Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) I. Johansson Request for Comments: 8298 Z. Sarker Category: Experimental Ericsson AB ISSN: 2070-1721 December 2017
Self-Clocked Rate Adaptation for Multimedia
Abstract
This memo describes a rate adaptation algorithm for conversational media services such as interactive video. The solution conforms to the packet conservation principle and uses a hybrid loss-and-delay- based congestion control algorithm. The algorithm is evaluated over both simulated Internet bottleneck scenarios as well as in a Long Term Evolution (LTE) system simulator and is shown to achieve both low latency and high video throughput in these scenarios.
Status of This Memo
This document is not an Internet Standards Track specification; it is published for examination, experimental implementation, and evaluation.
This document defines an Experimental Protocol for the Internet community. This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF). It represents the consensus of the IETF community. It has received public review and has been approved for publication by the Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG). Not all documents approved by the IESG are a candidate for any level of Internet Standard; see Section 2 of RFC 7841.
Information about the current status of this document, any errata, and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8298.
Johansson & Sarker Experimental [Page 1]
RFC 8298 SCReAM December 2017
Copyright Notice
Copyright (c) 2017 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the document authors. All rights reserved.
This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal Provisions Relating to IETF Documents (https://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of publication of this document. Please review these documents carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect to this document. Code Components extracted from this document must include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as described in the Simplified BSD License.
Congestion in the Internet occurs when the transmitted bitrate is higher than the available capacity over a given transmission path. Applications that are deployed in the Internet have to employ congestion control to achieve robust performance and to avoid congestion collapse in the Internet. Interactive real-time communication imposes a lot of requirements on the transport; therefore, a robust, efficient rate adaptation for all access types is an important part of interactive real-time communications, as the transmission channel bandwidth can vary over time. Wireless access such as LTE, which is an integral part of the current Internet, increases the importance of rate adaptation as the channel bandwidth of a default LTE bearer [QoS-3GPP] can change considerably in a very short time frame. Thus, a rate adaptation solution for interactive real-time media, such as WebRTC [RFC7478], should be both quick and be able to operate over a large range in channel capacity. This memo describes Self-Clocked Rate Adaptation for Multimedia (SCReAM), a solution that implements congestion control for RTP streams [RFC3550]. While SCReAM was originally devised for WebRTC, it can also be used for other applications where congestion control of RTP streams is necessary. SCReAM is based on the self-clocking principle of TCP and uses techniques similar to what is used in the rate adaptation algorithm based on Low Extra Delay Background Transport (LEDBAT) [RFC6817]. SCReAM is not entirely self-clocked as it augments self-clocking with pacing and a minimum send rate. SCReAM can take advantage of Explicit Congestion Notification (ECN) in cases where ECN is supported by the network and the hosts. However, ECN is not required for the basic congestion control functionality in SCReAM.
[WIRELESS-TESTS] describes the complications that can be observed in wireless environments. Wireless access such as LTE typically cannot guarantee a given bandwidth; this is true especially for default bearers. The network throughput can vary considerably, for instance, in cases where the wireless terminal is moving around. Even though LTE can support bitrates well above 100 Mbps, there are cases when the available bitrate can be much lower; examples are situations with high network load and poor coverage. An additional complication is that the network throughput can drop for short time intervals (e.g., at handover); these short glitches are initially very difficult to distinguish from more permanent reductions in throughput.
Unlike wireline bottlenecks with large statistical multiplexing, it is not possible to try to maintain a given bitrate when congestion is detected with the hope that other flows will yield. This is because
Johansson & Sarker Experimental [Page 4]
RFC 8298 SCReAM December 2017
there are generally few other flows competing for the same bottleneck. Each user gets its own variable throughput bottleneck, where the throughput depends on factors like channel quality, network load, and historical throughput. The bottom line is, if the throughput drops, the sender has no other option than to reduce the bitrate. Once the radio scheduler has reduced the resource allocation for a bearer, a flow (which is using RTP Media Congestion Avoidance Techniques (RMCAT)) in that bearer aims to reduce the sending rate quite quickly (within one RTT) in order to avoid excessive queuing delay or packet loss.
Self-clocked congestion control algorithms provide a benefit over their rate-based counterparts in that the former consists of two adaptation mechanisms:
o A congestion window computation that evolves over a longer timescale (several RTTs) especially when the congestion window evolution is dictated by estimated delay (to minimize vulnerability to, e.g., short-term delay variations).
o A fine-grained congestion control given by the self-clocking; it operates on a shorter time scale (1 RTT). The benefits of self- clocking are also elaborated upon in [TFWC].
