
 +
viable paths.  The paths chosen are based on the IGP cost metrics,
 +
while the delay depends on the path's physical layout.  Usually, the
 +
balancing process is performed on a per-flow basis to avoid delay
 +
variation experienced when packets traverse different physical paths.
  
 +
If the sample includes test packets with different characteristics
 +
such as IP addresses/ports, there could be multi-modal delay
 +
distributions present.  The PDV form makes the identification of
 +
multiple modes possible.  IPDV may also reveal that multiple paths
 +
are in use with a mixed-flow sample, but the different delay modes
 +
are not easily divided and analyzed separately.
  
 +
Should the delay singletons using multiple addresses/ports be
 +
combined in the same sample?  Should we characterize each mode
 +
separately?  (This question also applies to the Path Change case.)
 +
It depends on the task to be addressed by the measurement.
  
 +
For the task of de-jitter buffer sizing or assessing queue
 +
occupation, the modes should be characterized separately because
 +
flows will experience only one mode on a stable path.  Use of a
 +
single flow description (address/port combination) in each sample
 +
simplifies this analysis.  Multiple modes may be identified by
 +
collecting samples with different flow attributes, and
 +
characterization of multiple paths can proceed with comparison of the
 +
delay distributions from each sample.
  
 +
For the task of capacity planning and routing optimization,
 +
characterizing the modes separately could offer an advantage.
 +
Network-wide capacity planning (as opposed to link capacity planning)
 +
takes as input the core traffic matrix, which corresponds to a matrix
 +
of traffic transferred from every source to every destination in the
 +
network.  Applying the core traffic matrix along with the routing
 +
information (typically the link state database of a routing protocol)
 +
in a capacity planning tool offers the possibility to visualize the
 +
paths where the traffic flows and to optimize the routing based on
 +
the link utilization.  In the case where equal cost multiple paths
 +
(ECMPs) are used, the traffic will be load balanced onto multiple
 +
paths.  If each mode of the IP delay multi-modal distribution can be
 +
associated with a specific path, the delay performance offers an
 +
extra optimization parameter, i.e., the routing optimization based on
 +
the IP delay variation metric.  As an example, the load balancing
 +
across ECMPs could be suppressed so that the Voice over IP (VoIP)
 +
calls would only be routed via the path with the lower IP delay
  
 +
variation.  Clearly, any modifications can result in new delay
 +
performance measurements, so there must be a verification step to
 +
ensure the desired outcome.
  
 +
== Applicability of the Delay Variation Forms and Recommendations ==
  
              Packet #  1  2  3  4  5  6  7  8  9 10
+
Based on the comparisons of IPDV and PDV presented above, this
              Lost          L    L    L    L    L
+
section matches the attributes of each form with the tasks described
              ---------------------------------------
+
earlier. We discuss the more general circumstances first.
              Delay, ms  3  U  5  U  4  U  3  U  4 U
 
  
              IPDV      U  U  U  U  U  U  U  U  U  U
+
=== Uses ===
  
              PDV        0  U  2  U  1  U  0  U  1  U
+
==== Inferring Queue Occupancy ====
  
              Figure 3: Path Loss Every Other Packet
+
The PDV distribution is anchored at the minimum delay observed in the
 +
measurement interval.  When the sample minimum coincides with the
 +
true minimum delay of the path, then the PDV distribution is
 +
equivalent to the queuing time distribution experienced by the test
 +
stream.  If the minimum delay is not the true minimum, then the PDV
 +
distribution captures the variation in queuing time and some
 +
additional amount of queuing time is experienced, but unknown.  One
 +
can summarize the PDV distribution with the mean, median, and other
 +
statistics.
  
In case of a burst of packet loss, as displayed in Figure 4, both the
+
IPDV can capture the difference in queuing time from one packet to
IPDV and PDV metrics produce some results.  Note that PDV still
+
the next, but this is a different distribution from the queue
produces more values than IPDV.
+
occupancy revealed by PDV.
  
              Packet #  1  2  3  4  5  6  7  8  9 10
+
==== Determining De-Jitter Buffer Size (and FEC Design) ====
              Lost            L  L  L  L  L
 
              ---------------------------------------
 
              Delay, ms  3  4  U  U  U  U  U  5  4  3
 
  
              IPDV      U 1 U  U  U  U U  U -1 -1
+
This task is complimentary to the problem of inferring queue
 
+
occupancy through measurement. Again, use of the sample minimum as
              PDV        0 1 U U  U  U  U  2  1  0
+
the reference delay for PDV yields a distribution that is very
 +
relevant to de-jitter buffer size. This is because the minimum delay
 +
is an alignment point for the smoothing operation of de-jitter
 +
buffers. A de-jitter buffer that is ideally aligned with the delay
 +
variation adds zero buffer time to packets with the longest
 +
accommodated network delay (any packets with longer delays are
 +
discarded). Thus, a packet experiencing minimum network delay should
 +
be aligned to wait the maximum length of the de-jitter buffer. With
 +
this alignment, the stream is smoothed with no unnecessary delay
 +
added. Figure 5 of [G.1020] illustrates the ideal relationship
 +
between network delay variation and buffer time.
  
                  Figure 4: Burst of Packet Loss
+
The PDV distribution is also useful for this task, but different
 +
statistics are preferred.  The range (max-min) or the 99.9th
 +
percentile of PDV (pseudo-range) are closely related to the buffer
 +
size needed to accommodate the observed network delay variation.
  
In conclusion, the PDV results are affected by the packet-loss ratio.
+
The PDV distribution directly addresses the FEC waiting time
The IPDV results are affected by both the packet-loss ratio and the
+
questionWhen the PDV distribution has a 99th percentile of 10 ms,
packet-loss distributionIn the extreme case of loss of every other
+
then waiting 10 ms longer than the FEC protection interval will allow
packet, IPDV doesn't provide any results.
+
99% of late packets to arrive and be used in the FEC block.
  
=== Path Changes ===
+
In some cases, the positive excursions (or series of positive
 
+
excursions) of IPDV may help to approximate the de-jitter buffer
When there is little or no stability in the network under test, then
+
size, but there is no guarantee that a good buffer estimate will
the devices that attempt to characterize the network are equally
+
emerge, especially when the delay varies as a positive trend over
stressed, especially if the results displayed are used to make
+
several test packets.
inferences that may not be valid.
 
  
Sometimes the path characteristics change during a measurement
+
==== Spatial Composition ====
interval.  The change may be due to link or router failure,
 
administrative changes prior to maintenance (e.g., link-cost change),
 
or re-optimization of routing using new information.  All these
 
causes are usually infrequent, and network providers take appropriate
 
measures to ensure this.  Automatic restoration to a back-up path is
 
seen as a desirable feature of IP networks.
 
  
Frequent path changes and prolonged congestion with substantial
+
PDV has a clear advantage at this time, since there is no validated
packet loss clearly make delay variation measurements challenging.
+
method to compose an IPDV metric.
  
 +
==== Service-Level Specification: Reporting a Single Number ====
  
 +
The one-sided PDV distribution can be constrained with a single
 +
statistic, such as an upper percentile, so it is preferred.  The IPDV
 +
distribution is two-sided, usually has zero mean, and no universal
 +
summary statistic that relates to a physical quantity has emerged in
 +
years of experience.
  
 +
=== Challenging Circumstances ===
  
 +
Note that measurement of delay variation may not be the primary
 +
concern under unstable and unreliable circumstances.
  
Path changes are usually accompanied by a sudden, persistent increase
+
==== Clock and Storage Issues ====
or decrease in one-way delay[Cia03] gives one such exampleWe
+
 
assume that a restoration path either accepts a stream of packets or
+
When appreciable skew is present between measurement system clocks,
is not used for that particular stream (e.g., no multi-path for
+
IPDV has an advantage because PDV would require processing over the
flows).
+
entire sample to remove the skew errorHowever, significant skew
 +
can invalidate IPDV analysis assumptions, such as the zero-mean and
 +
symmetric-distribution characteristicsSmall skew may well be
 +
within the error tolerance, and both PDV and IPDV results will be
 +
usable.  There may be a portion of the skew, measurement interval,
 +
and required accuracy 3-D space where IPDV has an advantage,
 +
depending on the specific measurement specifications.
  
In any case, a change in the Time to Live (TTL) (or Hop Limit) of the
+
Neither form of delay variation is more suited than the other to
received packets indicates that the path is no longer the same.
+
on-the-fly summarization without memory, and this may be one of the
Transient packet reordering may also be observed with path changes,
+
reasons that [RFC3550] RTCP Jitter and MAPDV2 in [G.1020] have
due to use of non-optimal routing while updates propagate through the
+
attained deployment in low-cost systems.
network (see [Casner] and [Cia03] )
 
  
Many, if not all, packet streams experience packet loss in
+
==== Frequent Path Changes ====
conjunction with a path change.  However, it is certainly possible
+
 
that the active measurement stream does not experience loss.  This
+
If the network under test exhibits frequent path changes, on the
may be due to use of a long inter-packet sending interval with
+
order of several new routes per minute, then IPDV appears to isolate
respect to the restoration time, and it becomes more likely as "fast
+
the delay variation on each path from the transient effect of path
restoration" techniques see wider deployment (e.g., [RFC4090]).
+
change (especially if there is packet loss at the time of path
 +
change).  However, if one intends to use IPDV to indicate path
 +
changes, it cannot do this when the change is accompanied by loss.
  
Thus, there are two main cases to consider, path changes accompanied
+
It is possible to make meaningful PDV measurements when paths are
by loss, and those that are lossless from the point of view of the
+
unstable, but great importance would be placed on the algorithms that
active measurement stream.  The subsections below examine each of
+
infer path change and attempt to divide the sample on path change
these cases.
+
boundaries.
  
==== Lossless Path Change ====
+
When path changes are frequent and cause packet loss, delay variation
 +
is probably less important than the loss episodes and attention
 +
should be turned to the loss metric instead.
  
In the lossless case, a path change will typically affect only one
+
==== Frequent Loss ====
IPDV singleton.  For example, the delay sequence in the Figure below
 
always produces IPDV=0 except in the one case where the value is 5
 
(U, 0, 0, 0, 5, 0, 0, 0, 0).
 
  
                Packet #  1 2  3  4  5  6  7  8 9
+
If the network under test exhibits frequent loss, then PDV may
                Lost
+
produce a larger set of singletons for the sample than IPDV. This is
                ------------------------------------
+
due to IPDV requiring consecutive packet arrivals to assess delay
                Delay, ms  4  4  4  4  9  9  9  9  9
+
variation, compared to PDV where any packet arrival is useful. The
 +
worst case is when no consecutive packets arrive and the entire IPDV
 +
sample would be undefined, yet PDV would successfully produce a
 +
sample based on the arriving packets.
  
                IPDV      U  0  0  0  5  0  0  0  0
+
==== Load Balancing ====
  
                PDV       0 0  0  0  5  5  5  5  5
+
PDV distributions offer the most straightforward way to identify that
 +
a sample of packets have traversed multiple paths. The tasks of
 +
de-jitter buffer sizing or assessing queue occupation with PDV should
 +
be use a sample with a single flow because flows will experience only
 +
one mode on a stable path, and it simplifies the analysis.
  
                  Figure 5: Lossless Path Change
+
=== Summary ===
  
However, if the change in delay is negative and larger than the
+
+---------------+----------------------+----------------------------+
inter-packet sending interval, then more than one IPDV singleton may
+
| Comparison    | PDV = D(i)-D(min)    | IPDV = D(i)-D(i-1)        |
be affected because packet reordering is also likely to occur.
+
| Area          |                      |                            |
 
+
+---------------+----------------------+----------------------------+
 
+
| Challenging  | Less sensitive to   | Preferred when path        |
 
+
| Circumstances | packet loss, and    | changes are frequent or    |
 
+
|              | simplifies analysis  | when measurement clocks    |
 
+
|              | when load balancing  | exhibit some skew          |
 
+
|              | or multiple paths    |                            |
 
+
|              | are present          |                            |
 
+
|---------------|----------------------|----------------------------|
The use of the new path and its delay variation can be quantified by
+
| Spatial      | All validated        | Has sensitivity to        |
treating the PDV distribution as bi-modal, and characterizing each
+
| Composition  | methods use this    | sequence and spacing      |
mode separately. This would involve declaring a new path within the
+
| of DV metric  | form                | changes, which tends to    |
sample, and using a new local minimum delay as the PDV reference
+
|              |                      | break the requirement for  |
delay for the sub-sample (or time interval) where the new path is
+
|              |                      | independent distributions  |
present.
+
|              |                      | between path segments      |
 
+
|---------------|----------------------|----------------------------|
The process of detecting a bi-modal delay distribution is made
+
| Determine    | "Pseudo-range"      | No reliable relationship,  |
difficult if the typical delay variation is larger than the delay
+
| De-Jitter    | reveals this        | but some heuristics        |
change associated with the new path. However, information on a TTL
+
| Buffer Size  | property by         |                            |
(or Hop Limit) change or the presence of transient reordering can
+
| Required      | anchoring the       |                            |
assist in an automated decision.
+
|              | distribution at the  |                            |
 +
|              | minimum delay        |                            |
 +
|---------------|----------------------|----------------------------|
 +
| Estimate of  | Distribution has    | No reliable relationship  |
 +
| Queuing Time | one-to-one          |                            |
 +
| and Variation | relationship on a   |                            |
 +
|              | stable path,        |                            |
 +
|              | especially when      |                            |
 +
|              | sample min = true    |                            |
 +
|              | min                  |                            |
 +
|---------------|----------------------|----------------------------|
 +
| Specification | One constraint      | Distribution is two-sided, |
 +
| Simplicity:  | needed for          | usually has zero mean, and |
 +
| Single Number | single-sided        | no universal summary      |
 +
| SLA          | distribution, and    | statistic that relates to |
 +
|              | easily related to    | a physical quantity        |
 +
|              | quantities above    |                            |
 +
+---------------+----------------------+----------------------------+
  
The effect of path changes may also be reduced by making PDV
+
                      Summary of Comparisons
measurements over short intervals (minutes, as opposed to hours).
 
This way, a path change will affect one sample and its PDV values.
 
Assuming that the mean or median one-way delay changes appreciably on
 
the new path, then subsequent measurements can confirm a path change
 
and trigger special processing on the interval to revise the PDV
 
result.
 
  
Alternatively, if the path change is detected, by monitoring the test
+
== Measurement Considerations ==
packets TTL or Hop Limit, or monitoring the change in the IGP link-
 
state database, the results of measurement before and after the path
 
change could be kept separated, presenting two different
 
distributions.  This avoids the difficult task of determining the
 
different modes of a multi-modal distribution.
 
  
==== Path Change with Loss ====
+
This section discusses the practical aspects of delay variation
 +
measurement, with special attention to the two formulations compared
 +
in this memo.
  
If the path change is accompanied by loss, such that there are no
+
=== Measurement Stream Characteristics ===
consecutive packet pairs that span the change, then no IPDV
 
singletons will reflect the change.  This may or may not be
 
desirable, depending on the ultimate use of the delay variation
 
measurement.  Figure 6, in which L means Lost and U means Undefined,
 
illustrates this case.
 
  
                Packet #  1 3 4 5  6  7  8  9
+
As stated in Section 1.2, there is a strong dependency between the
                Lost                  L  L
+
active measurement stream characteristics and the results. The IPPM
                ------------------------------------
+
literature includes two primary methods for collecting samples:
                Delay, ms 3  4  3  3  U  U  8  9  8
+
Poisson sampling described in [RFC2330], and Periodic sampling in
 +
[RFC3432]. The Poisson method was intended to collect an unbiased
 +
sample of performance, while the Periodic method addresses a "known
 +
bias of interest". Periodic streams are required to have random
 +
start times and limited stream duration, in order to avoid unwanted
 +
synchronization with some other periodic process, or cause
 +
congestion-aware senders to synchronize with the stream and produce
 +
atypical results. The random start time should be different for each
 +
new stream.
  
                IPDV      U 1 -1  0  U  U  U  1 -1
+
It is worth noting that [RFC3393] was developed in parallel with
 +
[RFC3432]. As a result, all the stream metrics defined in [RFC3393]
 +
specify the Poisson sampling method.
  
