RFC2285

From RFC-Wiki

Network Working Group R. Mandeville Request for Comments: 2285 European Network Laboratories Category: Informational February 1998

       Benchmarking Terminology for LAN Switching Devices

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.

Copyright Notice

Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1998). All Rights Reserved.

Introduction

This document is intended to provide terminology for the benchmarking of local area network (LAN) switching devices. It extends the terminology already defined for benchmarking network interconnect devices in RFCs 1242 and 1944 to switching devices.

Although it might be found useful to apply some of the terms defined here to a broader range of network interconnect devices, this RFC primarily deals with devices which switch frames at the Medium Access Control (MAC) layer. It defines terms in relation to the traffic put to use when benchmarking switching devices, forwarding performance, congestion control, latency, address handling and filtering.

Existing definitions

RFC 1242 "Benchmarking Terminology for Network Interconnect Devices" should be consulted before attempting to make use of this document. RFC 1944 "Benchmarking Methodology for Network Interconnect Devices" contains discussions of a number of terms relevant to the benchmarking of switching devices and should also be consulted.

For the sake of clarity and continuity this RFC adopts the template for definitions set out in Section 2 of RFC 1242. Definitions are indexed and grouped together in sections for ease of reference.

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.

Term definitions

Devices

This group of definitions applies to all types of networking devices.

Device under test (DUT)

Definition:

  The network forwarding device to which stimulus is offered and
  response measured.

Discussion:

  A single stand-alone or modular unit which receives frames on one
  or more of its interfaces and then forwards them to one or more
  interfaces according to the addressing information contained in
  the frame.

Measurement units:

  n/a

Issues:

See Also:

  system under test (SUT) (3.1.2)

System Under Test (SUT)

Definition:

  The collective set of network devices to which stimulus is offered
  as a single entity and response measured.

Discussion:

  A system under test may be comprised of a variety of networking
  devices.  Some devices may be active in the forwarding decision-
  making process, such as routers or switches; other devices may be
  passive such as a CSU/DSU.  Regardless of constituent components,
  the system is treated as a singular entity to which stimulus is
  offered and response measured.

Measurement units:

  n/a

Issues:

See Also:

  device under test (DUT) (3.1.1)

Traffic orientation

This group of definitions applies to the traffic presented to the interfaces of a DUT/SUT and indicates whether the interfaces are receiving only, transmitting only, or both receiving and transmitting.

Unidirectional traffic

Definition:

  When all frames presented to the input interfaces of a DUT/SUT are
  addressed to output interfaces which do not themselves receive any
  frames.

Discussion:

  This definition conforms to the discussion in section 16 of RFC
  1944 which describes how unidirectional traffic can be offered to
  a DUT/SUT to measure throughput.  Unidirectional traffic is also
  appropriate for:
  -the measurement of the minimum inter-frame gap -the creation of
  many-to-one or one-to-many interface overload -the detection of
  head of line blocking -the measurement of forwarding rates and
  throughput when congestion control mechanisms are active.
  When a tester offers unidirectional traffic to a DUT/SUT reception
  and transmission are handled by different interfaces or sets of
  interfaces of the DUT/SUT.  All frames received from the tester by
  the DUT/SUT are transmitted back to the tester from interfaces
  which do not themselves receive any frames.
  It is useful to distinguish traffic orientation and traffic
  distribution when considering traffic patterns used in device
  testing.  Unidirectional traffic, for example, is traffic
  orientated in a single direction between mutually exclusive sets
  of source and destination interfaces of a DUT/SUT.  Such traffic,
  however, can be distributed between interfaces in different ways.
  When traffic is sent to two or more interfaces from an external
  source and then forwarded by the DUT/SUT to a single output
  interface the traffic orientation is unidirectional and the
  traffic distribution between interfaces is many-to-one.  Traffic
  can also be sent to a single input interface and forwarded by the
  DUT/SUT to two or more output interfaces to achieve a one-to-many
  distribution of traffic.
  Such traffic distributions can also be combined to test for head
  of line blocking or to measure forwarding rates and throughput
  when congestion control mechanisms are active.
  When a DUT/SUT is equipped with interfaces running at different
  media rates the number of input interfaces required to load or
  overload an output interface or interfaces will vary.
  It should be noted that measurement of the minimum inter-frame gap
  serves to detect violations of the IEEE 802.3 standard.

