RFC6412

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Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) S. Poretsky Request for Comments: 6412 Allot Communications Category: Informational B. Imhoff ISSN: 2070-1721 F5 Networks

                                                       K. Michielsen
                                                       Cisco Systems
                                                       November 2011

Terminology for Benchmarking Link-State IGP Data-Plane Route Convergence

Abstract

This document describes the terminology for benchmarking link-state Interior Gateway Protocol (IGP) route convergence. The terminology is to be used for benchmarking IGP convergence time through externally observable (black-box) data-plane measurements. The terminology can be applied to any link-state IGP, such as IS-IS and OSPF.

Status of This Memo

This document is not an Internet Standards Track specification; it is published for informational purposes.

This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF). It represents the consensus of the IETF community. It has received public review and has been approved for publication by the Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG). Not all documents approved by the IESG are a candidate for any level of Internet Standard; see Section 2 of RFC 5741.

Information about the current status of this document, any errata, and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6412.

Copyright Notice

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Introduction and Scope

This document is a companion to [Po11m], which contains the methodology to be used for benchmarking link-state Interior Gateway Protocol (IGP) convergence by observing the data plane. The purpose of this document is to introduce new terms required to complete execution of the Link-State IGP Data-Plane Route Convergence methodology [Po11m].

IGP convergence time is measured by observing the data plane through the Device Under Test (DUT) at the Tester. The methodology and terminology to be used for benchmarking IGP convergence can be applied to IPv4 and IPv6 traffic and link-state IGPs such as Intermediate System to Intermediate System (IS-IS) [Ca90][Ho08], Open Shortest Path First (OSPF) [Mo98] [Co08], and others.

Existing Definitions

This document uses existing terminology defined in other IETF documents. Examples include, but are not limited to:

      Throughput                       [Br91], Section 3.17
      Offered Load                     [Ma98], Section 3.5.2
      Forwarding Rate                  [Ma98], Section 3.6.1
      Device Under Test (DUT)          [Ma98], Section 3.1.1
      System Under Test (SUT)          [Ma98], Section 3.1.2
      Out-of-Order Packet              [Po06], Section 3.3.4
      Duplicate Packet                 [Po06], Section 3.3.5
      Stream                           [Po06], Section 3.3.2
      Forwarding Delay                 [Po06], Section 3.2.4
      IP Packet Delay Variation (IPDV) [De02], Section 1.2
      Loss Period                      [Ko02], Section 4

The keywords "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in BCP 14, RFC 2119 [Br97]. RFC 2119 defines the use of these keywords to help make the intent of Standards Track documents as clear as possible. While this document uses these keywords, this document is not a Standards Track document.

Term Definitions

Convergence Types

Route Convergence

Definition:

  The process of updating all components of the router, including
  the Routing Information Base (RIB) and Forwarding Information Base
  (FIB), along with software and hardware tables, with the most
  recent route change(s) such that forwarding for a route entry is
  successful on the Next-Best Egress Interface (Section 3.4.4).

Discussion:

  In general, IGP convergence does not necessarily result in a
  change in forwarding.  But the test cases in [Po11m] are specified
  such that the IGP convergence results in a change of egress
  interface for the measurement data-plane traffic.  Due to this
  property of the test case specifications, Route Convergence can be
  observed externally by the rerouting of the measurement data-plane
  traffic to the Next-Best Egress Interface (Section 3.4.4).

Measurement Units:

  N/A

See Also:

  Next-Best Egress Interface, Full Convergence

Full Convergence

Definition:

  Route Convergence for all routes in the Forwarding Information
  Base (FIB).

Discussion:

  In general, IGP convergence does not necessarily result in a
  change in forwarding.  But the test cases in [Po11m] are specified
  such that the IGP convergence results in a change of egress
  interface for the measurement data-plane traffic.  Due to this
  property of the test cases specifications, Full Convergence can be
  observed externally by the rerouting of the measurement data-plane
  traffic to the Next-Best Egress Interface (Section 3.4.4).

Measurement Units:

  N/A

See Also:

  Next-Best Egress Interface, Route Convergence

Instants

Traffic Start Instant

Definition:

  The time instant the Tester sends out the first data packet to the
  DUT.

Discussion:

  If using the Loss-Derived Method (Section 3.5.2) or the Route-
  Specific Loss-Derived Method (Section 3.5.3) to benchmark IGP
  convergence time, and the applied Convergence Event
  (Section 3.7.1) does not cause instantaneous traffic loss for all
  routes at the Convergence Event Instant (Section 3.2.2), then the
  Tester SHOULD collect a timestamp on the Traffic Start Instant in
  order to measure the period of time between the Traffic Start
  Instant and Convergence Event Instant.