                PDV        0 1  0  0  U  U  5  6  5
+
Periodic sampling is frequently used in measurements of delay
 +
variation. Several factors foster this choice:
  
                  Figure 6: Path Change with Loss
+
1.  Many application streams that are sensitive to delay variation
 +
    also exhibit periodicity, and so exemplify the bias of interest.
 +
    If the application has a constant packet spacing, this constant
 +
    spacing can be the inter-packet gap for the test stream.  VoIP
 +
    streams often use 20 ms spacing, so this is an obvious choice for
 +
    an Active stream.  This applies to both IPDV and PDV forms.
  
 +
2.  The spacing between packets in the stream will influence whether
 +
    the stream experiences short-range dependency, or only long-range
 +
    dependency, as investigated in [Li.Mills].  The packet spacing
 +
    also influences the IPDV distribution and the stream's
 +
    sensitivity to reordering.  For example, with a 20 ms spacing the
 +
    IPDV distribution cannot go below -20 ms without packet
 +
    reordering.
  
 +
3.  The measurement process may make several simplifying assumptions
 +
    when the send spacing and send rate are constant.  For example,
 +
    the inter-arrival times at the destination can be compared with
 +
    an ideal sending schedule, and allowing a one-point measurement
  
 +
    of delay variation (described in [Y.1540]) that approximates the
 +
    IPDV form.  Simplified methods that approximate PDV are possible
 +
    as well (some are discussed in Appendix II of [Y.1541]).
  
 +
4.  Analysis of truncated, or non-symmetrical IPDV distributions is
 +
    simplified.  Delay variations in excess of the periodic sending
 +
    interval can cause multiple singleton values at the negative
 +
    limit of the packet spacing (see Section 5.2 and [Cia03]).  Only
 +
    packet reordering can cause the negative spacing limit to be
 +
    exceeded.
  
 +
Despite the emphasis on inter-packet delay differences with IPDV,
 +
both Poisson [Demichelis] and Periodic [Li.Mills] streams have been
 +
used, and these references illustrate the different analyses that are
 +
possible.
  
PDV will again produce a bi-modal distribution.  But here, the
+
The advantages of using a Poisson distribution are discussed in
decision process to define sub-intervals associated with each path is
+
[RFC2330]The main properties are to avoid predicting the sample
further assisted by the presence of loss, in addition to TTL,
+
times, avoid synchronization with periodic events that are present in
reordering information, and use of short measurement intervals
+
networks, and avoid inducing synchronization with congestion-aware
consistent with the duration of user sessionsIt is reasonable to
+
sendersWhen a Poisson stream is used with IPDV, the distribution
assume that at least loss and delay will be measured simultaneously
+
will reflect inter-packet delay variation on many different time
with PDV and/or IPDV.
+
scales (or packet spacings).  The unbiased Poisson sampling brings a
 +
new layer of complexity in the analysis of IPDV distributions.
  
IPDV does not help to detect path changes when accompanied by loss,
+
=== Measurement Devices ===
and this is a disadvantage for those who rely solely on IPDV
 
measurements.
 
  
=== Clock Stability and Error ===
+
One key aspect of measurement devices is their ability to store
 +
singletons (or individual measurements).  This feature usually is
 +
closely related to local calculation capabilities.  For example, an
 +
embedded measurement device with limited storage will like provide
 +
only a few statistics on the delay variation distribution, while
 +
dedicated measurement systems store all the singletons and allow
 +
detailed analysis (later calculation of either form of delay
 +
variation is possible with the original singletons).
  
Low cost or low complexity measurement systems may be embedded in
+
Therefore, systems with limited storage must choose their metrics and
communication devices that do not have access to high stability
+
summary statistics in advance.  If both IPDV and PDV statistics are
clocks, and time errors will almost certainly be presentHowever,
+
desired, the supporting information must be collected as packets
larger time-related errors (~1 ms) may offer an acceptable trade-off
+
arriveFor example, the PDV range and high percentiles can be
for monitoring performance over a large population (the accuracy
+
determined later if the minimum and several of the largest delays are
needed to detect problems may be much less than required for a
+
stored while the measurement is in-progress.
scientific study, ~0.01 ms for example).
 
  
Maintaining time accuracy <<1 ms has typically required access to
+
=== Units of Measurement ===
dedicated time receivers at all measurement points.  Global
 
positioning system (GPS) receivers have often been installed to
 
support measurements.  The GPS installation conditions are fairly
 
restrictive, and many prospective measurement efforts have found the
 
deployment complexity and system maintenance too difficult.
 
  
As mentioned above, [Demichelis] observed that PDV places greater
+
Both IPDV and PDV can be summarized as a range in milliseconds.
demands on clock synchronization than for IPDV.  This observation
 
deserves more discussion.  Synchronization errors have two
 
components: time-of-day errors and clock-frequency errors (resulting
 
in skew).
 
  
Both IPDV and PDV are sensitive to time-of-day errors when attempting
+
With IPDV, it is interesting to report on a positive percentile, and
to align measurement intervals at the source and destinationGross
+
an inter-quantile range is appropriate to reflect both positive and
misalignment of the measurement intervals can lead to lost packets,
+
negative tails (e.g., 5% to 95%)If the IPDV distribution is
for example, if the receiver is not ready when the first test packet
+
symmetric around a mean of zero, then it is sufficient to report on
arrives.  However, both IPDV and PDV assess delay differences, so the
+
the positive side of the distribution.
error present in any two one-way-delay singletons will cancel as long
 
as the error is constant.  So, the demand for NTP or GPS
 
synchronization comes primarily from one-way-delay measurement time-
 
of-day accuracy requirements.  Delay variation and measurement
 
interval alignment are relatively less demanding.
 
  
 +
With PDV, it is sufficient to specify the upper percentile (e.g.,
 +
99.9%).
  
 +
=== Test Duration ===
  
 +
At several points in this memo, we have recommended use of test
 +
intervals on the order of minutes.  In their paper examining the
 +
stability of Internet path properties [Zhang.Duff], Zhang et al.
 +
concluded that consistency was present on the order of minutes for
 +
the performance metrics considered (loss, delay, and throughput) for
 +
the paths they measured.
  
 +
The topic of temporal aggregation of performance measured in small
 +
intervals to estimate some larger interval is described in the Metric
 +
Composition Framework [IPPM-Framework].
  
 +
The primary recommendation here is to test using durations that are
 +
similar in length to the session time of interest.  This applies to
 +
both IPDV and PDV, but is possibly more relevant for PDV since the
 +
duration determines how often the D_min will be determined, and the
 +
size of the associated sample.
  
 +
=== Clock Sync Options ===
  
 +
As with one-way-delay measurements, local clock synchronization is an
 +
important matter for delay variation measurements.
  
Skew is a measure of the change in clock time over an interval with
+
There are several options available:
respect to a reference clock.  Both IPDV and PDV are affected by
+
 
skew, but the error sensitivity in IPDV singletons is less because
+
1Global Positioning System receivers
the intervals between consecutive packets are rather small,
 
especially when compared to the overall measurement intervalSince
 
PDV computes the difference between a single reference delay (the
 
sample minimum) and all other delays in the measurement interval, the
 
constraint on skew error is greater to attain the same accuracy as
 
IPDV.  Again, use of short PDV measurement intervals (on the order of
 
minutes, not hours) provides some relief from the effects of skew
 
error.  Thus, the additional accuracy demand of PDV can be expressed
 
as a ratio of the measurement interval to the inter-packet spacing.
 
  
A practical example is a measurement between two hosts, one with a
+
2.  In some parts of the world, Cellular Code Division Multiple
synchronized clock and the other with a free-running clock having 50
+
    Access (CDMA) systems distribute timing signals that are derived
parts per million (ppm) long term accuracy.
+
    from GPS and traceable to UTC.
  
o If IPDV measurements are made on packets with a 1 second spacing,
+
3. Network Time Protocol [RFC1305] is a convenient choice in many
  the maximum singleton error will be 1 x 5 x 10^-5 seconds, or 0.05
+
    cases, but usually offers lower accuracy than the options above.
  ms.
 
  
o  If PDV measurements are made on the same packets over a 60 second
+
When clock synchronization is inconvenient or subject to appreciable
  measurement interval, then the delay variation due to the max
+
errors, then round-trip measurements may give a cumulative indication
  free-running clock error will be 60 x 5 x 10-5 seconds, or 3 ms
+
of the delay variation present on both directions of the path.
  delay variation error from the first packet to the last.
+
However, delay distributions are rarely symmetrical, so it is
 +
difficult to infer much about the one-way-delay variation from round-
 +
trip measurements.  Also, measurements on asymmetrical paths add
 +
complications for the one-way-delay metric.
  
Therefore, the additional accuracy required for equivalent PDV error
+
=== Distinguishing Long Delay from Loss ===
under these conditions is a factor of 60 more than for IPDV.  This is
 
a rather extreme scenario, because time-of-day error of 1 second
 
would accumulate in ~5.5 hours, potentially causing the measurement
 
interval alignment issue described above.
 
  
If skew is present in a sample of one-way delays, its symptom is
+
Lost and delayed packets are separated by a waiting time threshold.
typically a nearly linear growth or decline over all the one-way-
+
Packets that arrive at the measurement destination within their
delay valuesAs a practical matter, if the same slope appears
+
waiting time have finite delay and are not lostOtherwise, packets
consistently in the measurements, then it may be possible to fit the
+
are designated lost and their delay is undefined.  Guidance on
slope and compensate for the skew in the one-way-delay measurements,
+
setting the waiting time threshold may be found in [RFC2680] and
thereby avoiding the issue in the PDV calculations that follow.  See
+
[IPPM-Reporting].
[RFC3393] for additional information on compensating for skew.
 
  
Values for IPDV may have non-zero mean over a sample when clock skew
+
In essence, [IPPM-Reporting] suggests to use a long waiting time to
is present.  This tends to complicate IPDV analysis when using the
+
serve network characterization and revise results for specific
assumptions of a zero mean and a symmetric distribution.
+
application delay thresholds as needed.
  
There is a third factor related to clock error and stability: this is
+
=== Accounting for Packet Reordering ===
the presence of a clock-synchronization protocol (e.g., NTP) and the
 
time-adjustment operations that result.  When a time error is
 
detected (typically on the order of a few milliseconds), the host
 
  
 +
Packet reordering, defined in [RFC4737], is essentially an extreme
 +
form of delay variation where the packet stream arrival order differs
 +
from the sending order.
  
 +
PDV results are not sensitive to packet arrival order, and are not
 +
affected by reordering other than to reflect the more extreme
 +
variation.
  
 +
IPDV results will change if reordering is present because they are
 +
sensitive to the sequence of delays of arriving packets.  The main
 +
example of this sensitivity is in the truncation of the negative tail
 +
of the distribution.
  
 +
o  When there is no reordering, the negative tail is limited by the
 +
  sending time spacing between packets.
  
clock frequency is continuously adjusted to reduce the time error.
+
o  If reordering occurs (and the reordered packets are not
If these adjustments take place during a measurement interval, they
+
  discarded), the negative tail can take on any value (in
may appear as delay variation when none was present, and therefore
+
  principal).
are a source of error (regardless of the form of delay variation
 
considered).
 
  
=== Spatial Composition ===
+
In general, measurement systems should have the capability to detect
 +
when sequence has changed.  If IPDV measurements are made without
 +
regard to packet arrival order, the IPDV will be under-reported when
 +
reordering occurs.
  
ITU-T Recommendation [Y.1541] gives a provisional method to compose a
+
=== Results Representation and Reporting ===
PDV metric using PDV measurement results from two or more sub-paths.
 
Additional methods are considered in [IPPM-Spatial].
 
  
PDV has a clear advantage at this time, since there is no validated
+
All of the references that discuss or define delay variation suggest
method to compose an IPDV metric.  In addition, IPDV results depend
+
ways to represent or report the results, and interested readers
greatly on the exact sequence of packets and may not lend themselves
+
should review the various possibilities.
easily to the composition problem, where segments must be assumed to
 
have independent delay distributions.
 
  
=== Reporting a Single Number (SLA) ===
+
For example, [IPPM-Reporting] suggests reporting a pseudo-range of
 +
delay variation based on calculating the difference between a high
 +
percentile of delay and the minimum delay.  The 99.9th percentile
 +
minus the minimum will give a value that can be compared with
 +
objectives in [Y.1541].
  
Despite the risk of over-summarization, measurements must often be
+
== Security Considerations ==
displayed for easy consumption.  If the right summary report is
 
prepared, then the "dashboard" view correctly indicates whether there
 
is something different and worth investigating further, or that the
 
status has not changed.  The dashboard model restricts every
 
instrument display to a single number.  The packet network dashboard
 
could have different instruments for loss, delay, delay variation,
 
reordering, etc., and each must be summarized as a single number for
 
each measurement interval.  The single number summary statistic is a
 
key component of SLAs, where a threshold on that number must be met
 
x% of the time.
 
  
The simplicity of the PDV distribution lends itself to this
+
The security considerations that apply to any active measurement of
summarization process (including use of the percentiles, median or
+
live networks are relevant here as wellSee the "Security
mean)An SLA of the form "no more than x% of packets in a
+
Considerations" sections in [RFC2330], [RFC2679], [RFC3393],
measurement interval shall have PDV >= y ms, for no less than z% of
+
[RFC3432], and [RFC4656].
time" is relatively straightforward to specify and implement.
 
[Y.1541] introduced the notion of a pseudo-range when setting an
 
objective for the 99.9th percentile of PDV.  The conventional range
 
(max-min) was avoided for several reasons, including stability of the
 
maximum delay.  The 99.9th percentile of PDV is helpful to
 
performance planners (seeking to meet some user-to-user objective for
 
delay) and in design of de-jitter buffer sizes, even those with
 
adaptive capabilities.
 
  
IPDV does not lend itself to summarization so easily. The mean IPDV
+
Security considerations do not contribute to the selection of PDV or
is typically zeroAs the IPDV distribution will have two tails
+
IPDV forms of delay variation, because measurements using these
(positive and negative), the range or pseudo-range would not match
+
metrics involve exactly the same security issues.
 +
 
 +
10Acknowledgments
  
 +
The authors would like to thank Phil Chimento for his suggestion to
 +
employ the convention of conditional distributions of delay to deal
 +
with packet loss, and his encouragement to "write the memo" after
 +
hearing "the talk" on this topic at IETF 65.  We also acknowledge
 +
constructive comments from Alan Clark, Loki Jorgenson, Carsten
 +
Schmoll, and Robert Holley.
  
 +
11.  Appendix on Calculating the D(min) in PDV
  
 +
Practitioners have raised several questions that this section intends
 +
to answer:
  
 +
-  How is this D_min calculated?  Is it DV(99%) as mentioned in
 +
  [Krzanowski]?
  
the needed de-jitter buffer size. Additional complexity may be
+
Do we need to keep all the values from the interval, then take the
introduced when the variation exceeds the inter-packet sending
+
  minimumOr do we keep the minimum from previous intervals?
interval, as discussed above (in Sections 5.2 and 6.2.1).  Should the
 
Inter-Quartile Range be usedShould the singletons beyond some
 
threshold be counted (e.g., mean +/- 50 ms)? A strong rationale for
 
one of these summary statistics has yet to emerge.
 
  
When summarizing IPDV, some prefer the simplicity of the single-sided
+
The value of D_min used as the reference delay for PDV calculations
distribution created by taking the absolute value of each singleton
+
is simply the minimum delay of all packets in the current sample.
result, abs(D(i)-D(i-1)).  This approach sacrifices the two-sided
+
The usual single value summary of the PDV distribution is D_(99.9th
inter-arrival spread information in the distribution. It also makes
+
percentile) minus D_min.
the evaluation using percentiles more confusing, because a single
 
late packet that exceeds the variation threshold will cause two pairs
 
of singletons to fail the criteria (one positive, the other negative
 
converted to positive).  The single-sided PDV distribution is an
 
advantage in this category.
 