Issues:

  half duplex / full duplex

Measurement units:

  n/a

See Also:

  bidirectional traffic (3.2.2)
  non-meshed traffic (3.3.1)
  partially meshed traffic (3.3.2)
  fully meshed traffic (3.3.3)
  congestion control (3.7)
  head of line blocking (3.7.3)

Bidirectional traffic

Definition:

  Frames presented to a DUT/SUT such that every receiving interface
  also transmits.

Discussion:

  This definition conforms to the discussion in section 14 of RFC
  1944.
  When a tester offers bidirectional traffic to a DUT/SUT all the
  interfaces which receive frames from the tester also transmit
  frames back to the tester.
  Bidirectional traffic MUST be offered when measuring the
  throughput or forwarding rate of full duplex interfaces of a
  switching device.

Issues:

  truncated binary exponential back-off algorithm

Measurement units:

  n/a

See Also:

  unidirectional traffic (3.2.1)
  non-meshed traffic (3.3.1)
  partially meshed traffic (3.3.2)
  fully meshed traffic (3.3.3)

Traffic distribution

This group of definitions applies to the distribution of frames forwarded by a DUT/SUT.

Non-meshed traffic

Definition:

  Frames offered to a single input interface and addressed to a
  single output interface of a DUT/SUT where input and output
  interfaces are grouped in mutually exclusive pairs.

Discussion:

  In the simplest instance of non-meshed traffic all frames are
  offered to a single input interface and addressed to a single
  output interface.  The one-to-one mapping of input to output
  interfaces required by non-meshed traffic can be extended to
  multiple mutually exclusive pairs of input and output interfaces.

Measurement units:

  n/a

Issues:

  half duplex / full duplex

See Also:

  unidirectional traffic (3.2.1)
  bidirectional traffic (3.2.2)
  partially meshed traffic (3.3.2.)
  fully meshed traffic (3.3.3)
  burst (3.4.1)

Partially meshed traffic

Definition:

  Frames offered to one or more input interfaces of a DUT/SUT and
  addressed to one or more output interfaces where input and output
  interfaces are mutually exclusive and mapped one-to-many, many-
  to-one or many-to-many.

Discussion:

  This definition follows from the discussion in section 16 of RFC
  1944 on multi-port testing.  Partially meshed traffic allows for
  one-to-many, many-to-one or many-to-many mappings of input to
  output interfaces and readily extends to configurations with
  multiple switching devices linked together over backbone
  connections.
  It should be noted that partially meshed traffic can load backbone
  connections linking together two switching devices or systems more
  than fully meshed traffic.  When offered partially meshed traffic
  devices or systems can be set up to forward all of the frames they
  receive to the opposite side of the backbone connection whereas
  fully meshed traffic requires at least some of the offered frames
  to be forwarded locally, that is to the interfaces of the DUT/SUT
  receiving them.  Such frames will not traverse the backbone
  connection.

Measurement units:

  n/a

Issues:

  half duplex / full duplex

See Also:

  unidirectional traffic (3.2.1)
  bidirectional traffic (3.2.2)
  non-meshed traffic (3.3.1)
  fully meshed traffic (3.3.3)
  burst (3.4.1)

Fully meshed traffic

Definition:

  Frames offered to a designated number of interfaces of a DUT/SUT
  such that each one of the interfaces under test receives frames
  addressed to all of the other interfaces under test.