Measurement Units:

  seconds (and fractions), reported with resolution sufficient to
  distinguish between different instants

See Also:

  Loss-Derived Method, Route-Specific Loss-Derived Method,
  Convergence Event, Convergence Event Instant

Convergence Event Instant

Definition:

  The time instant that a Convergence Event (Section 3.7.1) occurs.

Discussion:

  If the Convergence Event (Section 3.7.1) causes instantaneous
  traffic loss on the Preferred Egress Interface (Section 3.4.3),
  the Convergence Event Instant is observable from the data plane as
  the instant that no more packets are received on the Preferred
  Egress Interface.
  The Tester SHOULD collect a timestamp on the Convergence Event
  Instant if the Convergence Event does not cause instantaneous
  traffic loss on the Preferred Egress Interface (Section 3.4.3).

Measurement Units:

  seconds (and fractions), reported with resolution sufficient to
  distinguish between different instants

See Also:

  Convergence Event, Preferred Egress Interface

Convergence Recovery Instant

Definition:

  The time instant that Full Convergence (Section 3.1.2) has
  completed.

Discussion:

  The Full Convergence completed state MUST be maintained for an
  interval of duration equal to the Sustained Convergence Validation
  Time (Section 3.7.5) in order to validate the Convergence Recovery
  Instant.
  The Convergence Recovery Instant is observable from the data plane
  as the instant the DUT forwards traffic to all destinations over
  the Next-Best Egress Interface (Section 3.4.4) without
  impairments.

Measurement Units:

  seconds (and fractions), reported with resolution sufficient to
  distinguish between different instants

See Also:

  Sustained Convergence Validation Time, Full Convergence, Next-Best
  Egress Interface

First Route Convergence Instant

Definition:

  The time instant the first route entry completes Route Convergence
  (Section 3.1.1)

Discussion:

  Any route may be the first to complete Route Convergence.  The
  First Route Convergence Instant is observable from the data plane
  as the instant that the first packet that is not an Impaired
  Packet (Section 3.8.1) is received from the Next-Best Egress
  Interface (Section 3.4.4) or, for the test cases with Equal Cost
  Multi-Path (ECMP) or Parallel Links, the instant that the
  Forwarding Rate on the Next-Best Egress Interface (Section 3.4.4)
  starts to increase.

Measurement Units:

  seconds (and fractions), reported with resolution sufficient to
  distinguish between different instants

See Also:

  Route Convergence, Impaired Packet, Next-Best Egress Interface

Transitions

Convergence Event Transition

Definition:

  A time interval following a Convergence Event (Section 3.7.1) in
  which the Forwarding Rate on the Preferred Egress Interface
  (Section 3.4.3) gradually reduces to zero.

Discussion:

  The Forwarding Rate during a Convergence Event Transition may or
  may not decrease linearly.
  The Forwarding Rate observed on the DUT egress interface(s) may or
  may not decrease to zero.
  The Offered Load, the number of routes, and the Packet Sampling
  Interval (Section 3.7.4) influence the observations of the
  Convergence Event Transition using the Rate-Derived Method
  (Section 3.5.1).

Measurement Units:

  seconds (and fractions)

See Also:

  Convergence Event, Preferred Egress Interface, Packet Sampling
  Interval, Rate-Derived Method

Convergence Recovery Transition

Definition:

  A time interval following the First Route Convergence Instant
  (Section 3.4.4) in which the Forwarding Rate on the DUT egress
  interface(s) gradually increases to equal to the Offered Load.

Discussion:

  The Forwarding Rate observed during a Convergence Recovery
  Transition may or may not increase linearly.
  The Offered Load, the number of routes, and the Packet Sampling
  Interval (Section 3.7.4) influence the observations of the
  Convergence Recovery Transition using the Rate-Derived Method
  (Section 3.5.1).

Measurement Units:

  seconds (and fractions)

See Also:

  First Route Convergence Instant, Packet Sampling Interval, Rate-
  Derived Method

Interfaces

Local Interface

Definition:

  An interface on the DUT.

Discussion:

  A failure of a Local Interface indicates that the failure occurred
  directly on the DUT.

Measurement Units:

  N/A

See Also:

  Remote Interface

Remote Interface

Definition:

  An interface on a neighboring router that is not directly
  connected to any interface on the DUT.

Discussion:

  A failure of a Remote Interface indicates that the failure
  occurred on a neighbor router's interface that is not directly
  connected to the DUT.