  
=== Jitter in RTCP Reports ===
+
It may be appropriate to segregate sub-sets and revise the minimum
 +
value during a sample.  For example, if it can be determined with
 +
certainty that the path has changed by monitoring the Time to Live or
 +
Hop Count of arriving packets, this may be sufficient justification
 +
to reset the minimum for packets on the new path.  There is also a
 +
simpler approach to solving this problem: use samples collected over
 +
short evaluation intervals (on the order of minutes).  Intervals with
 +
path changes may be more interesting from the loss or one-way-delay
 +
perspective (possibly failing to meet one or more SLAs), and it may
 +
not be necessary to conduct delay variation analysis.  Short
 +
evaluation intervals are preferred for measurements that serve as a
 +
basis for troubleshooting, since the results are available to report
 +
soon after collection.
  
Section 6.4.1 of [RFC3550] gives the calculation of the "inter-
+
It is not necessary to store all delay values in a sample when
arrival jitter" field for the RTP Control Protocol (RTCP) report,
+
storage is a major concern.  D_min can be found by comparing each new
with a sample implementation in an Appendix.
+
singleton value with the current value and replacing it when
 +
required.  In a sample with 5000 packets, evaluation of the 99.9th
 +
percentile can also be achieved with limited storage.  One method
 +
calls for storing the top 50 delay singletons and revising the top
 +
value list each time 50 more packets arrive.
 +
 
 +
12.  References
 +
 
 +
12.1.  Normative References
 +
 
 +
[RFC2119]         Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
 +
                  Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.
  
The RTCP "interarrival jitter" value can be calculated using IPDV
+
[RFC2330]        Paxson, V., Almes, G., Mahdavi, J., and M. Mathis,
singletons. If there is packet reordering, as defined in [RFC4737],
+
                  "Framework for IP Performance Metrics", RFC 2330,
then estimates of Jitter based on IPDV may vary slightly, because
+
                  May 1998.
[RFC3550] specifies the use of receive-packet order.
 
  
Just as there is no simple way to convert PDV singletons to IPDV
+
[RFC2679]        Almes, G., Kalidindi, S., and M. Zekauskas, "A One-
singletons without returning to the original sample of delay
+
                  way Delay Metric for IPPM", RFC 2679,
singletons, there is no clear relationship between PDV and [RFC3550]
+
                  September 1999.
"interarrival jitter".
 
  
=== MAPDV2 ===
+
[RFC2680]        Almes, G., Kalidindi, S., and M. Zekauskas, "A One-
 +
                  way Packet Loss Metric for IPPM", RFC 2680,
 +
                  September 1999.
  
MAPDV2 stands for Mean Absolute Packet Delay Variation (version) 2,
+
[RFC3393]         Demichelis, C. and P. Chimento, "IP Packet Delay
and is specified in [G.1020]. The MAPDV2 algorithm computes a
+
                  Variation Metric for IP Performance Metrics
smoothed running estimate of the mean delay using the one-way delays
+
                  (IPPM)", RFC 3393, November 2002.
of 16 previous packets. It compares the current one-way delay to the
 
estimated mean, separately computes the means of positive and
 
negative deviations, and sums these deviation means to produce
 
MAPVDV2.  In effect, there is a MAPDV2 singleton for every arriving
 
packet, so further summarization is usually warranted.
 
  
Neither IPDV or PDV forms assist in the computation of MAPDV2.
+
[RFC3432]        Raisanen, V., Grotefeld, G., and A. Morton,
 +
                  "Network performance measurement with periodic
 +
                  streams", RFC 3432, November 2002.
  
 +
[RFC4090]        Pan, P., Swallow, G., and A. Atlas, "Fast Reroute
 +
                  Extensions to RSVP-TE for LSP Tunnels", RFC 4090,
 +
                  May 2005.
  
 +
[RFC4656]        Shalunov, S., Teitelbaum, B., Karp, A., Boote, J.,
 +
                  and M. Zekauskas, "A One-way Active Measurement
 +
                  Protocol (OWAMP)", RFC 4656, September 2006.
  
 +
[RFC4737]        Morton, A., Ciavattone, L., Ramachandran, G.,
 +
                  Shalunov, S., and J. Perser, "Packet Reordering
 +
                  Metrics", RFC 4737, November 2006.
  
 +
12.2.  Informative References
  
 +
[COM12.D98]      Clark, A., "Analysis, measurement and modelling of
 +
                  Jitter", ITU-T Delayed Contribution COM 12 - D98,
 +
                  January 2003.
  
 +
[Casner]          Casner, S., Alaettinoglu, C., and C. Kuan, "A Fine-
 +
                  Grained View of High Performance Networking",
 +
                  NANOG 22, May 20-22, 2001,
 +
                  <http://www.nanog.org/mtg-0105/agenda.html>.
  
 +
[Cia03]          Ciavattone, L., Morton, A., and G. Ramachandran,
 +
                  "Standardized Active Measurements on a Tier 1 IP
 +
                  Backbone", IEEE Communications Magazine, p. 90-97,
 +
                  June 2003.
  
=== Load Balancing ===
+
[Demichelis]      Demichelis, C., "Packet Delay Variation Comparison
 +
                  between ITU-T and IETF Draft Definitions",
 +
                  November 2000, <http://www.advanced.org/ippm/
 +
                  archive.3/att-0075/01-pap02.doc>.
  
Network traffic load balancing is a process to divide packet traffic
+
[G.1020]          ITU-T, "Performance parameter definitions for the
in order to provide a more even distribution over two or more equally
+
                  quality of speech and other voiceband applications
viable paths. The paths chosen are based on the IGP cost metrics,
+
                  utilizing IP networks", ITU-T
while the delay depends on the path's physical layout. Usually, the
+
                  Recommendation G.1020, 2006.
balancing process is performed on a per-flow basis to avoid delay
+
 
variation experienced when packets traverse different physical paths.
+
[G.1050]          ITU-T, "Network model for evaluating multimedia
 +
                  transmission performance over Internet Protocol",
 +
                  ITU-T Recommendation G.1050, November 2005.
 +
 
 +
[I.356]          ITU-T, "B-ISDN ATM Layer Cell Transfer
 +
                  Performance", ITU-T Recommendation I.356,
 +
                  March 2000.
 +
 
 +
[IPPM-Framework]  Morton, A., "Framework for Metric Composition",
 +
                  Work in Progress, October 2008.
  
If the sample includes test packets with different characteristics
+
[IPPM-Reporting]  Morton, A., Ramachandran, G., and G. Maguluri,
such as IP addresses/ports, there could be multi-modal delay
+
                  "Reporting Metrics: Different Points of View", Work
distributions present.  The PDV form makes the identification of
+
                  in Progress, January 2009.
multiple modes possible.  IPDV may also reveal that multiple paths
 
are in use with a mixed-flow sample, but the different delay modes
 
are not easily divided and analyzed separately.
 
  
Should the delay singletons using multiple addresses/ports be
+
[IPPM-Spatial]    Morton, A. and E. Stephan, "Spatial Composition of
combined in the same sample?  Should we characterize each mode
+
                  Metrics", Work in Progress, July 2008.
separately?  (This question also applies to the Path Change case.)
 
It depends on the task to be addressed by the measurement.
 
  
For the task of de-jitter buffer sizing or assessing queue
+
[Krzanowski]      Presentation at IPPM, IETF-64, "Jitter Definitions:
occupation, the modes should be characterized separately because
+
                  What is What?", November 2005.
flows will experience only one mode on a stable path.  Use of a
 
single flow description (address/port combination) in each sample
 
simplifies this analysis.  Multiple modes may be identified by
 
collecting samples with different flow attributes, and
 
characterization of multiple paths can proceed with comparison of the
 
delay distributions from each sample.
 
  
For the task of capacity planning and routing optimization,
+
[Li.Mills]        Li, Q. and D. Mills, "The Implications of Short-
characterizing the modes separately could offer an advantage.
+
                  Range Dependency on Delay Variation Measurement",
Network-wide capacity planning (as opposed to link capacity planning)
+
                  Second IEEE Symposium on Network Computing
takes as input the core traffic matrix, which corresponds to a matrix
+
                  and Applications, 2003.
of traffic transferred from every source to every destination in the
 
network. Applying the core traffic matrix along with the routing
 
information (typically the link state database of a routing protocol)
 
in a capacity planning tool offers the possibility to visualize the
 
paths where the traffic flows and to optimize the routing based on
 
the link utilization. In the case where equal cost multiple paths
 
(ECMPs) are used, the traffic will be load balanced onto multiple
 
paths.  If each mode of the IP delay multi-modal distribution can be
 
associated with a specific path, the delay performance offers an
 
extra optimization parameter, i.e., the routing optimization based on
 
the IP delay variation metric. As an example, the load balancing
 
across ECMPs could be suppressed so that the Voice over IP (VoIP)
 
calls would only be routed via the path with the lower IP delay
 
  
 +
[Morton06]        Morton, A., "A Brief Jitter Metrics Comparison, and
 +
                  not the last word, by any means...", slide
 +
                  presentation at IETF 65, IPPM Session, March 2006.
  
 +
[RFC1305]        Mills, D., "Network Time Protocol (Version 3)
 +
                  Specification, Implementation", RFC 1305,
 +
                  March 1992.
  
 +
[RFC3357]        Koodli, R. and R. Ravikanth, "One-way Loss Pattern
 +
                  Sample Metrics", RFC 3357, August 2002.
  
 +
[RFC3550]        Schulzrinne, H., Casner, S., Frederick, R., and V.
 +
                  Jacobson, "RTP: A Transport Protocol for Real-Time
 +
                  Applications", STD 64, RFC 3550, July 2003.
  
 +
[Y.1540]          ITU-T, "Internet protocol data communication
 +
                  service - IP packet transfer and availability
 +
                  performance parameters", ITU-T Recommendation
 +
                  Y.1540, November 2007.
  
variation. Clearly, any modifications can result in new delay
+
[Y.1541]          ITU-T, "Network Performance Objectives for IP-Based
performance measurements, so there must be a verification step to
+
                  Services", ITU-T Recommendation Y.1541,
ensure the desired outcome.
+
                  February 2006.
  
== Applicability of the Delay Variation Forms and Recommendations ==
+
[Zhang.Duff]      Zhang, Y., Duffield, N., Paxson, V., and S.
 +
                  Shenker, "On the Constancy of Internet Path
 +
                  Properties", Proceedings of ACM SIGCOMM Internet
 +
                  Measurement Workshop, November 2001.
  
Based on the comparisons of IPDV and PDV presented above, this
+
Authors' Addresses
section matches the attributes of each form with the tasks described
 
earlier.  We discuss the more general circumstances first.
 
  
=== Uses ===
+
Al Morton
 +
AT&T Labs
 +
200 Laurel Avenue South
 +
Middletown, NJ  07748
 +
USA
  
==== Inferring Queue Occupancy ====
+
Phone: +1 732 420 1571
 +
Fax:  +1 732 368 1192
 +
 +
URI:  http://home.comcast.net/~acmacm/
  
The PDV distribution is anchored at the minimum delay observed in the
+
Benoit Claise
measurement interval.  When the sample minimum coincides with the
+
Cisco Systems, Inc.
true minimum delay of the path, then the PDV distribution is
+
De Kleetlaan 6a b1
equivalent to the queuing time distribution experienced by the test
+
Diegem,   1831
stream. If the minimum delay is not the true minimum, then the PDV
+
Belgium
distribution captures the variation in queuing time and some
 
additional amount of queuing time is experienced, but unknown.  One
 
can summarize the PDV distribution with the mean, median, and other
 
statistics.
 
  
IPDV can capture the difference in queuing time from one packet to
+
Phone: +32 2 704 5622
the next, but this is a different distribution from the queue
+
occupancy revealed by PDV.
 
 
 
==== Determining De-Jitter Buffer Size (and FEC Design) ====
 
 
 
This task is complimentary to the problem of inferring queue
 
occupancy through measurement.  Again, use of the sample minimum as
 
the reference delay for PDV yields a distribution that is very
 
relevant to de-jitter buffer size.  This is because the minimum delay
 
is an alignment point for the smoothing operation of de-jitter
 
buffers.  A de-jitter buffer that is ideally aligned with the delay
 
variation adds zero buffer time to packets with the longest
 
accommodated network delay (any packets with longer delays are
 
discarded).  Thus, a packet experiencing minimum network delay should
 
be aligned to wait the maximum length of the de-jitter buffer.  With
 
this alignment, the stream is smoothed with no unnecessary delay
 
added.  Figure 5 of [G.1020] illustrates the ideal relationship
 
between network delay variation and buffer time.
 
 
 
The PDV distribution is also useful for this task, but different
 
statistics are preferred.  The range (max-min) or the 99.9th
 
percentile of PDV (pseudo-range) are closely related to the buffer
 
size needed to accommodate the observed network delay variation.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
The PDV distribution directly addresses the FEC waiting time
 
question.  When the PDV distribution has a 99th percentile of 10 ms,
 
then waiting 10 ms longer than the FEC protection interval will allow
 
99% of late packets to arrive and be used in the FEC block.
 
 
 
In some cases, the positive excursions (or series of positive
 
excursions) of IPDV may help to approximate the de-jitter buffer
 
size, but there is no guarantee that a good buffer estimate will
 
emerge, especially when the delay varies as a positive trend over
 
several test packets.
 
 
 
==== Spatial Composition ====
 
 
 
PDV has a clear advantage at this time, since there is no validated
 
method to compose an IPDV metric.
 
 
 
==== Service-Level Specification: Reporting a Single Number ====
 
 
 
The one-sided PDV distribution can be constrained with a single
 
statistic, such as an upper percentile, so it is preferred.  The IPDV
 
distribution is two-sided, usually has zero mean, and no universal
 
summary statistic that relates to a physical quantity has emerged in
 
years of experience.
 
 
 
=== Challenging Circumstances ===
 
 
 
Note that measurement of delay variation may not be the primary
 
concern under unstable and unreliable circumstances.
 
 
 
==== Clock and Storage Issues ====
 
 
 
When appreciable skew is present between measurement system clocks,
 
IPDV has an advantage because PDV would require processing over the
 
entire sample to remove the skew error.  However, significant skew
 
can invalidate IPDV analysis assumptions, such as the zero-mean and
 
symmetric-distribution characteristics.  Small skew may well be
 
within the error tolerance, and both PDV and IPDV results will be
 
usable.  There may be a portion of the skew, measurement interval,
 
and required accuracy 3-D space where IPDV has an advantage,
 
depending on the specific measurement specifications.
 
 
 
Neither form of delay variation is more suited than the other to
 
on-the-fly summarization without memory, and this may be one of the
 
reasons that [RFC3550] RTCP Jitter and MAPDV2 in [G.1020] have
 
attained deployment in low-cost systems.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
==== Frequent Path Changes ====
 
 
 
If the network under test exhibits frequent path changes, on the
 
order of several new routes per minute, then IPDV appears to isolate
 
the delay variation on each path from the transient effect of path
 
change (especially if there is packet loss at the time of path
 
change).  However, if one intends to use IPDV to indicate path
 
changes, it cannot do this when the change is accompanied by loss.
 
 
 
It is possible to make meaningful PDV measurements when paths are
 
unstable, but great importance would be placed on the algorithms that
 
infer path change and attempt to divide the sample on path change
 
boundaries.
 
 
 
When path changes are frequent and cause packet loss, delay variation
 
is probably less important than the loss episodes and attention
 
should be turned to the loss metric instead.
 
 
 
==== Frequent Loss ====
 
 
 
If the network under test exhibits frequent loss, then PDV may
 
produce a larger set of singletons for the sample than IPDV.  This is
 
due to IPDV requiring consecutive packet arrivals to assess delay
 
variation, compared to PDV where any packet arrival is useful.  The
 
worst case is when no consecutive packets arrive and the entire IPDV
 
sample would be undefined, yet PDV would successfully produce a
 
sample based on the arriving packets.
 