Discussion:

  As with bidirectional partially meshed traffic, fully meshed
  traffic requires each one the interfaces of a DUT/SUT to both
  receive and transmit frames.  But since the interfaces are not
  divided into groups as with partially meshed traffic every
  interface forwards frames to and receives frames from every other
  interface.  The total number of individual input/output interface
  pairs when traffic is fully meshed over n switched interfaces
  equals n x (n - 1).  This compares with n x (n / 2) such interface
  pairs when traffic is partially meshed.
  Fully meshed traffic on half duplex interfaces is inherently
  bursty since interfaces must interrupt transmission whenever they
  receive frames.  This kind of bursty meshed traffic is
  characteristic of real network traffic and can be advantageously
  used to diagnose a DUT/SUT by exercising many of its component
  parts simultaneously.  Additional inspection may be warranted to
  correlate the frame forwarding capacity of a DUT/SUT when offered
  meshed traffic and the behavior of individual elements such as
  input or output buffers, buffer allocation mechanisms, aggregate
  switching capacity, processing speed or medium access control.
  The analysis of forwarding rate measurements presents a challenge
  when offering bidirectional or fully meshed traffic since the rate
  at which the tester can be observed to transmit frames to the
  DUT/SUT may be smaller than the rate at which it intends to
  transmit due to collisions on half duplex media or the action of
  congestion control mechanisms.  This makes it important to take
  account of both the intended and offered loads defined in sections
  3.5.1.and 3.5.2 below when reporting the results of such
  forwarding rate measurements.
  When offering bursty meshed traffic to a DUT/SUT a number of
  variables have to be considered.  These include frame size, the
  number of frames within bursts, the interval between bursts as
  well as the distribution of load between incoming and outgoing
  traffic.  Terms related to bursts are defined in section 3.4
  below.

Measurement units:

  n/a

Issues:

  half duplex / full duplex

See Also:

  unidirectional traffic (3.2.1)
  bidirectional traffic (3.2.2)
  non-meshed traffic (3.3.1)
  partially meshed traffic (3.3.2)
  burst (3.4.1)
  intended load (3.5.1)
  offered load (3.5.2)

Bursts

This group of definitions applies to the intervals between frames or groups of frames offered to the DUT/SUT.

Burst

Definition:

  A sequence of frames transmitted with the minimum legal inter-
  frame gap.

Discussion:

  This definition follows from discussions in section 3.16 of RFC
  1242 and section 21 of RFC 1944 which describes cases where it is
  useful to consider isolated frames as single frame bursts.

Measurement units:

  n/a

Issues:

See Also:

  burst size (3.4.2)
  inter-burst gap (IBG) (3.4.3)

Burst size

Definition:

  The number of frames in a burst.

Discussion:

  Burst size can range from one to infinity.  In unidirectional
  traffic as well as in bidirectional or meshed traffic on full
  duplex interfaces there is no theoretical limit to burst length.
  When traffic is bidirectional or meshed bursts on half duplex
  media are finite since interfaces interrupt transmission
  intermittently to receive frames.
  On real networks burst size will normally increase with window
  size.  This makes it desirable to test devices with small as well
  as large burst sizes.

Measurement units:

  number of N-octet frames

Issues:

See Also:

  burst (3.4.1)
  inter-burst gap (IBG) (3.4.3)

Inter-burst gap (IBG)

Definition:

  The interval between two bursts.

Discussion:

  This definition conforms to the discussion in section 20 of RFC
  1944 on bursty traffic.
  Bidirectional and meshed traffic are inherently bursty since
  interfaces share their time between receiving and transmitting
  frames.  External sources offering bursty traffic for a given
  frame size and burst size must adjust the inter-burst gap to
  achieve a specified average rate of frame transmission.

Measurement units:

  nanoseconds
  microseconds
  milliseconds
  seconds

Issues:

See Also:

  burst (3.4.1)
  burst size (3.4.2)

Loads

This group of definitions applies to the rates at which traffic is offered to any DUT/SUT.

Intended load (Iload)

Definition:

  The number of frames per second that an external source attempts
  to transmit to a DUT/SUT for forwarding to a specified output
  interface or interfaces.