Measurement Units:

  N/A

See Also:

  Local Interface

Preferred Egress Interface

Definition:

  The outbound interface from the DUT for traffic routed to the
  preferred next-hop.

Discussion:

  The Preferred Egress Interface is the egress interface prior to a
  Convergence Event (Section 3.7.1).

Measurement Units:

  N/A

See Also:

  Convergence Event, Next-Best Egress Interface

Next-Best Egress Interface

Definition:

  The outbound interface or set of outbound interfaces in an Equal
  Cost Multipath (ECMP) set or parallel link set of the Device Under
  Test (DUT) for traffic routed to the second-best next-hop.

Discussion:

  The Next-Best Egress Interface becomes the egress interface after
  a Convergence Event (Section 3.4.4).
  For the test cases in [Po11m] using test topologies with an ECMP
  set or parallel link set, the term Preferred Egress Interface
  refers to all members of the link set.

Measurement Units:

  N/A

See Also:

  Convergence Event, Preferred Egress Interface

Benchmarking Methods

Rate-Derived Method

Definition:

  The method to calculate convergence time benchmarks from observing
  the Forwarding Rate each Packet Sampling Interval (Section 3.7.4).

Discussion:

  Figure 1 shows an example of the Forwarding Rate change in time
  during convergence as observed when using the Rate-Derived Method.
       ^         Traffic                      Convergence
  Fwd  |         Start                        Recovery
  Rate |         Instant                      Instant
       | Offered  ^                             ^
       | Load --> ----------\                   /-----------
       |                     \                 /<--- Convergence
       |                      \     Packet    /      Recovery
       |       Convergence --->\     Loss    /       Transition
       |       Event            \           /
       |       Transition        \---------/ <-- Max Packet Loss
       |
       +--------------------------------------------------------->
                       ^                   ^                 time
                  Convergence         First Route
                  Event Instant       Convergence Instant
               Figure 1: Rate-Derived Convergence Graph
  To enable collecting statistics of Out-of-Order Packets per flow
  (see [Th00], Section 3), the Offered Load SHOULD consist of
  multiple Streams [Po06], and each Stream SHOULD consist of a
  single flow .  If sending multiple Streams, the measured traffic
  statistics for all Streams MUST be added together.
  The destination addresses for the Offered Load MUST be distributed
  such that all routes or a statistically representative subset of
  all routes are matched and each of these routes is offered an
  equal share of the Offered Load.  It is RECOMMENDED to send
  traffic to all routes, but a statistically representative subset
  of all routes can be used if required.
  At least one packet per route for all routes matched in the
  Offered Load MUST be offered to the DUT within each Packet
  Sampling Interval.  For maximum accuracy, the value of the Packet
  Sampling Interval SHOULD be as small as possible, but the presence
  of IP Packet Delay Variation (IPDV) [De02] may require that a
  larger Packet Sampling Interval be used.
  The Offered Load, IPDV, the number of routes, and the Packet
  Sampling Interval influence the observations for the Rate-Derived
  Method.  It may be difficult to identify the different convergence
  time instants in the Rate-Derived Convergence Graph.  For example,
  it is possible that a Convergence Event causes the Forwarding Rate
  to drop to zero, while this may not be observed in the Forwarding
  Rate measurements if the Packet Sampling Interval is too large.
  IPDV causes fluctuations in the number of received packets during
  each Packet Sampling Interval.  To account for the presence of
  IPDV in determining if a convergence instant has been reached,
  Forwarding Delay SHOULD be observed during each Packet Sampling
  Interval.  The minimum and maximum number of packets expected in a
  Packet Sampling Interval in presence of IPDV can be calculated
  with Equation 1.
number of packets expected in a Packet Sampling Interval
  in presence of IP Packet Delay Variation
    = expected number of packets without IP Packet Delay Variation
      +/-( (maxDelay - minDelay) * Offered Load)
where minDelay and maxDelay indicate (respectively) the minimum and
maximum Forwarding Delay of packets received during the Packet
Sampling Interval
                            Equation 1
  To determine if a convergence instant has been reached, the number
  of packets received in a Packet Sampling Interval is compared with
  the range of expected number of packets calculated in Equation 1.
  If packets are going over multiple ECMP members and one or more of
  the members has failed, then the number of received packets during
  each Packet Sampling Interval may vary, even excluding presence of
  IPDV.  To prevent fluctuation of the number of received packets
  during each Packet Sampling Interval for this reason, the Packet
  Sampling Interval duration SHOULD be a whole multiple of the time
  between two consecutive packets sent to the same destination.
  Metrics measured at the Packet Sampling Interval MUST include
  Forwarding Rate and Impaired Packet count.
  To measure convergence time benchmarks for Convergence Events
  (Section 3.7.1) that do not cause instantaneous traffic loss for
  all routes at the Convergence Event Instant, the Tester SHOULD
  collect a timestamp of the Convergence Event Instant
  (Section 3.2.2), and the Tester SHOULD observe Forwarding Rate
  separately on the Next-Best Egress Interface.
  Since the Rate-Derived Method does not distinguish between
  individual traffic destinations, it SHOULD NOT be used for any
  route specific measurements.  Therefore, the Rate-Derived Method
  SHOULD NOT be used to benchmark Route Loss of Connectivity Period
  (Section 3.6.5).