A rate-based congestion control algorithm typically adjusts the rate based on delay and loss. The congestion detection needs to be done with a certain time lag to avoid overreaction to spurious congestion events such as delay spikes. Despite the fact that there are two or more congestion indications, the outcome is that there is still only one mechanism to adjust the sending rate. This makes it difficult to reach the goals of high throughput and prompt reaction to congestion.
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in BCP 14 [RFC2119] [RFC8174] when, and only when, they appear in all capitals, as shown here.
The core SCReAM algorithm has similarities to the concepts of self- clocking used in TCP-friendly window-based congestion control [TFWC] and follows the packet conservation principle. The packet conservation principle is described as a key factor behind the protection of networks from congestion [Packet-conservation].
In SCReAM, the receiver of the media echoes a list of received RTP packets and the timestamp of the RTP packet with the highest sequence number back to the sender in feedback packets. The sender keeps a list of transmitted packets, their respective sizes, and the time they were transmitted. This information is used to determine the number of bytes that can be transmitted at any given time instant. A congestion window puts an upper limit on how many bytes can be in flight, i.e., transmitted but not yet acknowledged.
The congestion window is determined in a way similar to LEDBAT [RFC6817]. LEDBAT is a congestion control algorithm that uses send and receive timestamps to estimate the queuing delay (from now on denoted "qdelay") along the transmission path. This information is used to adjust the congestion window. The use of LEDBAT ensures that the end-to-end latency is kept low. [LEDBAT-delay-impact] shows that LEDBAT has certain inherent issues that make it counteract its purpose of achieving low delay. The general problem described in the paper is that the base delay is offset by LEDBAT's own queue buildup. The big difference with using LEDBAT in the SCReAM context lies in the facts that the source is rate limited and that the RTP queue must be kept short (preferably empty). In addition, the output from a video encoder is rarely constant bitrate; static content (talking heads, for instance) gives almost zero video bitrate. This yields two useful properties when LEDBAT is used with SCReAM; they help to avoid the issues described in [LEDBAT-delay-impact]:
1. There is always a certain probability that SCReAM is short of data to transmit; this means that the network queue will become empty every once in a while.
2. The max video bitrate can be lower than the link capacity. If the max video bitrate is 5 Mbps and the capacity is 10 Mbps, then the network queue will become empty.
It is sufficient that any of the two conditions above is fulfilled to make the base delay update properly. Furthermore, [LEDBAT-delay-impact] describes an issue with short-lived competing flows. In SCReAM, these short-lived flows will cause the self- clocking to slow down, thereby building up the RTP queue; in turn, this results in a reduced media video bitrate. Thus, SCReAM slows
Johansson & Sarker Experimental [Page 6]
RFC 8298 SCReAM December 2017
the bitrate more when there are competing short-lived flows than the traditional use of LEDBAT does. The basic functionality in the use of LEDBAT in SCReAM is quite simple; however, there are a few steps in order to make the concept work with conversational media:
o Congestion window validation techniques. These are similar to the method described in [RFC7661]. Congestion window validation ensures that the congestion window is limited by the actual number bytes in flight; this is important especially in the context of rate-limited sources such as video. Lack of congestion window validation would lead to a slow reaction to congestion as the congestion window does not properly reflect the congestion state in the network. The allowed idle period in this memo is shorter than in [RFC7661]; this to avoid excessive delays in the cases where, e.g., wireless throughput has decreased during a period where the output bitrate from the media coder has been low (for instance, due to inactivity). Furthermore, this memo allows for more relaxed rules for when the congestion window is allowed to grow; this is necessary as the variable output bitrate generally means that the congestion window is often underutilized.
o Fast increase mode makes the bitrate increase faster when no congestion is detected. It makes the media bitrate ramp up within 5 to 10 seconds. The behavior is similar to TCP slowstart. Fast increase mode is exited when congestion is detected. However, fast increase mode can resume if the congestion level is low; this enables a reasonably quick rate increase in case link throughput increases.
o A qdelay trend is computed for earlier detection of incipient congestion; as a result, it reduces jitter.
o Addition of a media rate control function.
o Use of inflection points in the media rate calculation to achieve reduced jitter.
o Adjustment of qdelay target for better performance when competing with other loss-based congestion-controlled flows.