Discussion:

  Collisions on CSMA/CD links or the action of congestion control
  mechanisms can effect the rate at which an external source of
  traffic transmits frames to a DUT/SUT.  This makes it useful to
  distinguish the load that an external source attempts to apply to
  a DUT/SUT and the load it is observed or measured to apply.
  In the case of Ethernet an external source of traffic MUST
  implement the truncated binary exponential back-off algorithm to
  ensure that it is accessing the medium legally

Measurement units:

  bits per second
  N-octets per second
  (N-octets per second / media_maximum-octets per second) x 100

Issues:

See Also:

  burst (3.4.1)
  inter-burst gap (3.4.3)
  offered load (3.5.2)

Offered load (Oload)

Definition:

  The number of frames per second that an external source can be
  observed or measured to transmit to a DUT/SUT for forwarding to a
  specified output interface or interfaces.

Discussion:

  The load which an external device can be observed to apply to a
  DUT/SUT may be less than the intended load due to collisions on
  half duplex media or the action of congestion control mechanisms.
  This makes it important to distinguish intended and offered load
  when analyzing the results of forwarding rate measurements using
  bidirectional or fully meshed traffic.
  Frames which are not successfully transmitted by an external
  source of traffic to a DUT/SUT MUST NOT be counted as transmitted
  frames when measuring forwarding rates.
  The frame count on an interface of a DUT/SUT may exceed the rate
  at which an external device offers frames due to the presence of
  spanning tree BPDUs (Bridge Protocol Data Units) on 802.1D-
  compliant switches or SNMP frames.  Such frames should be treated
  as modifiers as described in section 11 of RFC 1944.
  Offered load MUST be indicated when reporting the results of
  forwarding rate measurements.

Measurement units:

  bits per second
  N-octets per second
  (N-octets per second / media_maximum-octets per second) x 100

Issues:

  token ring

See Also:

  bidirectional traffic (3.2.2)
  fully meshed traffic (3.3.3)
  intended load (3.5.1)
  forwarding rate (3.6.1)

Maximum offered load (MOL)

Definition:

  The highest number of frames per second that an external source
  can transmit to a DUT/SUT for forwarding to a specified output
  interface or interfaces.

Discussion:

  The maximum load that an external device can apply to a DUT/SUT
  may not equal the maximum load allowed by the medium.  This
  will be the case  when an external source lacks the resources
  to transmit frames at the minimum legal inter-frame gap or when
  it has sufficient resources to transmit frames below the
  minimum legal inter-frame gap.  Moreover, maximum load may vary
  with respect to parameters other than a medium's maximum
  theoretical utilization.  For example, on those media employing
  tokens, maximum load may vary as a function of Token Rotation
  Time, Token Holding Time, or the ability to chain multiple
  frames to a single token.  The maximum load that an external
  device applies to a DUT/SUT MUST be specified when measuring
  forwarding rates.

Measurement units:

  bits per second
  N-octets per second
  (N-octets per second / media_maximum-octets per second) x 100

Issues:

See Also:

  offered load (3.5.2)

Overloading

Definition:

  Attempting to load a DUT/SUT in excess of the maximum rate of
  transmission allowed by the medium.

Discussion:

  Overloading can serve to exercise buffers and buffer allocation
  algorithms as well as congestion control mechanisms.  The number
  of input interfaces required to overload one or more output
  interfaces of a DUT/SUT will vary according to the media rates of
  the interfaces involved.
  An external source can also overload an interface by transmitting
  frames below the minimum inter-frame gap.  A DUT/SUT MUST forward
  such frames at intervals equal to or above the minimum gap
  specified in standards.
  A DUT/SUT using congestion control techniques such as backpressure
  or forward pressure may exhibit no frame loss when a tester
  attempts to overload one or more of its interfaces.  This should
  not be exploited to suggest that the DUT/SUT supports rates of
  transmission in excess of the maximum rate allowed by the medium
  since both techniques reduce the rate at which the tester offers
  frames to prevent overloading.  Backpressure achieves this purpose
  by jamming the transmission interfaces of the tester and forward
  pressure by hindering the tester from gaining fair access to the
  medium.  Analysis of both cases should take the distinction
  between intended load (3.5.1) and offered load (3.5.2) into
  account.

