Data Center TCP : TCP Congestion Control for Data Centers
RFC 8257, “Data Center TCP : TCP Congestion Control for Data Centers”, is an Informational document published in October 2017 by S. Bensley, D. Thaler, P. Balasubramanian, L. Eggert, G. Judd. The canonical text is published by the RFC Editor.
Abstract
This Informational RFC describes Data Center TCP (DCTCP): a TCP congestion control scheme for data-center traffic. DCTCP extends the Explicit Congestion Notification (ECN) processing to estimate the fraction of bytes that encounter congestion rather than simply detecting that some congestion has occurred. DCTCP then scales the TCP congestion window based on this estimate. This method achieves high-burst tolerance, low latency, and high throughput with shallow- buffered switches. This memo also discusses deployment issues related to the coexistence of DCTCP and conventional TCP, discusses the lack of a negotiating mechanism between sender and receiver, and presents some possible mitigations. This memo documents DCTCP as currently implemented by several major operating systems. DCTCP, as described in this specification, is applicable to deployments in controlled environments like data centers, but it must not be deployed over the public Internet without additional measures.
What “Informational” means
Published for the general information of the community. It does not define an IETF standard and carries no standards-track status.
The canonical text of RFC 8257 is hosted at rfc-editor.org. Available in TXT,HTML.
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