Title :
TCP Pacing in Data Center Networks
Author :
Ghobadi, Mostafa ; Ganjali, Yashar
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Comput. Sci., Univ. of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada
Abstract :
This paper studies the effectiveness of TCP pacing in a data center setting. TCP senders inject bursts of packets into the network at the beginning of each round-trip time. These bursts stress the network queues which may cause loss, reduction in throughput and increased latency. Such undesirable effects become more pronounced in data center environments where traffic is bursty in nature and buffer sizes are small. TCP pacing is believed to reduce the burstiness of TCP traffic and to mitigate the impact of small buffering in routers. Unfortunately, current research literature has not always agreed on the overall benefits of pacing. In this paper, we present a model for the effectiveness of pacing. Our model demonstrates that for a given buffer size, as the number of concurrent flows are increased beyond a Point of Inflection (PoI), non-paced TCP outperforms paced TCP. We present a lower bound for the PoI and argue that increasing the number of concurrent flows beyond the PoI, increases inter-flow burstiness of paced packets and diminishes the effectiveness of pacing.
Keywords :
computer centres; telecommunication congestion control; telecommunication network routing; telecommunication traffic; transport protocols; PoI; TCP pacing; TCP senders; TCP traffic; buffer size; buffering; concurrent flows; data center environments; data center network; data center setting; interflow burstiness; network queues; nonpaced TCP; paced packets; packet bursts; point of inflection; round-trip time; routers; throughput reduction; Bandwidth; Delays; Distributed databases; Hardware; Servers; Synchronization; Throughput;
Conference_Titel :
High-Performance Interconnects (HOTI), 2013 IEEE 21st Annual Symposium on
Conference_Location :
San Jose, CA
DOI :
10.1109/HOTI.2013.18