Measurement units:

  bits per second
  N-octets per second
  (N-octets per second / media_maximum-octets per second) x 100

Issues:

See Also:

  unidirectional traffic (3.2.1)
  intended load (3.5.1)
  offered load (3.5.2)
  forwarding rate (3.6.1)
  backpressure (3.7.1)
  forward pressure (3.7.2)

Forwarding rates

This group of definitions applies to the rates at which traffic is forwarded by any DUT/SUT in response to a stimulus.

Forwarding rate (FR)

Definition:

  The number of frames per second that a device can be observed to
  successfully transmit to the correct destination interface in
  response to a specified offered load.

Discussion:

  Unlike throughput defined in section 3.17 of RFC 1242, forwarding
  rate makes no explicit reference to frame loss.  Forwarding rate
  refers to the number of frames per second observed on the output
  side of the interface under test and MUST be reported in relation
  to the offered load.  Forwarding rate can be measured with
  different traffic orientations and distributions.
  It should be noted that the forwarding rate of a DUT/SUT may be
  sensitive to the action of congestion control mechanisms.

Measurement units:

  N-octet frames per second

Issues:

See Also:

  offered load (3.5.2)
  forwarding rate at maximum offered load (3.6.2)
  maximum forwarding rate (3.6.3)

Forwarding rate at maximum offered load (FRMOL)

Definition:

  The number of frames per second that a device can be observed to
  successfully transmit to the correct destination interface in
  response to the maximum offered load.

Discussion:

  Forwarding rate at maximum offered load may be less than the
  maximum rate at which a device can be observed to successfully
  forward traffic.  This will be the case when the ability of a
  device to forward frames degenerates when offered traffic at
  maximum load.
  Maximum offered load MUST be cited when reporting forwarding rate
  at maximum offered load.

Measurement units:

  N-octet frames per second

Issues:

See Also:

  maximum offered load (3.5.3)
  forwarding rate (3.6.1)
  maximum forwarding rate (3.6.3)

Maximum forwarding rate (MFR)

Definition:

  The highest forwarding rate of a DUT/SUT taken from an iterative
  set of forwarding rate measurements.

Discussion:

  The forwarding rate of a device may degenerate before maximum load
  is reached.  The load applied to a device must be cited when
  reporting maximum forwarding rate.
  The following example illustrates how the terms relative to
  loading and forwarding rates are meant to be used.  In particular
  it shows how the distinction between forwarding rate at maximum
  offered load (FRMOL) and maximum forwarding rate (MFR) can be used
  to characterize a DUT/SUT.
                (A)                          (B)
            Test Device                     DUT/SUT
            Offered Load                Forwarding Rate
            ------------                ---------------
    (1)       14,880 fps - MOL              7,400 fps - FRMOL
    (2)       13,880 fps                    8,472 fps
    (3)       12,880 fps                   12,880 fps  - MFR

Measurement units:

  N-octet frames per second

Issues:

See Also:

  offered load (3.5.2)
  forwarding rates (3.6.1)
  forwarding rate at maximum load (3.6.2)

Congestion control

This group of definitions applies to the behavior of a DUT/SUT when congestion or contention is present.

Backpressure

Definition:

  Any technique used by a DUT/SUT to attempt to avoid frame loss by
  impeding external sources of traffic from transmitting frames to
  congested interfaces.

Discussion:

  Some switches send jam signals, for example preamble bits, back to
  traffic sources when their transmit and/or receive buffers start
  to overfill.  Switches implementing full duplex Ethernet links may
  use IEEE 802.3x Flow Control for the same purpose.  Such devices
  may incur no frame loss when external sources attempt to offer
  traffic to congested or overloaded interfaces.
  It should be noted that jamming and other flow control methods may
  slow all traffic transmitted to congested input interfaces
  including traffic intended for uncongested output interfaces.
  A DUT/SUT applying backpressure may exhibit no frame loss when a
  tester attempts to overload one or more of its interfaces.  This
  should not be interpreted to suggest that the interfaces of the
  DUT/SUT support forwarding rates above the maximum rate allowed by
  the medium.  In these cases overloading is only apparent since
  through the application of backpressure the DUT/SUT avoids
  overloading by reducing the rate at which the tester can offer
  frames.