The above-mentioned features will be described in more detail in Sections 3.1 to 3.3. The full details are described in 4">Section 4.
The SCReAM algorithm consists of three main parts: network congestion control, sender transmission control, and media rate control. All of these parts reside at the sender side. Figure 1 shows the functional overview of a SCReAM sender. The receiver-side algorithm is very simple in comparison, as it only generates feedback containing acknowledgements of received RTP packets and an ECN count.
The network congestion control sets an upper limit on how much data can be in the network (bytes in flight); this limit is called CWND (congestion window) and is used in the sender transmission control.
Johansson & Sarker Experimental [Page 8]
RFC 8298 SCReAM December 2017
The SCReAM congestion control method uses techniques similar to LEDBAT [RFC6817] to measure the qdelay. As is the case with LEDBAT, it is not necessary to use synchronized clocks in the sender and receiver in order to compute the qdelay. However, it is necessary that they use the same clock frequency, or that the clock frequency at the receiver can be inferred reliably by the sender. Failure to meet this requirement leads to malfunction in the SCReAM congestion control algorithm due to incorrect estimation of the network queue delay.
The SCReAM sender calculates the congestion window based on the feedback from the SCReAM receiver. The congestion window is allowed to increase if the qdelay is below a predefined qdelay target; otherwise, the congestion window decreases. The qdelay target is typically set to 50-100 ms. This ensures that the queuing delay is kept low. The reaction to loss or ECN events leads to an instant reduction of CWND. Note that the source rate-limited nature of real- time media, such as video, typically means that the queuing delay will mostly be below the given delay target. This is contrary to the case where large files are transmitted using LEDBAT congestion control and the queuing delay will stay close to the delay target.
The sender transmission control limits the output of data, given by the relation between the number of bytes in flight and the congestion window. Packet pacing is used to mitigate issues with ACK compression that MAY cause increased jitter and/or packet loss in the media traffic. Packet pacing limits the packet transmission rate given by the estimated link throughput. Even if the send window allows for the transmission of a number of packets, these packets are not transmitted immediately; rather, they are transmitted in intervals given by the packet size and the estimated link throughput.
The media rate control serves to adjust the media bitrate to ramp up quickly enough to get a fair share of the system resources when link throughput increases.
The reaction to reduced throughput MUST be prompt in order to avoid getting too much data queued in the RTP packet queue(s) in the sender. The media bitrate is decreased if the RTP queue size exceeds a threshold.
In cases where the sender's frame queues increase rapidly, such as in the case of a Radio Access Type (RAT) handover, the SCReAM sender MAY implement additional actions, such as discarding of encoded media
Johansson & Sarker Experimental [Page 9]
RFC 8298 SCReAM December 2017
frames or frame skipping in order to ensure that the RTP queues are drained quickly. Frame skipping results in the frame rate being temporarily reduced. Which method to use is a design choice and is outside the scope of this algorithm description.
This section describes the sender-side algorithm in more detail. It is split between the network congestion control, sender transmission control, and media rate control.
A SCReAM sender implements media rate control and an RTP queue for each media type or source, where RTP packets containing encoded media frames are temporarily stored for transmission. Figure 1 shows the details when a single media source (or stream) is used. A transmission scheduler (not shown in the figure) is added to support multiple streams. The transmission scheduler can enforce differing priorities between the streams and act like a coupled congestion controller for multiple flows. Support for multiple streams is implemented in [SCReAM-CPP-implementation].
Media frames are encoded and forwarded to the RTP queue (1) in Figure 1. The media rate adaptation adapts to the size of the RTP queue (2) and provides a target rate for the media encoder (3). The RTP packets are picked from the RTP queue (4), for multiple flows from each RTP queue based on some defined priority order or simply in a round-robin fashion, by the sender transmission controller. The sender transmission controller (in case of multiple flows a transmission scheduler) sends the RTP packets to the UDP socket (5). In the general case, all media SHOULD go through the sender transmission controller and is limited so that the number of bytes in flight is less than the congestion window. RTCP packets are received (6) and the information about the bytes in flight and congestion window is exchanged between the network congestion control and the sender transmission control (7).
Constants and state variables are listed in this section. Temporary variables are not listed; instead, they are appended with '_t' in the pseudocode to indicate their local scope.
