Re: [PATCH] tcp: Implement a two-level initial RTO as per draft RFC2988bis-02.

From: Alexander Zimmermann
Date: Thu May 19 2011 - 02:36:19 EST



Am 19.05.2011 um 08:25 schrieb tsuna:

> On Wed, May 18, 2011 at 11:10 PM, Alexander Zimmermann
> <alexander.zimmermann@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>> Am 19.05.2011 um 06:33 schrieb tsuna:
>>> Presumably if the user decides to tweak these knobs, they'll know
>>> what's appropriate for their environment.
>>
>> Are you sure? I'm not. I fully agree with David that minRTO is
>
> s/minRTO/initRTO/, right?

Yes of course :-)

>
>> something that a user shout not control at all
>
> I personally don't like to hold the hand and spoon feed users too
> much, I want to trust them to be responsible and know what they're
> doing. Yes, there will always be people who will act stupid and do
> stupid things with whatever knobs you expose. The web is full of
> people who advise to tune up all the TCP rmem/wmem parameters to crazy
> high level based on the voodoo belief that they're going to improve
> their TCP performance, but then as long as you have knobs in your
> system, these people will misuse them anyway and shoot themselves in
> the foot, what can we do about that.

But if you tune rmen/wmen to crazy level, it's only your TCP performance
that hurts (and maybe the receiver's one).

If you set the initRTO=0.1s, it's good for me but bad for the rest of the
world. That's the difference.

Or do you want to implement a lower barrier of 1sec so that you can ensure
that nobody set the initRTO lower than 1s?


>
> There's also a good chunk of people who know what they're doing, and
> for them compile-time constants are annoying because it's inconvenient
> to experiment and iterate quickly when you need to recompile your
> kernel to change a value. If turning the compile time constant into a
> knob leaves the code reasonably straightforward and doesn't incur too
> much overhead, then why not do it?
>
> Regarding this knob in particular, I can imagine that people who are
> in environment where RTT easily gets around 1s will be upset by the
> change in the default value, and doubly upset that they have to
> recompile their kernel to change the value back to 3s. I'm in favor
> of the reduction of initRTO, for the same reason Google is, but I can
> also understand that the direction we're taking might not be
> appropriate for everyone.
>
> --
> Benoit "tsuna" Sigoure
> Software Engineer @ www.StumbleUpon.com

//
// Dipl.-Inform. Alexander Zimmermann
// Department of Computer Science, Informatik 4
// RWTH Aachen University
// Ahornstr. 55, 52056 Aachen, Germany
// phone: (49-241) 80-21422, fax: (49-241) 80-22222
// email: zimmermann@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
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