Measurement units:

  frame loss on congested interface or interfaces N-octet frames per
  second between the interface applying backpressure and an
  uncongested destination interface

Issues:

  jamming not explicitly described in standards

See Also:

  intended load (3.5.1)
  offered load (3.5.2)
  overloading (3.5.4)
  forwarding rate (3.6.1)
  forward pressure (3.7.2)

Forward pressure

Definition:

  Methods which depart from or otherwise violate a defined
  standardized protocol in an attempt to increase the forwarding
  performance of a DUT/SUT.

Discussion:

  A DUT/SUT may be found to inhibit or abort back-off algorithms in
  order to force access to the medium when contention occurs.  It
  should be noted that the back-off algorithm should be fair whether
  the DUT/SUT is in a congested or an uncongested state.
  Transmission below the minimum inter-frame gap or the disregard of
  flow control primitives fall into this category.
  A DUT/SUT applying forward pressure may eliminate all or most
  frame loss when a tester attempts to overload one or more of its
  interfaces.  This should not be interpreted to suggest that the
  interfaces of the DUT/SUT can sustain forwarding rates above the
  maximum rate allowed by the medium.  Overloading in such cases is
  only apparent since the application of forward pressure by the
  DUT/SUT enables interfaces to relieve saturated output queues by
  forcing access to the medium and concomitantly inhibiting the
  tester from transmitting frames.

Measurement units:

  intervals between frames in microseconds
  intervals in microseconds between transmission retries during
  16 successive collisions.

Issues:

  truncated binary exponential back-off algorithm

See Also:

  intended load (3.5.1)
  offered load (3.5.2)
  overloading (3.5.4)
  forwarding rate (3.6.1)
  backpressure (3.7.1)

Head of line blocking

Definition:

  Frame loss or added delay observed on an uncongested output
  interface whenever frames are received from an input interface
  which is also attempting to forward frames to a congested output
  interface.

Discussion:

  It is important to verify that a switch does not slow transmission
  or drop frames on interfaces which are not congested whenever
  overloading on one of its other interfaces occurs.

Measurement units:

  forwarding rate and frame loss recorded on an uncongested
  interface when receiving frames from an interface which is also
  forwarding frames to a congested interface.

Issues:

  input buffers

See Also:

  unidirectional traffic (3.2.1)

Address handling

This group of definitions applies to the address resolution process enabling a DUT/SUT to forward frames to their correct destinations.

Address caching capacity

Definition:

  The number of MAC addresses per n interfaces, per module or per
  device that a DUT/SUT can cache and successfully forward frames to
  without flooding or dropping frames.

Discussion:

  Users building networks will want to know how many nodes they can
  connect to a switch.  This makes it necessary to verify the number
  of MAC addresses that can be assigned per n interfaces, per module
  and per chassis before a DUT/SUT begins flooding frames.

Measurement units:

  number of MAC addresses per n interfaces, modules, or chassis

Issues:

See Also:

  address learning rate (3.8.2)

Address learning rate

Definition:

  The maximum rate at which a switch can learn new MAC addresses
  without flooding or dropping frames.

Discussion:

  Users may want to know how long it takes a switch to build its
  address tables.  This information is useful to have when
  considering how long it takes a network to come up when many users
  log on in the morning or after a network crash.

Measurement units:

  frames with different source addresses per second

Issues:

See Also:

  address caching capacity (3.8.1)

Flood count

Definition:

  Frames forwarded to interfaces which do not correspond to the
  destination MAC address information when traffic is offered to a
  DUT/SUT for forwarding.

Discussion:

  When recording throughput statistics it is important to check that
  frames have been forwarded to their proper destinations.  Flooded
  frames MUST NOT be counted as received frames.  Both known and
  unknown unicast frames can be flooded.

Measurement units:

  N-octet valid frames

Issues:

  spanning tree BPDUs.