Measurement Units:

  N/A

See Also:

  Packet Sampling Interval, Convergence Event, Convergence Event
  Instant, Next-Best Egress Interface, Route Loss of Connectivity
  Period

Loss-Derived Method

Definition:

  The method to calculate the Loss-Derived Convergence Time
  (Section 3.6.4) and Loss-Derived Loss of Connectivity Period
  (Section 3.6.6) benchmarks from the amount of Impaired Packets
  (Section 3.8.1).

Discussion:

  To enable collecting statistics of Out-of-Order Packets per flow
  (see [Th00], Section 3), the Offered Load SHOULD consist of
  multiple Streams [Po06], and each Stream SHOULD consist of a
  single flow .  If sending multiple Streams, the measured traffic
  statistics for all Streams MUST be added together.
  The destination addresses for the Offered Load MUST be distributed
  such that all routes or a statistically representative subset of
  all routes are matched and each of these routes is offered an
  equal share of the Offered Load.  It is RECOMMENDED to send
  traffic to all routes, but a statistically representative subset
  of all routes can be used if required.
  Loss-Derived Method SHOULD always be combined with the Rate-
  Derived Method in order to observe Full Convergence completion.
  The total amount of Convergence Packet Loss is collected after
  Full Convergence completion.
  To measure convergence time and loss of connectivity benchmarks
  for Convergence Events that cause instantaneous traffic loss for
  all routes at the Convergence Event Instant, the Tester SHOULD
  observe the Impaired Packet count on all DUT egress interfaces
  (see Connectivity Packet Loss (Section 3.7.3)).
  To measure convergence time benchmarks for Convergence Events that
  do not cause instantaneous traffic loss for all routes at the
  Convergence Event Instant, the Tester SHOULD collect timestamps of
  the Start Traffic Instant and of the Convergence Event Instant,
  and the Tester SHOULD observe Impaired Packet count separately on
  the Next-Best Egress Interface (see Convergence Packet Loss
  (Section 3.7.2)).
  Since Loss-Derived Method does not distinguish between traffic
  destinations and the Impaired Packet statistics are only collected
  after Full Convergence completion, this method can only be used to
  measure average values over all routes.  For these reasons, Loss-
  Derived Method can only be used to benchmark Loss-Derived
  Convergence Time (Section 3.6.4) and Loss-Derived Loss of
  Connectivity Period (Section 3.6.6).
  Note that the Loss-Derived Method measures an average over all
  routes, including the routes that may not be impacted by the
  Convergence Event, such as routes via non-impacted members of ECMP
  or parallel links.

Measurement Units:

  N/A

See Also:

  Loss-Derived Convergence Time, Loss-Derived Loss of Connectivity
  Period, Connectivity Packet Loss, Convergence Packet Loss

Route-Specific Loss-Derived Method

Definition:

  The method to calculate the Route-Specific Convergence Time
  (Section 3.6.3) benchmark from the amount of Impaired Packets
  (Section 3.8.1) during convergence for a specific route entry.

Discussion:

  To benchmark Route-Specific Convergence Time, the Tester provides
  an Offered Load that consists of multiple Streams [Po06].  Each
  Stream has a single destination address matching a different route
  entry, for all routes or a statistically representative subset of
  all routes.  Each Stream SHOULD consist of a single flow (see
  [Th00], Section 3).  Convergence Packet Loss is measured for each
  Stream separately.
  Route-Specific Loss-Derived Method SHOULD always be combined with
  the Rate-Derived Method in order to observe Full Convergence
  completion.  The total amount of Convergence Packet Loss
  (Section 3.7.2) for each Stream is collected after Full
  Convergence completion.
  Route-Specific Loss-Derived Method is the RECOMMENDED method to
  measure convergence time benchmarks.
  To measure convergence time and loss of connectivity benchmarks
  for Convergence Events that cause instantaneous traffic loss for
  all routes at the Convergence Event Instant, the Tester SHOULD
  observe Impaired Packet count on all DUT egress interfaces (see
  Connectivity Packet Loss (Section 3.7.3)).
  To measure convergence time benchmarks for Convergence Events that
  do not cause instantaneous traffic loss for all routes at the
  Convergence Event Instant, the Tester SHOULD collect timestamps of
  the Start Traffic Instant and of the Convergence Event Instant,
  and the Tester SHOULD observe packet loss separately on the Next-
  Best Egress Interface (see Convergence Packet Loss
  (Section 3.7.2)).
  Since Route-Specific Loss-Derived Method uses traffic streams to
  individual routes, it observes Impaired Packet count as it would
  be experienced by a network user.  For this reason, Route-Specific
  Loss-Derived Method is RECOMMENDED to measure Route-Specific
  Convergence Time benchmarks and Route Loss of Connectivity Period
  benchmarks.

Measurement Units:

  N/A

See Also:

  Route-Specific Convergence Time, Route Loss of Connectivity
  Period, Connectivity Packet Loss, Convergence Packet Loss

Benchmarks

Full Convergence Time

Definition:

  The time duration of the period between the Convergence Event
  Instant and the Convergence Recovery Instant as observed using the
  Rate-Derived Method.

Discussion:

  Using the Rate-Derived Method, Full Convergence Time can be
  calculated as the time difference between the Convergence Event
  Instant and the Convergence Recovery Instant, as shown in Equation
  2.
    Full Convergence Time =
        Convergence Recovery Instant - Convergence Event Instant
                            Equation 2
  The Convergence Event Instant can be derived from the Forwarding
  Rate observation or from a timestamp collected by the Tester.
  For the test cases described in [Po11m], it is expected that Full
  Convergence Time equals the maximum Route-Specific Convergence
  Time when benchmarking all routes in the FIB using the Route-
  Specific Loss-Derived Method.
  It is not possible to measure Full Convergence Time using the
  Loss-Derived Method.

Measurement Units:

  seconds (and fractions)

See Also:

  Full Convergence, Rate-Derived Method, Route-Specific Loss-Derived
  Method, Convergence Event Instant, Convergence Recovery Instant

First Route Convergence Time

Definition:

  The duration of the period between the Convergence Event Instant
  and the First Route Convergence Instant as observed using the
  Rate-Derived Method.

Discussion:

  Using the Rate-Derived Method, First Route Convergence Time can be
  calculated as the time difference between the Convergence Event
  Instant and the First Route Convergence Instant, as shown with
  Equation 3.
  First Route Convergence Time =
      First Route Convergence Instant - Convergence Event Instant
                            Equation 3
  The Convergence Event Instant can be derived from the Forwarding
  Rate observation or from a timestamp collected by the Tester.
  For the test cases described in [Po11m], it is expected that First
  Route Convergence Time equals the minimum Route-Specific
  Convergence Time when benchmarking all routes in the FIB using the
  Route-Specific Loss-Derived Method.
  It is not possible to measure First Route Convergence Time using
  the Loss-Derived Method.

Measurement Units:

  seconds (and fractions)

See Also:

  Rate-Derived Method, Route-Specific Loss-Derived Method,
  Convergence Event Instant, First Route Convergence Instant

Route-Specific Convergence Time

Definition:

  The amount of time it takes for Route Convergence to be completed
  for a specific route, as calculated from the amount of Impaired
  Packets (Section 3.8.1) during convergence for a single route
  entry.

Discussion:

  Route-Specific Convergence Time can only be measured using the
  Route-Specific Loss-Derived Method.
  If the applied Convergence Event causes instantaneous traffic loss
  for all routes at the Convergence Event Instant, Connectivity
  Packet Loss should be observed.  Connectivity Packet Loss is the
  combined Impaired Packet count observed on Preferred Egress
  Interface and Next-Best Egress Interface.  When benchmarking
  Route-Specific Convergence Time, Connectivity Packet Loss is
  measured, and Equation 4 is applied for each measured route.  The
  calculation is equal to Equation 8 in Section 3.6.5.

Route-Specific Convergence Time =

Connectivity Packet Loss for specific route / Offered Load per route
                            Equation 4
  If the applied Convergence Event does not cause instantaneous
  traffic loss for all routes at the Convergence Event Instant, then
  the Tester SHOULD collect timestamps of the Traffic Start Instant
  and of the Convergence Event Instant, and the Tester SHOULD
  observe Convergence Packet Loss separately on the Next-Best Egress
  Interface.  When benchmarking Route-Specific Convergence Time,
  Convergence Packet Loss is measured, and Equation 5 is applied for
  each measured route.