 
 
==== Load Balancing ====
 
 
 
PDV distributions offer the most straightforward way to identify that
 
a sample of packets have traversed multiple paths.  The tasks of
 
de-jitter buffer sizing or assessing queue occupation with PDV should
 
be use a sample with a single flow because flows will experience only
 
one mode on a stable path, and it simplifies the analysis.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
=== Summary ===
 
 
 
+---------------+----------------------+----------------------------+
 
| Comparison    | PDV = D(i)-D(min)    | IPDV = D(i)-D(i-1)        |
 
| Area          |                      |                            |
 
+---------------+----------------------+----------------------------+
 
| Challenging  | Less sensitive to    | Preferred when path        |
 
| Circumstances | packet loss, and    | changes are frequent or    |
 
|              | simplifies analysis  | when measurement clocks    |
 
|              | when load balancing  | exhibit some skew          |
 
|              | or multiple paths    |                            |
 
|              | are present          |                            |
 
|---------------|----------------------|----------------------------|
 
| Spatial      | All validated        | Has sensitivity to        |
 
| Composition  | methods use this    | sequence and spacing      |
 
| of DV metric  | form                | changes, which tends to    |
 
|              |                      | break the requirement for  |
 
|              |                      | independent distributions  |
 
|              |                      | between path segments      |
 
|---------------|----------------------|----------------------------|
 
| Determine    | "Pseudo-range"      | No reliable relationship,  |
 
| De-Jitter    | reveals this        | but some heuristics        |
 
| Buffer Size  | property by          |                            |
 
| Required      | anchoring the        |                            |
 
|              | distribution at the  |                            |
 
|              | minimum delay        |                            |
 
|---------------|----------------------|----------------------------|
 
| Estimate of  | Distribution has    | No reliable relationship  |
 
| Queuing Time  | one-to-one          |                            |
 
| and Variation | relationship on a    |                            |
 
|              | stable path,        |                            |
 
|              | especially when      |                            |
 
|              | sample min = true    |                            |
 
|              | min                  |                            |
 
|---------------|----------------------|----------------------------|
 
| Specification | One constraint      | Distribution is two-sided, |
 
| Simplicity:  | needed for          | usually has zero mean, and |
 
| Single Number | single-sided        | no universal summary      |
 
| SLA          | distribution, and    | statistic that relates to  |
 
|              | easily related to    | a physical quantity        |
 
|              | quantities above    |                            |
 
+---------------+----------------------+----------------------------+
 
 
 
                      Summary of Comparisons
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
== Measurement Considerations ==
 
 
 
This section discusses the practical aspects of delay variation
 
measurement, with special attention to the two formulations compared
 
in this memo.
 
 
 
=== Measurement Stream Characteristics ===
 
 
 
As stated in Section 1.2, there is a strong dependency between the
 
active measurement stream characteristics and the results.  The IPPM
 
literature includes two primary methods for collecting samples:
 
Poisson sampling described in [RFC2330], and Periodic sampling in
 
[RFC3432].  The Poisson method was intended to collect an unbiased
 
sample of performance, while the Periodic method addresses a "known
 
bias of interest".  Periodic streams are required to have random
 
start times and limited stream duration, in order to avoid unwanted
 
synchronization with some other periodic process, or cause
 
congestion-aware senders to synchronize with the stream and produce
 
atypical results.  The random start time should be different for each
 
new stream.
 
 
 
It is worth noting that [RFC3393] was developed in parallel with
 
[RFC3432].  As a result, all the stream metrics defined in [RFC3393]
 
specify the Poisson sampling method.
 
 
 
Periodic sampling is frequently used in measurements of delay
 
variation.  Several factors foster this choice:
 
 
 
1.  Many application streams that are sensitive to delay variation
 
    also exhibit periodicity, and so exemplify the bias of interest.
 
    If the application has a constant packet spacing, this constant
 
    spacing can be the inter-packet gap for the test stream.  VoIP
 
    streams often use 20 ms spacing, so this is an obvious choice for
 
    an Active stream.  This applies to both IPDV and PDV forms.
 
 
 
2.  The spacing between packets in the stream will influence whether
 
    the stream experiences short-range dependency, or only long-range
 
    dependency, as investigated in [Li.Mills].  The packet spacing
 
    also influences the IPDV distribution and the stream's
 
    sensitivity to reordering.  For example, with a 20 ms spacing the
 
    IPDV distribution cannot go below -20 ms without packet
 
    reordering.
 
 
 
3.  The measurement process may make several simplifying assumptions
 
    when the send spacing and send rate are constant.  For example,
 
    the inter-arrival times at the destination can be compared with
 
    an ideal sending schedule, and allowing a one-point measurement
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
    of delay variation (described in [Y.1540]) that approximates the
 
    IPDV form.  Simplified methods that approximate PDV are possible
 
    as well (some are discussed in Appendix II of [Y.1541]).
 
 
 
4.  Analysis of truncated, or non-symmetrical IPDV distributions is
 
    simplified.  Delay variations in excess of the periodic sending
 
    interval can cause multiple singleton values at the negative
 
    limit of the packet spacing (see Section 5.2 and [Cia03]).  Only
 
    packet reordering can cause the negative spacing limit to be
 
    exceeded.
 
 
 
Despite the emphasis on inter-packet delay differences with IPDV,
 
both Poisson [Demichelis] and Periodic [Li.Mills] streams have been
 
used, and these references illustrate the different analyses that are
 
possible.
 
 
 
The advantages of using a Poisson distribution are discussed in
 
[RFC2330].  The main properties are to avoid predicting the sample
 
times, avoid synchronization with periodic events that are present in
 
networks, and avoid inducing synchronization with congestion-aware
 
senders.  When a Poisson stream is used with IPDV, the distribution
 
will reflect inter-packet delay variation on many different time
 
scales (or packet spacings).  The unbiased Poisson sampling brings a
 
new layer of complexity in the analysis of IPDV distributions.
 
 
 
=== Measurement Devices ===
 
 
 
One key aspect of measurement devices is their ability to store
 
singletons (or individual measurements).  This feature usually is
 
closely related to local calculation capabilities.  For example, an
 
embedded measurement device with limited storage will like provide
 
only a few statistics on the delay variation distribution, while
 
dedicated measurement systems store all the singletons and allow
 
detailed analysis (later calculation of either form of delay
 
variation is possible with the original singletons).
 
 
 
Therefore, systems with limited storage must choose their metrics and
 
summary statistics in advance.  If both IPDV and PDV statistics are
 
desired, the supporting information must be collected as packets
 
arrive.  For example, the PDV range and high percentiles can be
 
determined later if the minimum and several of the largest delays are
 
stored while the measurement is in-progress.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
=== Units of Measurement ===
 
 
 
Both IPDV and PDV can be summarized as a range in milliseconds.
 
 
 
With IPDV, it is interesting to report on a positive percentile, and
 
an inter-quantile range is appropriate to reflect both positive and
 
negative tails (e.g., 5% to 95%).  If the IPDV distribution is
 
symmetric around a mean of zero, then it is sufficient to report on
 
the positive side of the distribution.
 
 
 
With PDV, it is sufficient to specify the upper percentile (e.g.,
 
99.9%).
 
 
 
=== Test Duration ===
 
 
 
At several points in this memo, we have recommended use of test
 
intervals on the order of minutes.  In their paper examining the
 
stability of Internet path properties [Zhang.Duff], Zhang et al.
 
concluded that consistency was present on the order of minutes for
 
the performance metrics considered (loss, delay, and throughput) for
 
the paths they measured.
 
 
 
The topic of temporal aggregation of performance measured in small
 
intervals to estimate some larger interval is described in the Metric
 
Composition Framework [IPPM-Framework].
 
 
 
The primary recommendation here is to test using durations that are
 
similar in length to the session time of interest.  This applies to
 
both IPDV and PDV, but is possibly more relevant for PDV since the
 
duration determines how often the D_min will be determined, and the
 
size of the associated sample.
 
 
 
=== Clock Sync Options ===
 
 
 
As with one-way-delay measurements, local clock synchronization is an
 
important matter for delay variation measurements.
 
 
 
There are several options available:
 
 
 
1.  Global Positioning System receivers
 
 
 
2.  In some parts of the world, Cellular Code Division Multiple
 
    Access (CDMA) systems distribute timing signals that are derived
 
    from GPS and traceable to UTC.
 
 
 
3.  Network Time Protocol [RFC1305] is a convenient choice in many
 
    cases, but usually offers lower accuracy than the options above.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
When clock synchronization is inconvenient or subject to appreciable
 
errors, then round-trip measurements may give a cumulative indication
 
of the delay variation present on both directions of the path.
 
However, delay distributions are rarely symmetrical, so it is
 
difficult to infer much about the one-way-delay variation from round-
 
trip measurements.  Also, measurements on asymmetrical paths add
 
complications for the one-way-delay metric.
 
 
 
=== Distinguishing Long Delay from Loss ===
 
 
 
Lost and delayed packets are separated by a waiting time threshold.
 
Packets that arrive at the measurement destination within their
 
waiting time have finite delay and are not lost.  Otherwise, packets
 
are designated lost and their delay is undefined.  Guidance on
 
setting the waiting time threshold may be found in [RFC2680] and
 
[IPPM-Reporting].
 
 
 
In essence, [IPPM-Reporting] suggests to use a long waiting time to
 
serve network characterization and revise results for specific
 
application delay thresholds as needed.
 
 
 
=== Accounting for Packet Reordering ===
 
 
 
Packet reordering, defined in [RFC4737], is essentially an extreme
 
form of delay variation where the packet stream arrival order differs
 
from the sending order.
 
 
 
PDV results are not sensitive to packet arrival order, and are not
 
affected by reordering other than to reflect the more extreme
 
variation.
 
 
 
IPDV results will change if reordering is present because they are
 
sensitive to the sequence of delays of arriving packets.  The main
 
example of this sensitivity is in the truncation of the negative tail
 
of the distribution.
 
 
 
o  When there is no reordering, the negative tail is limited by the
 
  sending time spacing between packets.
 
 
 
o  If reordering occurs (and the reordered packets are not
 
  discarded), the negative tail can take on any value (in
 
  principal).
 
 
 
In general, measurement systems should have the capability to detect
 
when sequence has changed.  If IPDV measurements are made without
 
regard to packet arrival order, the IPDV will be under-reported when
 
reordering occurs.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
=== Results Representation and Reporting ===
 
 
 
All of the references that discuss or define delay variation suggest
 
ways to represent or report the results, and interested readers
 
should review the various possibilities.
 
 
 
For example, [IPPM-Reporting] suggests reporting a pseudo-range of
 
delay variation based on calculating the difference between a high
 
percentile of delay and the minimum delay.  The 99.9th percentile
 
minus the minimum will give a value that can be compared with
 
objectives in [Y.1541].
 
 
 
== Security Considerations ==
 
 
 
The security considerations that apply to any active measurement of
 
live networks are relevant here as well.  See the "Security
 
Considerations" sections in [RFC2330], [RFC2679], [RFC3393],
 
[RFC3432], and [RFC4656].
 
 
 
Security considerations do not contribute to the selection of PDV or
 
IPDV forms of delay variation, because measurements using these
 
metrics involve exactly the same security issues.
 
 
 
== Acknowledgments ==
 
 
 
The authors would like to thank Phil Chimento for his suggestion to
 
employ the convention of conditional distributions of delay to deal
 
with packet loss, and his encouragement to "write the memo" after
 
hearing "the talk" on this topic at IETF 65.  We also acknowledge
 
constructive comments from Alan Clark, Loki Jorgenson, Carsten
 
Schmoll, and Robert Holley.
 
 
 
== Appendix on Calculating the D(min) in PDV ==
 
 
 
Practitioners have raised several questions that this section intends
 
to answer:
 
 
 
-  How is this D_min calculated?  Is it DV(99%) as mentioned in
 
  [Krzanowski]?
 
 
 
-  Do we need to keep all the values from the interval, then take the
 
  minimum?  Or do we keep the minimum from previous intervals?
 
 
 
The value of D_min used as the reference delay for PDV calculations
 
is simply the minimum delay of all packets in the current sample.
 
The usual single value summary of the PDV distribution is D_(99.9th
 
percentile) minus D_min.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
It may be appropriate to segregate sub-sets and revise the minimum
 
value during a sample.  For example, if it can be determined with
 
certainty that the path has changed by monitoring the Time to Live or
 
Hop Count of arriving packets, this may be sufficient justification
 
to reset the minimum for packets on the new path.  There is also a
 
simpler approach to solving this problem: use samples collected over
 
short evaluation intervals (on the order of minutes).  Intervals with
 
path changes may be more interesting from the loss or one-way-delay
 
perspective (possibly failing to meet one or more SLAs), and it may
 
not be necessary to conduct delay variation analysis.  Short
 
evaluation intervals are preferred for measurements that serve as a
 
basis for troubleshooting, since the results are available to report
 
soon after collection.
 
 
 
It is not necessary to store all delay values in a sample when
 
storage is a major concern.  D_min can be found by comparing each new
 
singleton value with the current value and replacing it when
 
required.  In a sample with 5000 packets, evaluation of the 99.9th
 
percentile can also be achieved with limited storage.  One method
 
calls for storing the top 50 delay singletons and revising the top
 
value list each time 50 more packets arrive.
 
 
 
== References ==
 
 
 
=== Normative References ===
 
 
 
[RFC2119]        Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate                  Requirement Levels", [[BCP14|BCP 14]], [[RFC2119|RFC 2119]], March 1997.
 
[RFC2330]        Paxson, V., Almes, G., Mahdavi, J., and M. Mathis,                  "Framework for IP Performance Metrics", [[RFC2330|RFC 2330]],                  May 1998.
 
[RFC2679]        Almes, G., Kalidindi, S., and M. Zekauskas, "A One-                  way Delay Metric for IPPM", [[RFC2679|RFC 2679]],                  September 1999.
 
[RFC2680]        Almes, G., Kalidindi, S., and M. Zekauskas, "A One-                  way Packet Loss Metric for IPPM", [[RFC2680|RFC 2680]],                  September 1999.
 
[RFC3393]        Demichelis, C. and P. Chimento, "IP Packet Delay                  Variation Metric for IP Performance Metrics                  (IPPM)", [[RFC3393|RFC 3393]], November 2002.
 
[RFC3432]        Raisanen, V., Grotefeld, G., and A. Morton,                  "Network performance measurement with periodic                  streams", [[RFC3432|RFC 3432]], November 2002.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
[RFC4090]        Pan, P., Swallow, G., and A. Atlas, "Fast Reroute                  Extensions to RSVP-TE for LSP Tunnels", [[RFC4090|RFC 4090]],                  May 2005.
 
[RFC4656]        Shalunov, S., Teitelbaum, B., Karp, A., Boote, J.,                  and M. Zekauskas, "A One-way Active Measurement                  Protocol (OWAMP)", [[RFC4656|RFC 4656]], September 2006.
 
[RFC4737]        Morton, A., Ciavattone, L., Ramachandran, G.,                  Shalunov, S., and J. Perser, "Packet Reordering                  Metrics", [[RFC4737|RFC 4737]], November 2006.
 
=== Informative References ===
 
 
 
[COM12.D98]      Clark, A., "Analysis, measurement and modelling of                  Jitter", ITU-T Delayed Contribution COM 12 - D98,                  January 2003.
 
[Casner]          Casner, S., Alaettinoglu, C., and C. Kuan, "A Fine-                  Grained View of High Performance Networking",                  NANOG 22, May 20-22, 2001,                  <http://www.nanog.org/mtg-0105/agenda.html>.
 
[Cia03]          Ciavattone, L., Morton, A., and G. Ramachandran,                  "Standardized Active Measurements on a Tier 1 IP                  Backbone", IEEE Communications Magazine, p. 90-97,                  June 2003.
 
[Demichelis]      Demichelis, C., "Packet Delay Variation Comparison                  between ITU-T and IETF Draft Definitions",                  November 2000, <http://www.advanced.org/ippm/                  archive.3/att-0075/01-pap02.doc>.
 
[G.1020]          ITU-T, "Performance parameter definitions for the                  quality of speech and other voiceband applications                  utilizing IP networks", ITU-T                  Recommendation G.1020, 2006.
 
[G.1050]          ITU-T, "Network model for evaluating multimedia                  transmission performance over Internet Protocol",                  ITU-T Recommendation G.1050, November 2005.
 
[I.356]          ITU-T, "B-ISDN ATM Layer Cell Transfer                  Performance", ITU-T Recommendation I.356,                  March 2000.
 
[IPPM-Framework]  Morton, A., "Framework for Metric Composition",                  Work in Progress, October 2008.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
[IPPM-Reporting]  Morton, A., Ramachandran, G., and G. Maguluri,                  "Reporting Metrics: Different Points of View", Work                  in Progress, January 2009.
 
