Dual-Queue Coupled Active Queue Management for Low Latency, Low Loss, and Scalable Throughput
RFC 9332, “Dual-Queue Coupled Active Queue Management for Low Latency, Low Loss, and Scalable Throughput”, is an Experimental document published in January 2023 by K. De Schepper, B. Briscoe, G. White. The canonical text is published by the RFC Editor.
Abstract
This specification defines a framework for coupling the Active Queue Management (AQM) algorithms in two queues intended for flows with different responses to congestion. This provides a way for the Internet to transition from the scaling problems of standard TCP-Reno-friendly ('Classic') congestion controls to the family of 'Scalable' congestion controls. These are designed for consistently very low queuing latency, very low congestion loss, and scaling of per-flow throughput by using Explicit Congestion Notification (ECN) in a modified way. Until the Coupled Dual Queue (DualQ), these Scalable L4S congestion controls could only be deployed where a clean-slate environment could be arranged, such as in private data centres.
This specification first explains how a Coupled DualQ works. It then gives the normative requirements that are necessary for it to work well. All this is independent of which two AQMs are used, but pseudocode examples of specific AQMs are given in appendices.
What “Experimental” means
Describes a specification that is part of a research or development effort, published so the community can gain experience with it.
The canonical text of RFC 9332 is hosted at rfc-editor.org. Available in HTML,TXT,PDF,XML.
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