Route-Specific Convergence Time =

 Convergence Packet Loss for specific route / Offered Load per route
 - (Convergence Event Instant - Traffic Start Instant)
                            Equation 5
  The Route-Specific Convergence Time benchmarks enable minimum,
  maximum, average, and median convergence time measurements to be
  reported by comparing the results for the different route entries.
  It also enables benchmarking of convergence time when configuring
  a priority value for the route entry or entries.  Since multiple
  Route-Specific Convergence Times can be measured, it is possible
  to have an array of results.  The format for reporting Route-
  Specific Convergence Time is provided in [Po11m].

Measurement Units:

  seconds (and fractions)

See Also:

  Route-Specific Loss-Derived Method, Convergence Event, Convergence
  Event Instant, Convergence Packet Loss, Connectivity Packet Loss,
  Route Convergence

Loss-Derived Convergence Time

Definition:

  The average Route Convergence time for all routes in the
  Forwarding Information Base (FIB), as calculated from the amount
  of Impaired Packets (Section 3.8.1) during convergence.

Discussion:

  Loss-Derived Convergence Time is measured using the Loss-Derived
  Method.
  If the applied Convergence Event causes instantaneous traffic loss
  for all routes at the Convergence Event Instant, Connectivity
  Packet Loss (Section 3.7.3) should be observed.  Connectivity
  Packet Loss is the combined Impaired Packet count observed on
  Preferred Egress Interface and Next-Best Egress Interface.  When
  benchmarking Loss-Derived Convergence Time, Connectivity Packet
  Loss is measured, and Equation 6 is applied.
            Loss-Derived Convergence Time =
                Connectivity Packet Loss / Offered Load
                            Equation 6
  If the applied Convergence Event does not cause instantaneous
  traffic loss for all routes at the Convergence Event Instant, then
  the Tester SHOULD collect timestamps of the Start Traffic Instant
  and of the Convergence Event Instant, and the Tester SHOULD
  observe Convergence Packet Loss (Section 3.7.2) separately on the
  Next-Best Egress Interface.  When benchmarking Loss-Derived
  Convergence Time, Convergence Packet Loss is measured and Equation
  7 is applied.
     Loss-Derived Convergence Time =
         Convergence Packet Loss / Offered Load
         - (Convergence Event Instant - Traffic Start Instant)
                            Equation 7

Measurement Units:

  seconds (and fractions)

See Also:

  Convergence Packet Loss, Connectivity Packet Loss, Route
  Convergence, Loss-Derived Method

Route Loss of Connectivity Period

Definition:

  The time duration of packet impairments for a specific route entry
  following a Convergence Event until Full Convergence completion,
  as observed using the Route-Specific Loss-Derived Method.

Discussion:

  In general, the Route Loss of Connectivity Period is not equal to
  the Route-Specific Convergence Time.  If the DUT continues to
  forward traffic to the Preferred Egress Interface after the
  Convergence Event is applied, then the Route Loss of Connectivity
  Period will be smaller than the Route-Specific Convergence Time.
  This is also specifically the case after reversing a failure
  event.
  The Route Loss of Connectivity Period may be equal to the Route-
  Specific Convergence Time if, as a characteristic of the
  Convergence Event, traffic for all routes starts dropping
  instantaneously on the Convergence Event Instant.  See discussion
  in [Po11m].
  For the test cases described in [Po11m], the Route Loss of
  Connectivity Period is expected to be a single Loss Period [Ko02].
  When benchmarking the Route Loss of Connectivity Period,
  Connectivity Packet Loss is measured for each route, and Equation
  8 is applied for each measured route entry.  The calculation is
  equal to Equation 4 in Section 3.6.3.

Route Loss of Connectivity Period =

Connectivity Packet Loss for specific route / Offered Load per route
                            Equation 8
  Route Loss of Connectivity Period SHOULD be measured using Route-
  Specific Loss-Derived Method.

Measurement Units:

  seconds (and fractions)

See Also:

  Route-Specific Convergence Time, Route-Specific Loss-Derived
  Method, Connectivity Packet Loss

Loss-Derived Loss of Connectivity Period

Definition:

  The average time duration of packet impairments for all routes
  following a Convergence Event until Full Convergence completion,
  as observed using the Loss-Derived Method.