[IPPM-Spatial]    Morton, A. and E. Stephan, "Spatial Composition of                  Metrics", Work in Progress, July 2008.
 
[Krzanowski]      Presentation at IPPM, IETF-64, "Jitter Definitions:                  What is What?", November 2005.
 
[Li.Mills]        Li, Q. and D. Mills, "The Implications of Short-                  Range Dependency on Delay Variation Measurement",                  Second IEEE Symposium on Network Computing                  and Applications, 2003.
 
[Morton06]        Morton, A., "A Brief Jitter Metrics Comparison, and                  not the last word, by any means...", slide                  presentation at IETF 65, IPPM Session, March 2006.
 
[RFC1305]        Mills, D., "Network Time Protocol (Version 3)                  Specification, Implementation", [[RFC1305|RFC 1305]],                  March 1992.
 
[RFC3357]        Koodli, R. and R. Ravikanth, "One-way Loss Pattern                  Sample Metrics", [[RFC3357|RFC 3357]], August 2002.
 
[RFC3550]        Schulzrinne, H., Casner, S., Frederick, R., and V.                  Jacobson, "RTP: A Transport Protocol for Real-Time                  Applications", STD 64, [[RFC3550|RFC 3550]], July 2003.
 
[Y.1540]          ITU-T, "Internet protocol data communication                  service - IP packet transfer and availability                  performance parameters", ITU-T Recommendation                  Y.1540, November 2007.
 
[Y.1541]          ITU-T, "Network Performance Objectives for IP-Based                  Services", ITU-T Recommendation Y.1541,                  February 2006.
 
[Zhang.Duff]      Zhang, Y., Duffield, N., Paxson, V., and S.                  Shenker, "On the Constancy of Internet Path                  Properties", Proceedings of ACM SIGCOMM Internet                  Measurement Workshop, November 2001.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Authors' Addresses
 
 
 
Al Morton
 
AT&T Labs
 
200 Laurel Avenue South
 
Middletown, NJ  07748
 
USA
 
 
 
Phone: +1 732 420 1571
 
Fax:  +1 732 368 1192
 
 
URI:  http://home.comcast.net/~acmacm/
 
 
 
 
 
Benoit Claise
 
Cisco Systems, Inc.
 
De Kleetlaan 6a b1
 
Diegem,  1831
 
Belgium
 
 
 
Phone: +32 2 704 5622
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
[[Category:Informational]]
 

Revision as of 13:39, 26 September 2020

Network Working Group A. Morton Request for Comments: 5481 AT&T Labs Category: Informational B. Claise

                                                 Cisco Systems, Inc.
                                                          March 2009
         Packet Delay Variation Applicability Statement

Status of This Memo

This memo provides information for the Internet community. It does not specify an Internet standard of any kind. Distribution of this memo is unlimited.

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Abstract

Packet delay variation metrics appear in many different standards documents. The metric definition in RFC 3393 has considerable flexibility, and it allows multiple formulations of delay variation through the specification of different packet selection functions.

Although flexibility provides wide coverage and room for new ideas, it can make comparisons of independent implementations more difficult. Two different formulations of delay variation have come into wide use in the context of active measurements. This memo examines a range of circumstances for active measurements of delay variation and their uses, and recommends which of the two forms is best matched to particular conditions and tasks.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction ....................................................4

  1.1. Requirements Language ......................................5
  1.2. Background Literature in IPPM and Elsewhere ................5
  1.3. Organization of the Memo ...................................6

2. Purpose and Scope ...............................................7 3. Brief Descriptions of Delay Variation Uses ......................7

  3.1. Inferring Queue Occupation on a Path .......................7
  3.2. Determining De-Jitter Buffer Size ..........................8
  3.3. Spatial Composition .......................................10
  3.4. Service-Level Comparison ..................................10
  3.5. Application-Layer FEC Design ..............................10

4. Formulations of IPDV and PDV ...................................10

  4.1. IPDV: Inter-Packet Delay Variation ........................11
  4.2. PDV: Packet Delay Variation ...............................11
  4.3. A "Point" about Measurement Points ........................12
  4.4. Examples and Initial Comparisons ..........................12

5. Survey of Earlier Comparisons ..................................13

  5.1. Demichelis' Comparison ....................................13
  5.2. Ciavattone et al. .........................................15
  5.3. IPPM List Discussion from 2000 ............................16
  5.4. Y.1540 Appendix II ........................................18
  5.5. Clark's ITU-T SG 12 Contribution ..........................18

6. Additional Properties and Comparisons ..........................18

  6.1. Packet Loss ...............................................18
  6.2. Path Changes ..............................................19
       6.2.1. Lossless Path Change ...............................20
       6.2.2. Path Change with Loss ..............................21
  6.3. Clock Stability and Error .................................22
  6.4. Spatial Composition .......................................24
  6.5. Reporting a Single Number (SLA) ...........................24
  6.6. Jitter in RTCP Reports ....................................25
  6.7. MAPDV2 ....................................................25
  6.8. Load Balancing ............................................26

7. Applicability of the Delay Variation Forms and

  Recommendations ................................................27
  7.1. Uses ......................................................27
       7.1.1. Inferring Queue Occupancy ..........................27
       7.1.2. Determining De-Jitter Buffer Size (and FEC
              Design) ............................................27
       7.1.3. Spatial Composition ................................28
       7.1.4. Service-Level Specification: Reporting a
              Single Number ......................................28
  7.2. Challenging Circumstances .................................28
       7.2.1. Clock and Storage Issues ...........................28
       7.2.2. Frequent Path Changes ..............................29
       7.2.3. Frequent Loss ......................................29
       7.2.4. Load Balancing .....................................29
  7.3. Summary ...................................................30

8. Measurement Considerations .....................................31

  8.1. Measurement Stream Characteristics ........................31
  8.2. Measurement Devices .......................................32
  8.3. Units of Measurement ......................................33
  8.4. Test Duration .............................................33
  8.5. Clock Sync Options ........................................33
  8.6. Distinguishing Long Delay from Loss .......................34
  8.7. Accounting for Packet Reordering ..........................34
  8.8. Results Representation and Reporting ......................35

9. Security Considerations ........................................35 10. Acknowledgments ...............................................35 11. Appendix on Calculating the D(min) in PDV .....................35 12. References ....................................................36

  12.1. Normative References .....................................36
  12.2. Informative References ...................................37

Contents

Introduction

There are many ways to formulate packet delay variation metrics for the Internet and other packet-based networks. The IETF itself has several specifications for delay variation [RFC3393], sometimes called jitter [RFC3550] or even inter-arrival jitter [RFC3550], and these have achieved wide adoption. The International Telecommunication Union - Telecommunication Standardization Sector (ITU-T) has also recommended several delay variation metrics (called parameters in their terminology) [Y.1540] [G.1020], and some of these are widely cited and used. Most of the standards above specify more than one way to quantify delay variation, so one can conclude that standardization efforts have tended to be inclusive rather than selective.

This memo uses the term "delay variation" for metrics that quantify a path's ability to transfer packets with consistent delay. [RFC3393] and [Y.1540] both prefer this term. Some refer to this phenomenon as "jitter" (and the buffers that attempt to smooth the variations as de-jitter buffers). Applications of the term "jitter" are much broader than packet transfer performance, with "unwanted signal variation" as a general definition. "Jitter" has been used to describe frequency or phase variations, such as data stream rate variations or carrier signal phase noise. The phrase "delay variation" is almost self-defining and more precise, so it is preferred in this memo.

Most (if not all) delay variation metrics are derived metrics, in that their definitions rely on another fundamental metric. In this case, the fundamental metric is one-way delay, and variation is assessed by computing the difference between two individual one-way- delay measurements, or a pair of singletons. One of the delay singletons is taken as a reference, and the result is the variation with respect to the reference. The variation is usually summarized for all packets in a stream using statistics.

The industry has predominantly implemented two specific formulations of delay variation (for one survey of the situation, see [Krzanowski]):

1. Inter-Packet Delay Variation, IPDV, where the reference is the

   previous packet in the stream (according to sending sequence),
   and the reference changes for each packet in the stream.
   Properties of variation are coupled with packet sequence in this
   formulation.  This form was called Instantaneous Packet Delay
   Variation in early IETF contributions, and is similar to the
   packet spacing difference metric used for interarrival jitter
   calculations in [RFC3550].

2. Packet Delay Variation, PDV, where a single reference is chosen

   from the stream based on specific criteria.  The most common
   criterion for the reference is the packet with the minimum delay
   in the sample.  This term derives its name from a similar
   definition for Cell Delay Variation, an ATM performance metric
   [I.356].

It is important to note that the authors of relevant standards for delay variation recognized there are many different users with varying needs, and allowed sufficient flexibility to formulate several metrics with different properties. Therefore, the comparison is not so much between standards bodies or their specifications as it is between specific formulations of delay variation. Both Inter- Packet Delay Variation and Packet Delay Variation are compliant with [RFC3393], because different packet selection functions will produce either form.

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 RFC 2119 [RFC2119].

Background Literature in IPPM and Elsewhere

With more people joining the measurement community every day, it is possible this memo is the first from the IP Performance Metrics (IPPM) Working Group that the reader has consulted. This section provides a brief road map and background on the IPPM literature, and the published specifications of other relevant standards organizations.

The IPPM framework [RFC2330] provides a background for this memo and other IPPM RFCs. Key terms such as singleton, sample, and statistic are defined there, along with methods of collecting samples (Poisson streams), time-related issues, and the "packet of Type-P" convention.

There are two fundamental and related metrics that can be applied to every packet transfer attempt: one-way loss [RFC2680] and one-way delay [RFC2679]. The metrics use a waiting time threshold to distinguish between lost and delayed packets. Packets that arrive at the measurement destination within their waiting time have finite delay and are not lost. Otherwise, packets are designated lost and their delay is undefined. Guidance on setting the waiting time threshold may be found in [RFC2680] and [IPPM-Reporting].

Another fundamental metric is packet reordering as specified in [RFC4737]. The reordering metric was defined to be "orthogonal" to packet loss. In other words, the gap in a packet sequence caused by loss does not result in reordered packets, but a rearrangement of packet arrivals from their sending order constitutes reordering.

Derived metrics are based on the fundamental metrics. The metric of primary interest here is delay variation [RFC3393], a metric that is derived from one-way delay [RFC2680]. Another derived metric is the loss patterns metric [RFC3357], which is derived from loss.

The measured values of all metrics (both fundamental and derived) depend to great extent on the stream characteristics used to collect them. Both Poisson streams [RFC3393] and Periodic streams [RFC3432] have been used with the IPDV and PDV metrics. The choice of stream specification for active measurement will depend on the purpose of the characterization and the constraints of the testing environment. Periodic streams are frequently chosen for use with IPDV and PDV, because the application streams that are most sensitive to delay variation exhibit periodicity. Additional details that are method- specific are discussed in Section 8 on "Measurement Considerations".

In the ITU-T, the framework, fundamental metrics, and derived metrics for IP performance are specified in Recommendation Y.1540 [Y.1540]. [G.1020] defines additional delay variation metrics, analyzes the operation of fixed and adaptive de-jitter buffers, and describes an example adaptive de-jitter buffer emulator. Appendix II of [G.1050] describes the models for network impairments (including delay variation) that are part of standardized IP network emulator that may be useful when evaluating measurement techniques.

Organization of the Memo

The Purpose and Scope follows in Section 2. We then give a summary of the main tasks for delay variation metrics in Section 3. Section 4 defines the two primary forms of delay variation, and Section 5 presents summaries of four earlier comparisons. Section 6 adds new comparisons to the analysis, and Section 7 reviews the applicability and recommendations for each form of delay variation. Section 8 then looks at many important delay variation measurement considerations. Following the Security Considerations, there is an appendix on the calculation of the minimum delay for the PDV form.

Purpose and Scope

The IPDV and PDV formulations have certain features that make them more suitable for one circumstance and less so for another. The purpose of this memo is to compare two forms of delay variation, so that it will be evident which of the two is better suited for each of many possible uses and their related circumstances.

The scope of this memo is limited to the two forms of delay variation briefly described above (Inter-Packet Delay Variation and Packet Delay Variation), circumstances related to active measurement, and uses that are deemed relevant and worthy of inclusion here through IPPM Working Group consensus.

It is entirely possible that the analysis and conclusions drawn here are applicable beyond the intended scope, but the reader is cautioned to fully appreciate the circumstances of active measurement on IP networks before doing so.

The scope excludes assessment of delay variation for packets with undefined delay. This is accomplished by conditioning the delay distribution on arrival within a reasonable waiting time based on an understanding of the path under test and packet lifetimes. The waiting time is sometimes called the loss threshold [RFC2680]: if a packet arrives beyond this threshold, it may as well have been lost because it is no longer useful. This is consistent with [RFC3393], where the Type-P-One-way-ipdv is undefined when the destination fails to receive one or both packets in the selected pair. Furthermore, it is consistent with application performance analysis to consider only arriving packets, because a finite waiting time-out is a feature of many protocols.

Brief Descriptions of Delay Variation Uses

This section presents a set of tasks that call for delay variation measurements. Here, the memo provides several answers to the question, "How will the results be used?" for the delay variation metric.

Inferring Queue Occupation on a Path

As packets travel along the path from source to destination, they pass through many network elements, including a series of router queues. Some types of the delay sources along the path are constant, such as links between two locations. But the latency encountered in each queue varies, depending on the number of packets in the queue when a particular packet arrives. If one assumes that at least one of the packets in a test stream encounters virtually empty queues all

along the path (and the path is stable), then the additional delay observed on other packets can be attributed to the time spent in one or more queues. Otherwise, the delay variation observed is the variation in queue time experienced by the test stream.

It is worth noting that delay variation can occur beyond IP router queues, in other communication components. Examples include media contention: DOCSIS, IEEE 802.11, and some mobile radio technologies.

However, delay variation from all sources at the IP layer and below will be quantified using the two formulations discussed here.

Determining De-Jitter Buffer Size

Note -- while this memo and other IPPM literature prefer the term "delay variation", the terms "jitter buffer" and the more accurate "de-jitter buffer" are widely adopted names for a component of packet communication systems, and they will be used here to designate that system component.

Most isochronous applications (a.k.a. real-time applications) employ a buffer to smooth out delay variation encountered on the path from source to destination. The buffer must be big enough to accommodate the expected variation of delay, or packet loss will result. However, if the buffer is too large, then some of the desired spontaneity of communication will be lost and conversational dynamics will be affected. Therefore, application designers need to know the range of delay variation they must accommodate, whether they are designing fixed or adaptive buffer systems.

Network service providers also attempt to constrain delay variation to ensure the quality of real-time applications, and monitor this metric (possibly to compare with a numerical objective or Service Level Agreement).

De-jitter buffer size can be expressed in units of octets of storage space for the packet stream, or in units of time that the packets are stored. It is relatively simple to convert between octets and time when the buffer read rate (in octets per second) is constant:

read_rate * storage_time = storage_octets

Units of time are used in the discussion below.

The objective of a de-jitter buffer is to compensate for all prior sources of delay variation and produce a packet stream with constant delay. Thus, a packet experiencing the minimum transit delay from source to destination, D_min, should spend the maximum time in a

de-jitter buffer, B_max. The sum of D_min and B_max should equal the sum of the maximum transit delay (D_max) and the minimum buffer time (B_min). We have

Constant = D_min + B_max = D_max + B_min,

after rearranging terms,

B_max - B_min = D_max - D_min = range(B) = range(D)

where range(B) is the range of packet buffering times, and range(D) is the range of packet transit delays from source to destination.

Packets with transit delay between the max and min spend a complementary time in the buffer and also see the constant delay.

In practice, the minimum buffer time, B_min, may not be zero, and the maximum transit delay, D_max, may be a high percentile (99.9th percentile) instead of the maximum.

Note that B_max - B_min = range(B) is the range of buffering times needed to compensate for delay variation. The actual size of the buffer may be larger (where B_min > 0) or smaller than range(B).