See Also:

  address caching capacity (3.8.1)

Errored frame filtering

This group of definitions applies to frames with errors which a DUT/SUT may filter.

Errored frames

Definition:

  Frames which are over-sized, under-sized, misaligned or with an
  errored Frame Check Sequence.

Discussion:

  Switches, unlike IEEE 802.1d compliant bridges, do not necessarily
  filter all types of illegal frames.  Some switches, for example,
  which do not store frames before forwarding them to their
  destination interfaces may not filter over-sized frames (jabbers)
  or verify the validity of the Frame Check Sequence field.  Other
  illegal frames are under-sized frames (runts) and misaligned
  frames.

Measurement units:

  n/a

Issues:

See Also:

3.10 Broadcasts

This group of definitions applies to MAC layer and network layer broadcast frames.

3.10.1 Broadcast forwarding rate

Definition:

  The number of broadcast frames per second that a DUT/SUT can be
  observed to deliver to all interfaces located within a broadcast
  domain in response to a specified offered load of frames directed
  to the broadcast MAC address.

Discussion:

  There is no standard forwarding mechanism used by switches to
  forward broadcast frames.  It is useful to determine the broadcast
  forwarding rate for frames switched between interfaces on the same
  card, interfaces on different cards in the same chassis and
  interfaces on different chassis linked together over backbone
  connections.  The terms maximum broadcast forwarding rate and
  broadcast forwarding rate at maximum load follow directly from the
  terms already defined for forwarding rate measurements in section
  3.6 above.

Measurement units:

  N-octet frames per second

Issues:

See Also:

  forwarding rate at maximum load (3.6.2)
  maximum forwarding rate (3.6.3)
  broadcast latency (3.10.2)

3.10.2 Broadcast latency

Definition:

  The time required by a DUT/SUT to forward a broadcast frame to
  each interface located within a broadcast domain.

Discussion:

  Since there is no standard way for switches to process
  broadcast frames, broadcast latency may not be the same on all
  receiving interfaces of a switching device.  The latency
  measurements SHOULD be bit oriented as described in section 3.8
  of RFC 1242.  It is useful to determine broadcast latency for
  frames forwarded between interfaces on the same card, on
  different cards in the same chassis and on different chassis
  linked over backbone connections.

Measurement units:

     nanoseconds
     microseconds
     milliseconds
     seconds

Issues:

See Also:

  broadcast forwarding rate (3.10.1)

Security Considerations

Documents of this type do not directly effect the security of the Internet or of corporate networks as long as benchmarking is not performed on devices or systems connected to operating networks.

The document points out that switching devices may violate the IEEE 802.3 standard by transmitting frames below the minimum interframe gap or unfairly accessing the medium by inhibiting the backoff algorithm. Although such violations do not directly engender breaches in security, they may perturb the normal functioning of other interworking devices by obstructing their access to the medium. Their use on the Internet or on corporate networks should be discouraged.

References

[1] Bradner, S., "Benchmarking Terminology for Network

   Interconnection Devices", RFC 1242, July 1991.

[2] Bradner, S., and J. McQuaid, "Benchmarking Methodology for

   Network Interconnect Devices", RFC 1944, May 1996.

Acknowledgments

The Benchmarking Methodology Working Group of the IETF and particularly Kevin Dubray (Bay Networks) are to be thanked for the many suggestions they collectively made to help complete this document. Ajay Shah (WG), Jean-Christophe Bestaux (ENL), Henry Hamon (Netcom Systems), Stan Kopek (Digital) and Doug Ruby (Prominet) all provided valuable input at various stages of this project.

Special thanks go to Scott Bradner for his seminal work in the field of benchmarking and his many encouraging remarks.

Author's Address

Robert Mandeville European Network Laboratories (ENL) 2, rue Helene Boucher 78286 Guyancourt Cedex France

Phone: + 33 1 39 44 12 05 Mobile Phone + 33 6 07 47 67 10 Fax: + 33 1 39 44 12 06 EMail: [email protected]

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