Discussion:

  In general, the Loss-Derived Loss of Connectivity Period is not
  equal to the Loss-Derived Convergence Time.  If the DUT continues
  to forward traffic to the Preferred Egress Interface after the
  Convergence Event is applied, then the Loss-Derived Loss of
  Connectivity Period will be smaller than the Loss-Derived
  Convergence Time.  This is also specifically the case after
  reversing a failure event.
  The Loss-Derived Loss of Connectivity Period may be equal to the
  Loss-Derived Convergence Time if, as a characteristic of the
  Convergence Event, traffic for all routes starts dropping
  instantaneously on the Convergence Event Instant.  See discussion
  in [Po11m].
  For the test cases described in [Po11m], each route's Route Loss
  of Connectivity Period is expected to be a single Loss Period
  [Ko02].
  When benchmarking the Loss-Derived Loss of Connectivity Period,
  Connectivity Packet Loss is measured for all routes, and Equation
  9 is applied.  The calculation is equal to Equation 6 in
  Section 3.6.4.
     Loss-Derived Loss of Connectivity Period =
        Connectivity Packet Loss for all routes / Offered Load
                            Equation 9
  The Loss-Derived Loss of Connectivity Period SHOULD be measured
  using the Loss-Derived Method.

Measurement Units:

  seconds (and fractions)

See Also:

  Loss-Derived Convergence Time, Loss-Derived Method, Connectivity
  Packet Loss

Measurement Terms

Convergence Event

Definition:

  The occurrence of an event in the network that will result in a
  change in the egress interface of the DUT for routed packets.

Discussion:

  All test cases in [Po11m] are defined such that a Convergence
  Event results in a change of egress interface of the DUT.  Local
  or remote triggers that cause a route calculation that does not
  result in a change in forwarding are not considered.

Measurement Units:

  N/A

See Also:

  Convergence Event Instant

Convergence Packet Loss

Definition:

  The number of Impaired Packets (Section 3.8.1) as observed on the
  Next-Best Egress Interface of the DUT during convergence.

Discussion:

  An Impaired Packet is considered as a lost packet.

Measurement Units:

  number of packets

See Also:

  Connectivity Packet Loss

Connectivity Packet Loss

Definition:

  The number of Impaired Packets observed on all DUT egress
  interfaces during convergence.

Discussion:

  An Impaired Packet is considered as a lost packet.  Connectivity
  Packet Loss is equal to Convergence Packet Loss if the Convergence
  Event causes instantaneous traffic loss for all egress interfaces
  of the DUT except for the Next-Best Egress Interface.

Measurement Units:

  number of packets

See Also:

  Convergence Packet Loss

Packet Sampling Interval

Definition:

  The interval at which the Tester (test equipment) polls to make
  measurements for arriving packets.

Discussion:

  At least one packet per route for all routes matched in the
  Offered Load MUST be offered to the DUT within the Packet Sampling
  Interval.  Metrics measured at the Packet Sampling Interval MUST
  include Forwarding Rate and received packets.
  Packet Sampling Interval can influence the convergence graph as
  observed with the Rate-Derived Method.  This is particularly true
  when implementations complete Full Convergence in less time than
  the Packet Sampling Interval.  The Convergence Event Instant and
  First Route Convergence Instant may not be easily identifiable,
  and the Rate-Derived Method may produce a larger than actual
  convergence time.
  Using a small Packet Sampling Interval in the presence of IPDV
  [De02] may cause fluctuations of the Forwarding Rate observation
  and can prevent correct observation of the different convergence
  time instants.
  The value of the Packet Sampling Interval only contributes to the
  measurement accuracy of the Rate-Derived Method.  For maximum
  accuracy, the value for the Packet Sampling Interval SHOULD be as
  small as possible, but the presence of IPDV may enforce using a
  larger Packet Sampling Interval.

Measurement Units:

  seconds (and fractions)

See Also:

  Rate-Derived Method

Sustained Convergence Validation Time

Definition:

  The amount of time for which the completion of Full Convergence is
  maintained without additional Impaired Packets being observed.

Discussion:

  The purpose of the Sustained Convergence Validation Time is to
  produce convergence benchmarks protected against fluctuation in
  Forwarding Rate after the completion of Full Convergence is
  observed.  The RECOMMENDED Sustained Convergence Validation Time
  to be used is the time to send 5 consecutive packets to each
  destination with a minimum of 5 seconds.  The Benchmarking
  Methodology Working Group (BMWG) selected 5 seconds based upon
  [Br99], which recommends waiting 2 seconds for residual frames to
  arrive (this is the Forwarding Delay Threshold for the last packet
  sent) and 5 seconds for DUT restabilization.

