Re: [PATCH] tcp: Implement a two-level initial RTO as per draftRFC 2988bis-02.
From: David Miller
Date: Thu May 19 2011 - 00:18:29 EST
From: tsuna <tsunanet@xxxxxxxxx>
Date: Wed, 18 May 2011 20:56:33 -0700
> On Wed, May 18, 2011 at 7:36 PM, David Miller <davem@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>> From: Benoit Sigoure <tsunanet@xxxxxxxxx>
>> Date: Wed, 18 May 2011 19:22:24 -0700
>>
>>> Prior to this patch, Linux would always use 3 seconds (compile-time
>>> constant) as the initial RTO. Draft RFC 2988bis-02 proposes to tune
>>> this down to 1 second and, in case of a timeout during the TCP 3WHS,
>>> revert the RTO back up to 3 seconds when data transmission begins.
>>
>> We just had a discussion where it was determined that changes to
>> these settings are "network specific" and therefore that if it
>> is appropriate at all (I'm still not convinced) it is only suitable
>> as a routing metric.
>
> Fair enough. I'll take another stab at it and see if I can change
> this to be on a per network basis. Do I need any patch that's not yet
> in Linus' tree? I'm referring to this:
Keep in mind another thing I do not like about this knob.
The IETF draft has a requirement that we fallback to 3 seconds if the
initial RTO is 1 second.
Nothing in your facilities ensure this, or provide a way for the
kernel to make sure this is the case.
And for other values of initial RTO, what fallback is appropriate?
As a result of all of this, I do not really think this is something
the user should control at all.
I really would rather see the initial RTO be static and be set to 1
with fallback RTO of 3.
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