There must be a process to align the de-jitter buffer time with packet transit delay. This is a process to identify the packets with minimum delay and schedule their play-out time so that they spend the maximum time in the buffer. The error in the alignment process can be accounted for by a variable, A. In the equation below, the range of buffering times *available* to the packet stream, range(b), depends on buffer alignment with the actual arrival times of D_min and D_max.

range(b) = b_max - b_min = D_max - D_min + A

where variable b represents the *available* buffer in a system with a specific alignment, A, and b_max and b_min represent the limits of the available buffer.

When A is positive, the de-jitter buffer applies more delay than necessary (where Constant = D_max + b_min + A represents one possible alignment). When A is negative, there is insufficient buffer time available to compensate for range(D) because of misalignment. Packets with D_min may be arriving too early and encountering a full buffer, or packets with D_max may be arriving too late, and in either case, the packets would be discarded.

In summary, the range of transit delay variation is a critical factor in the determination of de-jitter buffer size.

Spatial Composition

In Spatial Composition, the tasks are similar to those described above, but with the additional complexity of a multiple network path where several sub-paths are measured separately and no source-to- destination measurements are available. In this case, the source-to- destination performance must be estimated, using Composed Metrics as described in [IPPM-Framework] and [Y.1541]. Note that determining the composite delay variation is not trivial: simply summing the sub- path variations is not accurate.

Service-Level Comparison

IP performance measurements are often used as the basis for agreements (or contracts) between service providers and their customers. The measurement results must compare favorably with the performance levels specified in the agreement.

Packet delay variation is usually one of the metrics specified in these agreements. In principle, any formulation could be specified in the Service Level Agreement (SLA). However, the SLA is most useful when the measured quantities can be related to ways in which the communication service will be utilized by the customer, and this can usually be derived from one of the tasks described above.

Application-Layer FEC Design

The design of application-layer Forward Error Correction (FEC) components is closely related to the design of a de-jitter buffer in several ways. The FEC designer must choose a protection interval (time to send/receive a block of packets in a constant packet rate system) consistent with the packet-loss characteristics, but also mindful of the extent of delay variation expected. Further, the system designer must decide how long to wait for "late" packets to arrive. Again, the range of delay variation is the relevant expression delay variation for these tasks.

Formulations of IPDV and PDV

This section presents the formulations of IPDV and PDV, and provides some illustrative examples. We use the basic singleton definition in [RFC3393] (which itself is based on [RFC2679]):

"Type-P-One-way-ipdv is defined for two packets from Src to Dst selected by the selection function F, as the difference between the value of the Type-P-One-way-delay from Src to Dst at T2 and the value of the Type-P-One-Way-Delay from Src to Dst at T1".

IPDV: Inter-Packet Delay Variation

If we have packets in a stream consecutively numbered i = 1,2,3,... falling within the test interval, then IPDV(i) = D(i)-D(i-1) where D(i) denotes the one-way delay of the ith packet of a stream.

One-way delays are the difference between timestamps applied at the ends of the path, or the receiver time minus the transmission time.

So D(2) = R2-T2. With this timestamp notation, it can be shown that IPDV also represents the change in inter-packet spacing between transmission and reception:

IPDV(2) = D(2) - D(1) = (R2-T2) - (R1-T1) = (R2-R1) - (T2-T1)

An example selection function given in [RFC3393] is "Consecutive Type-P packets within the specified interval". This is exactly the function needed for IPDV. The reference packet in the pair is the previous packet in the sending sequence.

Note that IPDV can take on positive and negative values (and zero). One way to analyze the IPDV results is to concentrate on the positive excursions. However, this approach has limitations that are discussed in more detail below (see Section 5.3).

The mean of all IPDV(i) for a stream is usually zero. However, a slow delay change over the life of the stream, or a frequency error between the measurement system clocks, can result in a non-zero mean.

PDV: Packet Delay Variation

The name Packet Delay Variation is used in [Y.1540] and its predecessors, and refers to a performance parameter equivalent to the metric described below.

The Selection Function for PDV requires two specific roles for the packets in the pair. The first packet is any Type-P packet within the specified interval. The second, or reference packet is the Type-P packet within the specified interval with the minimum one-way delay.

Therefore, PDV(i) = D(i)-D(min) (using the nomenclature introduced in the IPDV section). D(min) is the delay of the packet with the lowest value for delay (minimum) over the current test interval. Values of PDV may be zero or positive, and quantiles of the PDV distribution are direct indications of delay variation.

PDV is a version of the one-way-delay distribution, shifted to the origin by normalizing to the minimum delay.

A "Point" about Measurement Points

Both IPDV and PDV are derived from the one-way-delay metric. One-way delay requires knowledge of time at two points, e.g., the source and destination of an IP network path in end-to-end measurement. Therefore, both IPDV and PDV can be categorized as 2-point metrics because they are derived from one-way delay. Specific methods of measurement may make assumptions or have a priori knowledge about one of the measurement points, but the metric definitions themselves are based on information collected at two measurement points.

Examples and Initial Comparisons

Note: This material originally presented in Slides 2 and 3 of [Morton06].

The Figure below gives a sample of packet delays, calculates IPDV and PDV values, and depicts a histogram for each one.

                   Packet #     1   2   3   4   5
                   -------------------------------
                   Delay, ms   20  10  20  25  20
                   IPDV         U -10  10   5  -5
                   PDV         10   0  10  15  10
                      |                 |
                     4|                4|
                      |                 |
                     3|                3|         H
                      |                 |         H
                     2|                2|         H
                      |                 |         H
              H   H  1|   H   H        1|H        H   H
              H   H   |   H   H         |H        H   H
             ---------+--------         +---------------
            -10  -5   0   5  10          0   5   10  15
               IPDV Histogram             PDV Histogram
                 Figure 1: IPDV and PDV Comparison

The sample of packets contains three packets with "typical" delays of 20 ms, one packet with a low delay of 10 ms (the minimum of the sample) and one packet with 25 ms delay.

As noted above, this example illustrates that IPDV may take on positive and negative values, while the PDV values are greater than or equal to zero. The histograms of IPDV and PDV are quite different in general shape, and the ranges are different, too (IPDV range = 20ms, PDV range = 15 ms). Note that the IPDV histogram will change if the sequence of delays is modified, but the PDV histogram will stay the same. PDV normalizes the one-way-delay distribution to the minimum delay and emphasizes the variation independent from the sequence of delays.

Survey of Earlier Comparisons

This section summarizes previous work to compare these two forms of delay variation.

Demichelis' Comparison

In [Demichelis], Demichelis compared the early versions of two forms of delay variation. Although the IPDV form would eventually see widespread use, the ITU-T work-in-progress he cited did not utilize

the same reference packets as PDV. Demichelis compared IPDV with the alternatives of using the delay of the first packet in the stream and the mean delay of the stream as the PDV reference packet. Neither of these alternative references were used in practice, and they are now deprecated in favor of the minimum delay of the stream [Y.1540].

Active measurements of a transcontinental path (Torino to Tokyo) provided the data for the comparison. The Poisson test stream had 0.764 second average inter-packet interval, with more than 58 thousand packets over 13.5 hours. Among Demichelis' observations about IPDV are the following:

1. IPDV is a measure of the network's ability to preserve the

   spacing between packets.

2. The distribution of IPDV is usually symmetrical about the origin,

   having a balance of negative and positive values (for the most
   part).  The mean is usually zero, unless some long-term delay
   trend is present.

3. IPDV singletons distinguish quick-delay variations (short-term,

   on the order of the interval between packets) from longer-term
   variations.

4. IPDV places reduced demands on the stability and skew of

   measurement clocks.

He also notes these features of PDV:

1. The PDV distribution does not distinguish short-term variation

   from variation over the complete test interval.  (Comment: PDV
   can be determined over any sub-intervals when the singletons are
   stored.)

2. The location of the distribution is very sensitive to the delay

   of the first packet, IF this packet is used as the reference.
   This would be a new formulation that differs from the PDV
   definition in this memo (PDV references the packet with minimum
   delay, so it does not have this drawback).

3. The shape of the PDV distribution is identical to the delay

   distribution, but shifted by the reference delay.

4. Use of a common reference over measurement intervals that are

   longer than a typical session length may indicate more PDV than
   would be experienced by streams that support such sessions.
   (Ideally, the measurement interval should be aligned with the
   session length of interest, and this influences determination of
   the reference delay, D(min).)

5. The PDV distribution characterizes the range of queue occupancies

   along the measurement path (assuming the path is fixed), but the
   range says nothing about how the variation took place.

The summary metrics used in this comparison were the number of values exceeding a +/-50ms range around the mean, the Inverse Percentiles, and the Inter-Quartile Range.

Ciavattone et al.

In [Cia03], the authors compared IPDV and PDV (referred to as delta) using a periodic packet stream conforming to [RFC3432] with inter- packet interval of 20 ms.

One of the comparisons between IPDV and PDV involves a laboratory setup where a queue was temporarily congested by a competing packet burst. The additional queuing delay was 85 ms to 95 ms, much larger than the inter-packet interval. The first packet in the stream that follows the competing burst spends the longest time queued, and others experience less and less queuing time until the queue is drained.

The authors observed that PDV reflects the additional queuing time of the packets affected by the burst, with values of 85, 65, 45, 25, and 5 ms. Also, it is easy to determine (by looking at the PDV range) that a de-jitter buffer of >85 ms would have been sufficient to accommodate the delay variation. Again, the measurement interval is a key factor in the validity of such observations (it should have similar length to the session interval of interest).

The IPDV values in the congested queue example are very different: 85, -20, -20, -20, -20, -5 ms. Only the positive excursion of IPDV gives an indication of the de-jitter buffer size needed. Although the variation exceeds the inter-packet interval, the extent of negative IPDV values is limited by that sending interval. This preference for information from the positive IPDV values has prompted some to ignore the negative values, or to take the absolute value of each IPDV measurement (sacrificing key properties of IPDV in the process, such as its ability to distinguish delay trends).

Note that this example illustrates a case where the IPDV distribution is asymmetrical, because the delay variation range (85 ms) exceeds the inter-packet spacing (20 ms). We see that the IPDV values 85, -20, -20, -20, -20, -5 ms have zero mean, but the left side of the distribution is truncated at -20 ms.

Elsewhere in the article, the authors considered the range as a summary statistic for IPDV, and the 99.9th percentile minus the minimum delay as a summary statistic for delay variation, or PDV.

IPPM List Discussion from 2000

Mike Pierce made many comments in the context of a working version of [RFC3393]. One of his main points was that a delay histogram is a useful approach to quantifying variation. Another point was that the time duration of evaluation is a critical aspect.

Carlo Demichelis then mailed his comparison paper [Demichelis] to the IPPM list, as discussed in more detail above.

Ruediger Geib observed that both IPDV and the delay histogram (PDV) are useful, and suggested that they might be applied to different variation time scales. He pointed out that loss has a significant effect on IPDV, and encouraged that the loss information be retained in the arrival sequence.

Several example delay variation scenarios were discussed, including:

      Packet #     1   2   3   4   5   6   7   8   9  10  11
      -------------------------------------------------------
      Ex. A
      Lost
      Delay, ms  100 110 120 130 140 150 140 130 120 110 100
      IPDV        U   10  10  10  10  10 -10 -10 -10 -10 -10
      PDV         0   10  20  30  40  50  40  30  20  10   0
      -------------------------------------------------------
      Ex. B
      Lost                     L
      Delay, ms  100 110 150   U 120 100 110 150 130 120 100
      IPDV        U   10  40   U   U -10  10  40 -20 -10 -20
      PDV         0   10  50   U  20   0  10  50  30  20   0
                     Figure 2: Delay Examples

Clearly, the range of PDV values is 50 ms in both cases above, and this is the statistic that determines the size of a de-jitter buffer. The IPDV range is minimal in response to the smooth variation in Example A (20 ms). However, IPDV responds to the faster variations in Example B (60 ms range from 40 to -20). Here the IPDV range is larger than the PDV range, and overestimates the buffer size requirements.

A heuristic method to estimate buffer size using IPDV is to sum the consecutive positive or zero values as an estimate of PDV range. However, this is more complicated to assess than the PDV range, and has strong dependence on the actual sequence of IPDV values (any negative IPDV value stops the summation, and again causes an underestimate).

IPDV values can be viewed as the adjustments that an adaptive de- jitter buffer would make, if it could make adjustments on a packet- by-packet basis. However, adaptive de-jitter buffers don't make adjustments this frequently, so the value of this information is unknown. The short-term variations may be useful to know in some other cases.

Y.1540 Appendix II

Appendix II of [Y.1540] describes a secondary terminology for delay variation. It compares IPDV, PDV (referred to as 2-point PDV), and 1-point packet delay variation (which assumes a periodic stream and assesses variation against an ideal arrival schedule constructed at a single measurement point). This early comparison discusses some of the same considerations raised in Section 6 below.

Clark's ITU-T SG 12 Contribution

Alan Clark's contribution to ITU-T Study Group 12 in January 2003 provided an analysis of the root causes of delay variation and investigated different techniques for measurement and modeling of "jitter" [COM12.D98]. Clark compared a metric closely related to IPDV, Mean Packet-to-Packet Delay Variation, MPPDV = mean(abs(D(i)- D(i-1))) to the newly proposed Mean Absolute Packet Delay Variation (MAPDV2, see [G.1020]). One of the tasks for this study was to estimate the number of packet discards in a de-jitter buffer. Clark concluded that MPPDV did not track the ramp delay variation he associated access link congestion (similar to Figure 2, Example A above), but MAPDV2 did.

Clark also briefly looked at PDV (as described in the 2002 version of [Y.1541]). He concluded that if PDV was applied to a series of very short measurement intervals (e.g., 200 ms), it could be used to determine the fraction of intervals with high packet discard rates.

Additional Properties and Comparisons

This section treats some of the earlier comparison areas in more detail and introduces new areas for comparison.

Packet Loss

The measurement of packet loss is of great influence for the delay variation results, as displayed in the Figures 3 and 4 (L means Lost and U means Undefined). Figure 3 shows that in the extreme case of every other packet loss, the IPDV metric doesn't produce any results, while the PDV produces results for all arriving packets.

              Packet #   1  2  3  4  5  6  7  8  9 10
              Lost          L     L     L     L     L
              ---------------------------------------
              Delay, ms  3  U  5  U  4  U  3  U  4  U
              IPDV       U  U  U  U  U  U  U  U  U  U
              PDV        0  U  2  U  1  U  0  U  1  U
              Figure 3: Path Loss Every Other Packet

In case of a burst of packet loss, as displayed in Figure 4, both the IPDV and PDV metrics produce some results. Note that PDV still produces more values than IPDV.

              Packet #   1  2  3  4  5  6  7  8  9 10
              Lost             L  L  L  L  L
              ---------------------------------------
              Delay, ms  3  4  U  U  U  U  U  5  4  3
              IPDV       U  1  U  U  U  U  U  U -1 -1
              PDV        0  1  U  U  U  U  U  2  1  0
                  Figure 4: Burst of Packet Loss

In conclusion, the PDV results are affected by the packet-loss ratio. The IPDV results are affected by both the packet-loss ratio and the packet-loss distribution. In the extreme case of loss of every other packet, IPDV doesn't provide any results.

Path Changes

When there is little or no stability in the network under test, then the devices that attempt to characterize the network are equally stressed, especially if the results displayed are used to make inferences that may not be valid.

Sometimes the path characteristics change during a measurement interval. The change may be due to link or router failure, administrative changes prior to maintenance (e.g., link-cost change), or re-optimization of routing using new information. All these causes are usually infrequent, and network providers take appropriate measures to ensure this. Automatic restoration to a back-up path is seen as a desirable feature of IP networks.

Frequent path changes and prolonged congestion with substantial packet loss clearly make delay variation measurements challenging.

Path changes are usually accompanied by a sudden, persistent increase or decrease in one-way delay. [Cia03] gives one such example. We assume that a restoration path either accepts a stream of packets or is not used for that particular stream (e.g., no multi-path for flows).

In any case, a change in the Time to Live (TTL) (or Hop Limit) of the received packets indicates that the path is no longer the same. Transient packet reordering may also be observed with path changes, due to use of non-optimal routing while updates propagate through the network (see [Casner] and [Cia03] )

Many, if not all, packet streams experience packet loss in conjunction with a path change. However, it is certainly possible that the active measurement stream does not experience loss. This may be due to use of a long inter-packet sending interval with respect to the restoration time, and it becomes more likely as "fast restoration" techniques see wider deployment (e.g., [RFC4090]).