Measurement Units:

  seconds (and fractions)

See Also:

  Full Convergence, Convergence Recovery Instant

Forwarding Delay Threshold

Definition:

  The maximum waiting time threshold used to distinguish between
  packets with very long delay and lost packets that will never
  arrive.

Discussion:

  Applying a Forwarding Delay Threshold allows packets with a too
  large Forwarding Delay to be considered lost, as is required for
  some applications (e.g. voice, video, etc.).  The Forwarding Delay
  Threshold is a parameter of the methodology, and it MUST be
  reported.  [Br99] recommends waiting 2 seconds for residual frames
  to arrive.

Measurement Units:

  seconds (and fractions)

See Also:

  Convergence Packet Loss, Connectivity Packet Loss

Miscellaneous Terms

Impaired Packet

Definition:

  A packet that experienced at least one of the following
  impairments: loss, excessive Forwarding Delay, corruption,
  duplication, reordering.

Discussion:

  A lost packet, a packet with a Forwarding Delay exceeding the
  Forwarding Delay Threshold, a corrupted packet, a Duplicate Packet
  [Po06], and an Out-of-Order Packet [Po06] are Impaired Packets.
  Packet ordering is observed for each individual flow (see [Th00],
  Section 3) of the Offered Load.

Measurement Units:

  N/A

See Also:

  Forwarding Delay Threshold

Security Considerations

Benchmarking activities as described in this memo are limited to technology characterization using controlled stimuli in a laboratory environment, with dedicated address space and the constraints specified in the sections above.

The benchmarking network topology will be an independent test setup and MUST NOT be connected to devices that may forward the test traffic into a production network or misroute traffic to the test management network.

Further, benchmarking is performed on a "black-box" basis, relying solely on measurements observable external to the DUT/SUT.

Special capabilities SHOULD NOT exist in the DUT/SUT specifically for benchmarking purposes. Any implications for network security arising from the DUT/SUT SHOULD be identical in the lab and in production networks.

Acknowledgements

Thanks to Sue Hares, Al Morton, Kevin Dubray, Ron Bonica, David Ward, Peter De Vriendt, Anuj Dewagan, Adrian Farrel, Stewart Bryant, Francis Dupont, and the Benchmarking Methodology Working Group for their contributions to this work.

Normative References

[Br91] Bradner, S., "Benchmarking terminology for network

        interconnection devices", RFC 1242, July 1991.

[Br97] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate

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

[Br99] Bradner, S. and J. McQuaid, "Benchmarking Methodology for

        Network Interconnect Devices", RFC 2544, March 1999.

[Ca90] Callon, R., "Use of OSI IS-IS for routing in TCP/IP and dual

        environments", RFC 1195, December 1990.

[Co08] Coltun, R., Ferguson, D., Moy, J., and A. Lindem, "OSPF for

        IPv6", RFC 5340, July 2008.

[De02] Demichelis, C. and P. Chimento, "IP Packet Delay Variation

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

[Ho08] Hopps, C., "Routing IPv6 with IS-IS", RFC 5308,

        October 2008.

[Ko02] Koodli, R. and R. Ravikanth, "One-way Loss Pattern Sample

        Metrics", RFC 3357, August 2002.

[Ma98] Mandeville, R., "Benchmarking Terminology for LAN Switching

        Devices", RFC 2285, February 1998.

[Mo98] Moy, J., "OSPF Version 2", STD 54, RFC 2328, April 1998.

[Po06] Poretsky, S., Perser, J., Erramilli, S., and S. Khurana,

        "Terminology for Benchmarking Network-layer Traffic Control
        Mechanisms", RFC 4689, October 2006.

[Po11m] Poretsky, S., Imhoff, B., and K. Michielsen, "Benchmarking

        Methodology for Link-State IGP Data-Plane Route
        Convergence", RFC 6413, November 2011.

[Th00] Thaler, D. and C. Hopps, "Multipath Issues in Unicast and

        Multicast Next-Hop Selection", RFC 2991, November 2000.

Authors' Addresses

Scott Poretsky Allot Communications 300 TradeCenter Woburn, MA 01801 USA

Phone: + 1 508 309 2179 EMail: [email protected]

Brent Imhoff F5 Networks 401 Elliott Avenue West Seattle, WA 98119 USA

Phone: + 1 314 378 2571 EMail: [email protected]

Kris Michielsen Cisco Systems 6A De Kleetlaan Diegem, BRABANT 1831 Belgium

EMail: [email protected]