Thus, there are two main cases to consider, path changes accompanied by loss, and those that are lossless from the point of view of the active measurement stream. The subsections below examine each of these cases.

Lossless Path Change

In the lossless case, a path change will typically affect only one IPDV singleton. For example, the delay sequence in the Figure below always produces IPDV=0 except in the one case where the value is 5 (U, 0, 0, 0, 5, 0, 0, 0, 0).

                Packet #   1  2  3  4  5  6  7  8  9
                Lost
                ------------------------------------
                Delay, ms  4  4  4  4  9  9  9  9  9
                IPDV       U  0  0  0  5  0  0  0  0
                PDV        0  0  0  0  5  5  5  5  5
                  Figure 5: Lossless Path Change

However, if the change in delay is negative and larger than the inter-packet sending interval, then more than one IPDV singleton may be affected because packet reordering is also likely to occur.

The use of the new path and its delay variation can be quantified by treating the PDV distribution as bi-modal, and characterizing each mode separately. This would involve declaring a new path within the sample, and using a new local minimum delay as the PDV reference delay for the sub-sample (or time interval) where the new path is present.

The process of detecting a bi-modal delay distribution is made difficult if the typical delay variation is larger than the delay change associated with the new path. However, information on a TTL (or Hop Limit) change or the presence of transient reordering can assist in an automated decision.

The effect of path changes may also be reduced by making PDV measurements over short intervals (minutes, as opposed to hours). This way, a path change will affect one sample and its PDV values. Assuming that the mean or median one-way delay changes appreciably on the new path, then subsequent measurements can confirm a path change and trigger special processing on the interval to revise the PDV result.

Alternatively, if the path change is detected, by monitoring the test packets TTL or Hop Limit, or monitoring the change in the IGP link- state database, the results of measurement before and after the path change could be kept separated, presenting two different distributions. This avoids the difficult task of determining the different modes of a multi-modal distribution.

Path Change with Loss

If the path change is accompanied by loss, such that there are no consecutive packet pairs that span the change, then no IPDV singletons will reflect the change. This may or may not be desirable, depending on the ultimate use of the delay variation measurement. Figure 6, in which L means Lost and U means Undefined, illustrates this case.

                Packet #   1  2  3  4  5  6  7  8  9
                Lost                   L  L
                ------------------------------------
                Delay, ms  3  4  3  3  U  U  8  9  8
                IPDV       U  1 -1  0  U  U  U  1 -1
                PDV        0  1  0  0  U  U  5  6  5
                  Figure 6: Path Change with Loss

PDV will again produce a bi-modal distribution. But here, the decision process to define sub-intervals associated with each path is further assisted by the presence of loss, in addition to TTL, reordering information, and use of short measurement intervals consistent with the duration of user sessions. It is reasonable to assume that at least loss and delay will be measured simultaneously with PDV and/or IPDV.

IPDV does not help to detect path changes when accompanied by loss, and this is a disadvantage for those who rely solely on IPDV measurements.

Clock Stability and Error

Low cost or low complexity measurement systems may be embedded in communication devices that do not have access to high stability clocks, and time errors will almost certainly be present. However, larger time-related errors (~1 ms) may offer an acceptable trade-off for monitoring performance over a large population (the accuracy needed to detect problems may be much less than required for a scientific study, ~0.01 ms for example).

Maintaining time accuracy <<1 ms has typically required access to dedicated time receivers at all measurement points. Global positioning system (GPS) receivers have often been installed to support measurements. The GPS installation conditions are fairly restrictive, and many prospective measurement efforts have found the deployment complexity and system maintenance too difficult.

As mentioned above, [Demichelis] observed that PDV places greater demands on clock synchronization than for IPDV. This observation deserves more discussion. Synchronization errors have two components: time-of-day errors and clock-frequency errors (resulting in skew).

Both IPDV and PDV are sensitive to time-of-day errors when attempting to align measurement intervals at the source and destination. Gross misalignment of the measurement intervals can lead to lost packets, for example, if the receiver is not ready when the first test packet arrives. However, both IPDV and PDV assess delay differences, so the error present in any two one-way-delay singletons will cancel as long as the error is constant. So, the demand for NTP or GPS synchronization comes primarily from one-way-delay measurement time- of-day accuracy requirements. Delay variation and measurement interval alignment are relatively less demanding.

Skew is a measure of the change in clock time over an interval with respect to a reference clock. Both IPDV and PDV are affected by skew, but the error sensitivity in IPDV singletons is less because the intervals between consecutive packets are rather small, especially when compared to the overall measurement interval. Since PDV computes the difference between a single reference delay (the sample minimum) and all other delays in the measurement interval, the constraint on skew error is greater to attain the same accuracy as IPDV. Again, use of short PDV measurement intervals (on the order of minutes, not hours) provides some relief from the effects of skew error. Thus, the additional accuracy demand of PDV can be expressed as a ratio of the measurement interval to the inter-packet spacing.

A practical example is a measurement between two hosts, one with a synchronized clock and the other with a free-running clock having 50 parts per million (ppm) long term accuracy.

o If IPDV measurements are made on packets with a 1 second spacing,

  the maximum singleton error will be 1 x 5 x 10^-5 seconds, or 0.05
  ms.

o If PDV measurements are made on the same packets over a 60 second

  measurement interval, then the delay variation due to the max
  free-running clock error will be 60 x 5 x 10-5 seconds, or 3 ms
  delay variation error from the first packet to the last.

Therefore, the additional accuracy required for equivalent PDV error under these conditions is a factor of 60 more than for IPDV. This is a rather extreme scenario, because time-of-day error of 1 second would accumulate in ~5.5 hours, potentially causing the measurement interval alignment issue described above.

If skew is present in a sample of one-way delays, its symptom is typically a nearly linear growth or decline over all the one-way- delay values. As a practical matter, if the same slope appears consistently in the measurements, then it may be possible to fit the slope and compensate for the skew in the one-way-delay measurements, thereby avoiding the issue in the PDV calculations that follow. See [RFC3393] for additional information on compensating for skew.

Values for IPDV may have non-zero mean over a sample when clock skew is present. This tends to complicate IPDV analysis when using the assumptions of a zero mean and a symmetric distribution.

There is a third factor related to clock error and stability: this is the presence of a clock-synchronization protocol (e.g., NTP) and the time-adjustment operations that result. When a time error is detected (typically on the order of a few milliseconds), the host

clock frequency is continuously adjusted to reduce the time error. If these adjustments take place during a measurement interval, they may appear as delay variation when none was present, and therefore are a source of error (regardless of the form of delay variation considered).

Spatial Composition

ITU-T Recommendation [Y.1541] gives a provisional method to compose a PDV metric using PDV measurement results from two or more sub-paths. Additional methods are considered in [IPPM-Spatial].

PDV has a clear advantage at this time, since there is no validated method to compose an IPDV metric. In addition, IPDV results depend greatly on the exact sequence of packets and may not lend themselves easily to the composition problem, where segments must be assumed to have independent delay distributions.

Reporting a Single Number (SLA)

Despite the risk of over-summarization, measurements must often be displayed for easy consumption. If the right summary report is prepared, then the "dashboard" view correctly indicates whether there is something different and worth investigating further, or that the status has not changed. The dashboard model restricts every instrument display to a single number. The packet network dashboard could have different instruments for loss, delay, delay variation, reordering, etc., and each must be summarized as a single number for each measurement interval. The single number summary statistic is a key component of SLAs, where a threshold on that number must be met x% of the time.

The simplicity of the PDV distribution lends itself to this summarization process (including use of the percentiles, median or mean). An SLA of the form "no more than x% of packets in a measurement interval shall have PDV >= y ms, for no less than z% of time" is relatively straightforward to specify and implement. [Y.1541] introduced the notion of a pseudo-range when setting an objective for the 99.9th percentile of PDV. The conventional range (max-min) was avoided for several reasons, including stability of the maximum delay. The 99.9th percentile of PDV is helpful to performance planners (seeking to meet some user-to-user objective for delay) and in design of de-jitter buffer sizes, even those with adaptive capabilities.

IPDV does not lend itself to summarization so easily. The mean IPDV is typically zero. As the IPDV distribution will have two tails (positive and negative), the range or pseudo-range would not match

the needed de-jitter buffer size. Additional complexity may be introduced when the variation exceeds the inter-packet sending interval, as discussed above (in Sections 5.2 and 6.2.1). Should the Inter-Quartile Range be used? Should the singletons beyond some threshold be counted (e.g., mean +/- 50 ms)? A strong rationale for one of these summary statistics has yet to emerge.

When summarizing IPDV, some prefer the simplicity of the single-sided distribution created by taking the absolute value of each singleton result, abs(D(i)-D(i-1)). This approach sacrifices the two-sided inter-arrival spread information in the distribution. It also makes the evaluation using percentiles more confusing, because a single late packet that exceeds the variation threshold will cause two pairs of singletons to fail the criteria (one positive, the other negative converted to positive). The single-sided PDV distribution is an advantage in this category.

Jitter in RTCP Reports

Section 6.4.1 of [RFC3550] gives the calculation of the "inter- arrival jitter" field for the RTP Control Protocol (RTCP) report, with a sample implementation in an Appendix.

The RTCP "interarrival jitter" value can be calculated using IPDV singletons. If there is packet reordering, as defined in [RFC4737], then estimates of Jitter based on IPDV may vary slightly, because [RFC3550] specifies the use of receive-packet order.

Just as there is no simple way to convert PDV singletons to IPDV singletons without returning to the original sample of delay singletons, there is no clear relationship between PDV and [RFC3550] "interarrival jitter".

MAPDV2

MAPDV2 stands for Mean Absolute Packet Delay Variation (version) 2, and is specified in [G.1020]. The MAPDV2 algorithm computes a smoothed running estimate of the mean delay using the one-way delays of 16 previous packets. It compares the current one-way delay to the estimated mean, separately computes the means of positive and negative deviations, and sums these deviation means to produce MAPVDV2. In effect, there is a MAPDV2 singleton for every arriving packet, so further summarization is usually warranted.

Neither IPDV or PDV forms assist in the computation of MAPDV2.

Load Balancing

Network traffic load balancing is a process to divide packet traffic in order to provide a more even distribution over two or more equally viable paths. The paths chosen are based on the IGP cost metrics, while the delay depends on the path's physical layout. Usually, the balancing process is performed on a per-flow basis to avoid delay variation experienced when packets traverse different physical paths.

If the sample includes test packets with different characteristics such as IP addresses/ports, there could be multi-modal delay distributions present. The PDV form makes the identification of multiple modes possible. IPDV may also reveal that multiple paths are in use with a mixed-flow sample, but the different delay modes are not easily divided and analyzed separately.

Should the delay singletons using multiple addresses/ports be combined in the same sample? Should we characterize each mode separately? (This question also applies to the Path Change case.) It depends on the task to be addressed by the measurement.

For the task of de-jitter buffer sizing or assessing queue occupation, the modes should be characterized separately because flows will experience only one mode on a stable path. Use of a single flow description (address/port combination) in each sample simplifies this analysis. Multiple modes may be identified by collecting samples with different flow attributes, and characterization of multiple paths can proceed with comparison of the delay distributions from each sample.

For the task of capacity planning and routing optimization, characterizing the modes separately could offer an advantage. Network-wide capacity planning (as opposed to link capacity planning) takes as input the core traffic matrix, which corresponds to a matrix of traffic transferred from every source to every destination in the network. Applying the core traffic matrix along with the routing information (typically the link state database of a routing protocol) in a capacity planning tool offers the possibility to visualize the paths where the traffic flows and to optimize the routing based on the link utilization. In the case where equal cost multiple paths (ECMPs) are used, the traffic will be load balanced onto multiple paths. If each mode of the IP delay multi-modal distribution can be associated with a specific path, the delay performance offers an extra optimization parameter, i.e., the routing optimization based on the IP delay variation metric. As an example, the load balancing across ECMPs could be suppressed so that the Voice over IP (VoIP) calls would only be routed via the path with the lower IP delay

variation. Clearly, any modifications can result in new delay performance measurements, so there must be a verification step to ensure the desired outcome.

Applicability of the Delay Variation Forms and Recommendations

Based on the comparisons of IPDV and PDV presented above, this section matches the attributes of each form with the tasks described earlier. We discuss the more general circumstances first.

Uses

Inferring Queue Occupancy

The PDV distribution is anchored at the minimum delay observed in the measurement interval. When the sample minimum coincides with the true minimum delay of the path, then the PDV distribution is equivalent to the queuing time distribution experienced by the test stream. If the minimum delay is not the true minimum, then the PDV distribution captures the variation in queuing time and some additional amount of queuing time is experienced, but unknown. One can summarize the PDV distribution with the mean, median, and other statistics.

IPDV can capture the difference in queuing time from one packet to the next, but this is a different distribution from the queue occupancy revealed by PDV.

Determining De-Jitter Buffer Size (and FEC Design)

This task is complimentary to the problem of inferring queue occupancy through measurement. Again, use of the sample minimum as the reference delay for PDV yields a distribution that is very relevant to de-jitter buffer size. This is because the minimum delay is an alignment point for the smoothing operation of de-jitter buffers. A de-jitter buffer that is ideally aligned with the delay variation adds zero buffer time to packets with the longest accommodated network delay (any packets with longer delays are discarded). Thus, a packet experiencing minimum network delay should be aligned to wait the maximum length of the de-jitter buffer. With this alignment, the stream is smoothed with no unnecessary delay added. Figure 5 of [G.1020] illustrates the ideal relationship between network delay variation and buffer time.

The PDV distribution is also useful for this task, but different statistics are preferred. The range (max-min) or the 99.9th percentile of PDV (pseudo-range) are closely related to the buffer size needed to accommodate the observed network delay variation.

The PDV distribution directly addresses the FEC waiting time question. When the PDV distribution has a 99th percentile of 10 ms, then waiting 10 ms longer than the FEC protection interval will allow 99% of late packets to arrive and be used in the FEC block.

In some cases, the positive excursions (or series of positive excursions) of IPDV may help to approximate the de-jitter buffer size, but there is no guarantee that a good buffer estimate will emerge, especially when the delay varies as a positive trend over several test packets.

Spatial Composition

PDV has a clear advantage at this time, since there is no validated method to compose an IPDV metric.

Service-Level Specification: Reporting a Single Number

The one-sided PDV distribution can be constrained with a single statistic, such as an upper percentile, so it is preferred. The IPDV distribution is two-sided, usually has zero mean, and no universal summary statistic that relates to a physical quantity has emerged in years of experience.

Challenging Circumstances

Note that measurement of delay variation may not be the primary concern under unstable and unreliable circumstances.

Clock and Storage Issues

When appreciable skew is present between measurement system clocks, IPDV has an advantage because PDV would require processing over the entire sample to remove the skew error. However, significant skew can invalidate IPDV analysis assumptions, such as the zero-mean and symmetric-distribution characteristics. Small skew may well be within the error tolerance, and both PDV and IPDV results will be usable. There may be a portion of the skew, measurement interval, and required accuracy 3-D space where IPDV has an advantage, depending on the specific measurement specifications.

Neither form of delay variation is more suited than the other to on-the-fly summarization without memory, and this may be one of the reasons that [RFC3550] RTCP Jitter and MAPDV2 in [G.1020] have attained deployment in low-cost systems.

Frequent Path Changes

If the network under test exhibits frequent path changes, on the order of several new routes per minute, then IPDV appears to isolate the delay variation on each path from the transient effect of path change (especially if there is packet loss at the time of path change). However, if one intends to use IPDV to indicate path changes, it cannot do this when the change is accompanied by loss.

It is possible to make meaningful PDV measurements when paths are unstable, but great importance would be placed on the algorithms that infer path change and attempt to divide the sample on path change boundaries.

When path changes are frequent and cause packet loss, delay variation is probably less important than the loss episodes and attention should be turned to the loss metric instead.

Frequent Loss

If the network under test exhibits frequent loss, then PDV may produce a larger set of singletons for the sample than IPDV. This is due to IPDV requiring consecutive packet arrivals to assess delay variation, compared to PDV where any packet arrival is useful. The worst case is when no consecutive packets arrive and the entire IPDV sample would be undefined, yet PDV would successfully produce a sample based on the arriving packets.

Load Balancing

PDV distributions offer the most straightforward way to identify that a sample of packets have traversed multiple paths. The tasks of de-jitter buffer sizing or assessing queue occupation with PDV should be use a sample with a single flow because flows will experience only one mode on a stable path, and it simplifies the analysis.

Summary

+---------------+----------------------+----------------------------+ | Comparison | PDV = D(i)-D(min) | IPDV = D(i)-D(i-1) | | Area | | | +---------------+----------------------+----------------------------+ | Challenging | Less sensitive to | Preferred when path | | Circumstances | packet loss, and | changes are frequent or | | | simplifies analysis | when measurement clocks | | | when load balancing | exhibit some skew | | | or multiple paths | | | | are present | | |---------------|----------------------|----------------------------| | Spatial | All validated | Has sensitivity to | | Composition | methods use this | sequence and spacing | | of DV metric | form | changes, which tends to | | | | break the requirement for | | | | independent distributions | | | | between path segments | |---------------|----------------------|----------------------------| | Determine | "Pseudo-range" | No reliable relationship, | | De-Jitter | reveals this | but some heuristics | | Buffer Size | property by | | | Required | anchoring the | | | | distribution at the | | | | minimum delay | | |---------------|----------------------|----------------------------| | Estimate of | Distribution has | No reliable relationship | | Queuing Time | one-to-one | | | and Variation | relationship on a | | | | stable path, | | | | especially when | | | | sample min = true | | | | min | | |---------------|----------------------|----------------------------| | Specification | One constraint | Distribution is two-sided, | | Simplicity: | needed for | usually has zero mean, and | | Single Number | single-sided | no universal summary | | SLA | distribution, and | statistic that relates to | | | easily related to | a physical quantity | | | quantities above | | +---------------+----------------------+----------------------------+

                      Summary of Comparisons

Measurement Considerations

This section discusses the practical aspects of delay variation measurement, with special attention to the two formulations compared in this memo.

Measurement Stream Characteristics

As stated in Section 1.2, there is a strong dependency between the active measurement stream characteristics and the results. The IPPM literature includes two primary methods for collecting samples: Poisson sampling described in [RFC2330], and Periodic sampling in [RFC3432]. The Poisson method was intended to collect an unbiased sample of performance, while the Periodic method addresses a "known bias of interest". Periodic streams are required to have random start times and limited stream duration, in order to avoid unwanted synchronization with some other periodic process, or cause congestion-aware senders to synchronize with the stream and produce atypical results. The random start time should be different for each new stream.

It is worth noting that [RFC3393] was developed in parallel with [RFC3432]. As a result, all the stream metrics defined in [RFC3393] specify the Poisson sampling method.

Periodic sampling is frequently used in measurements of delay variation. Several factors foster this choice:

1. Many application streams that are sensitive to delay variation

   also exhibit periodicity, and so exemplify the bias of interest.
   If the application has a constant packet spacing, this constant
   spacing can be the inter-packet gap for the test stream.  VoIP
   streams often use 20 ms spacing, so this is an obvious choice for
   an Active stream.  This applies to both IPDV and PDV forms.

2. The spacing between packets in the stream will influence whether

   the stream experiences short-range dependency, or only long-range
   dependency, as investigated in [Li.Mills].  The packet spacing
   also influences the IPDV distribution and the stream's
   sensitivity to reordering.  For example, with a 20 ms spacing the
   IPDV distribution cannot go below -20 ms without packet
   reordering.

3. The measurement process may make several simplifying assumptions

   when the send spacing and send rate are constant.  For example,
   the inter-arrival times at the destination can be compared with
   an ideal sending schedule, and allowing a one-point measurement
   of delay variation (described in [Y.1540]) that approximates the
   IPDV form.  Simplified methods that approximate PDV are possible
   as well (some are discussed in Appendix II of [Y.1541]).

4. Analysis of truncated, or non-symmetrical IPDV distributions is

   simplified.  Delay variations in excess of the periodic sending
   interval can cause multiple singleton values at the negative
   limit of the packet spacing (see Section 5.2 and [Cia03]).  Only
   packet reordering can cause the negative spacing limit to be
   exceeded.

Despite the emphasis on inter-packet delay differences with IPDV, both Poisson [Demichelis] and Periodic [Li.Mills] streams have been used, and these references illustrate the different analyses that are possible.

The advantages of using a Poisson distribution are discussed in [RFC2330]. The main properties are to avoid predicting the sample times, avoid synchronization with periodic events that are present in networks, and avoid inducing synchronization with congestion-aware senders. When a Poisson stream is used with IPDV, the distribution will reflect inter-packet delay variation on many different time scales (or packet spacings). The unbiased Poisson sampling brings a new layer of complexity in the analysis of IPDV distributions.

Measurement Devices

One key aspect of measurement devices is their ability to store singletons (or individual measurements). This feature usually is closely related to local calculation capabilities. For example, an embedded measurement device with limited storage will like provide only a few statistics on the delay variation distribution, while dedicated measurement systems store all the singletons and allow detailed analysis (later calculation of either form of delay variation is possible with the original singletons).

Therefore, systems with limited storage must choose their metrics and summary statistics in advance. If both IPDV and PDV statistics are desired, the supporting information must be collected as packets arrive. For example, the PDV range and high percentiles can be determined later if the minimum and several of the largest delays are stored while the measurement is in-progress.

Units of Measurement

Both IPDV and PDV can be summarized as a range in milliseconds.

With IPDV, it is interesting to report on a positive percentile, and an inter-quantile range is appropriate to reflect both positive and negative tails (e.g., 5% to 95%). If the IPDV distribution is symmetric around a mean of zero, then it is sufficient to report on the positive side of the distribution.

With PDV, it is sufficient to specify the upper percentile (e.g., 99.9%).

Test Duration

At several points in this memo, we have recommended use of test intervals on the order of minutes. In their paper examining the stability of Internet path properties [Zhang.Duff], Zhang et al. concluded that consistency was present on the order of minutes for the performance metrics considered (loss, delay, and throughput) for the paths they measured.

The topic of temporal aggregation of performance measured in small intervals to estimate some larger interval is described in the Metric Composition Framework [IPPM-Framework].

The primary recommendation here is to test using durations that are similar in length to the session time of interest. This applies to both IPDV and PDV, but is possibly more relevant for PDV since the duration determines how often the D_min will be determined, and the size of the associated sample.

Clock Sync Options

As with one-way-delay measurements, local clock synchronization is an important matter for delay variation measurements.

There are several options available:

1. Global Positioning System receivers

2. In some parts of the world, Cellular Code Division Multiple

   Access (CDMA) systems distribute timing signals that are derived
   from GPS and traceable to UTC.

3. Network Time Protocol [RFC1305] is a convenient choice in many

   cases, but usually offers lower accuracy than the options above.

When clock synchronization is inconvenient or subject to appreciable errors, then round-trip measurements may give a cumulative indication of the delay variation present on both directions of the path. However, delay distributions are rarely symmetrical, so it is difficult to infer much about the one-way-delay variation from round- trip measurements. Also, measurements on asymmetrical paths add complications for the one-way-delay metric.

Distinguishing Long Delay from Loss

Lost and delayed packets are separated by a waiting time threshold. Packets that arrive at the measurement destination within their waiting time have finite delay and are not lost. Otherwise, packets are designated lost and their delay is undefined. Guidance on setting the waiting time threshold may be found in [RFC2680] and [IPPM-Reporting].

In essence, [IPPM-Reporting] suggests to use a long waiting time to serve network characterization and revise results for specific application delay thresholds as needed.

Accounting for Packet Reordering

Packet reordering, defined in [RFC4737], is essentially an extreme form of delay variation where the packet stream arrival order differs from the sending order.

PDV results are not sensitive to packet arrival order, and are not affected by reordering other than to reflect the more extreme variation.

IPDV results will change if reordering is present because they are sensitive to the sequence of delays of arriving packets. The main example of this sensitivity is in the truncation of the negative tail of the distribution.

o When there is no reordering, the negative tail is limited by the

  sending time spacing between packets.

o If reordering occurs (and the reordered packets are not

  discarded), the negative tail can take on any value (in
  principal).

In general, measurement systems should have the capability to detect when sequence has changed. If IPDV measurements are made without regard to packet arrival order, the IPDV will be under-reported when reordering occurs.

Results Representation and Reporting

All of the references that discuss or define delay variation suggest ways to represent or report the results, and interested readers should review the various possibilities.

For example, [IPPM-Reporting] suggests reporting a pseudo-range of delay variation based on calculating the difference between a high percentile of delay and the minimum delay. The 99.9th percentile minus the minimum will give a value that can be compared with objectives in [Y.1541].

Security Considerations

The security considerations that apply to any active measurement of live networks are relevant here as well. See the "Security Considerations" sections in [RFC2330], [RFC2679], [RFC3393], [RFC3432], and [RFC4656].

Security considerations do not contribute to the selection of PDV or IPDV forms of delay variation, because measurements using these metrics involve exactly the same security issues.

10. Acknowledgments

The authors would like to thank Phil Chimento for his suggestion to employ the convention of conditional distributions of delay to deal with packet loss, and his encouragement to "write the memo" after hearing "the talk" on this topic at IETF 65. We also acknowledge constructive comments from Alan Clark, Loki Jorgenson, Carsten Schmoll, and Robert Holley.

11. Appendix on Calculating the D(min) in PDV

Practitioners have raised several questions that this section intends to answer:

- How is this D_min calculated? Is it DV(99%) as mentioned in

  [Krzanowski]?

- Do we need to keep all the values from the interval, then take the

  minimum?  Or do we keep the minimum from previous intervals?

The value of D_min used as the reference delay for PDV calculations is simply the minimum delay of all packets in the current sample. The usual single value summary of the PDV distribution is D_(99.9th percentile) minus D_min.

It may be appropriate to segregate sub-sets and revise the minimum value during a sample. For example, if it can be determined with certainty that the path has changed by monitoring the Time to Live or Hop Count of arriving packets, this may be sufficient justification to reset the minimum for packets on the new path. There is also a simpler approach to solving this problem: use samples collected over short evaluation intervals (on the order of minutes). Intervals with path changes may be more interesting from the loss or one-way-delay perspective (possibly failing to meet one or more SLAs), and it may not be necessary to conduct delay variation analysis. Short evaluation intervals are preferred for measurements that serve as a basis for troubleshooting, since the results are available to report soon after collection.

It is not necessary to store all delay values in a sample when storage is a major concern. D_min can be found by comparing each new singleton value with the current value and replacing it when required. In a sample with 5000 packets, evaluation of the 99.9th percentile can also be achieved with limited storage. One method calls for storing the top 50 delay singletons and revising the top value list each time 50 more packets arrive.

12. References

12.1. Normative References

[RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate

                 Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.

[RFC2330] Paxson, V., Almes, G., Mahdavi, J., and M. Mathis,

                 "Framework for IP Performance Metrics", RFC 2330,
                 May 1998.

[RFC2679] Almes, G., Kalidindi, S., and M. Zekauskas, "A One-

                 way Delay Metric for IPPM", RFC 2679,
                 September 1999.

[RFC2680] Almes, G., Kalidindi, S., and M. Zekauskas, "A One-

                 way Packet Loss Metric for IPPM", RFC 2680,
                 September 1999.

[RFC3393] Demichelis, C. and P. Chimento, "IP Packet Delay

                 Variation Metric for IP Performance Metrics
                 (IPPM)", RFC 3393, November 2002.

[RFC3432] Raisanen, V., Grotefeld, G., and A. Morton,

                 "Network performance measurement with periodic
                 streams", RFC 3432, November 2002.

[RFC4090] Pan, P., Swallow, G., and A. Atlas, "Fast Reroute

                 Extensions to RSVP-TE for LSP Tunnels", RFC 4090,
                 May 2005.

[RFC4656] Shalunov, S., Teitelbaum, B., Karp, A., Boote, J.,

                 and M. Zekauskas, "A One-way Active Measurement
                 Protocol (OWAMP)", RFC 4656, September 2006.

[RFC4737] Morton, A., Ciavattone, L., Ramachandran, G.,

                 Shalunov, S., and J. Perser, "Packet Reordering
                 Metrics", RFC 4737, November 2006.

12.2. Informative References

[COM12.D98] Clark, A., "Analysis, measurement and modelling of

                 Jitter", ITU-T Delayed Contribution COM 12 - D98,
                 January 2003.

[Casner] Casner, S., Alaettinoglu, C., and C. Kuan, "A Fine-

                 Grained View of High Performance Networking",
                 NANOG 22, May 20-22, 2001,
                 <http://www.nanog.org/mtg-0105/agenda.html>.

[Cia03] Ciavattone, L., Morton, A., and G. Ramachandran,

                 "Standardized Active Measurements on a Tier 1 IP
                 Backbone", IEEE Communications Magazine, p. 90-97,
                 June 2003.

[Demichelis] Demichelis, C., "Packet Delay Variation Comparison

                 between ITU-T and IETF Draft Definitions",
                 November 2000, <http://www.advanced.org/ippm/
                 archive.3/att-0075/01-pap02.doc>.

[G.1020] ITU-T, "Performance parameter definitions for the

                 quality of speech and other voiceband applications
                 utilizing IP networks", ITU-T
                 Recommendation G.1020, 2006.

[G.1050] ITU-T, "Network model for evaluating multimedia

                 transmission performance over Internet Protocol",
                 ITU-T Recommendation G.1050, November 2005.

[I.356] ITU-T, "B-ISDN ATM Layer Cell Transfer

                 Performance", ITU-T Recommendation I.356,
                 March 2000.

[IPPM-Framework] Morton, A., "Framework for Metric Composition",

                 Work in Progress, October 2008.

[IPPM-Reporting] Morton, A., Ramachandran, G., and G. Maguluri,

                 "Reporting Metrics: Different Points of View", Work
                 in Progress, January 2009.

[IPPM-Spatial] Morton, A. and E. Stephan, "Spatial Composition of

                 Metrics", Work in Progress, July 2008.

[Krzanowski] Presentation at IPPM, IETF-64, "Jitter Definitions:

                 What is What?", November 2005.

[Li.Mills] Li, Q. and D. Mills, "The Implications of Short-

                 Range Dependency on Delay Variation Measurement",
                 Second IEEE Symposium on Network Computing
                 and Applications, 2003.

[Morton06] Morton, A., "A Brief Jitter Metrics Comparison, and

                 not the last word, by any means...", slide
                 presentation at IETF 65, IPPM Session, March 2006.

[RFC1305] Mills, D., "Network Time Protocol (Version 3)

                 Specification, Implementation", RFC 1305,
                 March 1992.

[RFC3357] Koodli, R. and R. Ravikanth, "One-way Loss Pattern

                 Sample Metrics", RFC 3357, August 2002.

[RFC3550] Schulzrinne, H., Casner, S., Frederick, R., and V.

                 Jacobson, "RTP: A Transport Protocol for Real-Time
                 Applications", STD 64, RFC 3550, July 2003.

[Y.1540] ITU-T, "Internet protocol data communication

                 service - IP packet transfer and availability
                 performance parameters", ITU-T Recommendation
                 Y.1540, November 2007.

[Y.1541] ITU-T, "Network Performance Objectives for IP-Based

                 Services", ITU-T Recommendation Y.1541,
                 February 2006.

[Zhang.Duff] Zhang, Y., Duffield, N., Paxson, V., and S.

                 Shenker, "On the Constancy of Internet Path
                 Properties", Proceedings of ACM SIGCOMM Internet
                 Measurement Workshop, November 2001.

Authors' Addresses

Al Morton AT&T Labs 200 Laurel Avenue South Middletown, NJ 07748 USA

Phone: +1 732 420 1571 Fax: +1 732 368 1192 EMail: [email protected] URI: http://home.comcast.net/~acmacm/

Benoit Claise Cisco Systems, Inc. De Kleetlaan 6a b1 Diegem, 1831 Belgium

Phone: +32 2 704 5622 EMail: [email protected]