The RECOMMENDED values, within parentheses "()", for the constants are deduced from experiments.
QDELAY_TARGET_LO (0.1 s) Target value for the minimum qdelay.
QDELAY_TARGET_HI (0.4 s) Target value for the maximum qdelay. This parameter provides an upper limit to how much the target qdelay (qdelay_target) can be increased in order to cope with competing loss-based flows. However, the target qdelay does not have to be initialized to this high value, as it would increase end-to-end delay and also make the rate control and congestion control loops sluggish.
QDELAY_WEIGHT (0.1) Averaging factor for qdelay_fraction_avg.
QDELAY_TREND_TH (0.2) Threshold for the detection of incipient congestion.
MIN_CWND (3000 bytes) Minimum congestion window.
MAX_BYTES_IN_FLIGHT_HEAD_ROOM (1.1) Headroom for the limitation of CWND.
GAIN (1.0) Gain factor for congestion window adjustment.
BETA_LOSS (0.8) CWND scale factor due to loss event.
BETA_ECN (0.9) CWND scale factor due to ECN event.
BETA_R (0.9) Scale factor for target rate due to loss event.
MSS (1000 byte) Maximum segment size = Max RTP packet size.
RATE_ADJUST_INTERVAL (0.2 s) Interval between media bitrate adjustments.
TARGET_BITRATE_MIN Minimum target bitrate in bps (bits per second).
Johansson & Sarker Experimental [Page 11]
RFC 8298 SCReAM December 2017
TARGET_BITRATE_MAX Maximum target bitrate in bps.
RAMP_UP_SPEED (200000 bps/s) Maximum allowed rate increase speed.
PRE_CONGESTION_GUARD (0.0..1.0) Guard factor against early congestion onset. A higher value gives less jitter, possibly at the expense of a lower link utilization. This value MAY be subject to tuning depending on e.g., media coder characteristics. Experiments with H264 and VP8 indicate that 0.1 is a suitable value. See [SCReAM-CPP-implementation] and [SCReAM-implementation-experience] for evaluation of a real implementation.
TX_QUEUE_SIZE_FACTOR (0.0..2.0) Guard factor against RTP queue buildup. This value MAY be subject to tuning depending on, e.g., media coder characteristics. Experiments with H264 and VP8 indicate that 1.0 is a suitable value. See [SCReAM-CPP-implementation] and [SCReAM-implementation-experience] for evaluation of a real implementation.
RTP_QDELAY_TH (0.02 s) RTP queue delay threshold for a target rate reduction.
TARGET_RATE_SCALE_RTP_QDELAY (0.95) Scale factor for target rate when RTP qdelay threshold exceeds RTP_QDELAY_TH.
QDELAY_TREND_LO (0.2) Threshold value for qdelay_trend.
T_RESUME_FAST_INCREASE (5 s) Time span until fast increase mode can be resumed, given that the qdelay_trend is below QDELAY_TREND_LO.
The values within parentheses "()" indicate initial values.
qdelay_target (QDELAY_TARGET_LO) qdelay target, a variable qdelay target is introduced to manage cases where a fixed qdelay target would otherwise starve the RMCAT flow under such circumstances (e.g., FTP competes for the bandwidth over the same bottleneck). The qdelay target is allowed to vary between QDELAY_TARGET_LO and QDELAY_TARGET_HI.
Johansson & Sarker Experimental [Page 12]
RFC 8298 SCReAM December 2017
qdelay_fraction_avg (0.0) Fractional qdelay filtered by the Exponentially Weighted Moving Average (EWMA).
qdelay_fraction_hist[20] ({0,..,0}) Vector of the last 20 fractional qdelay samples.
qdelay_trend_mem (0.0) Low-pass filtered version of qdelay_trend.
qdelay_norm_hist[100] ({0,..,0}) Vector of the last 100 normalized qdelay samples.
in_fast_increase (true) True if in fast increase mode.
cwnd (MIN_CWND) Congestion window.
bytes_newly_acked (0) The number of bytes that was acknowledged with the last received acknowledgement, i.e., bytes acknowledged since the last CWND update.
max_bytes_in_flight (0) The maximum number of bytes in flight over a sliding time window, i.e., transmitted but not yet acknowledged bytes.
send_wnd (0) Upper limit to how many bytes can currently be transmitted. Updated when cwnd is updated and when RTP packet is transmitted.
target_bitrate (0 bps) Media target bitrate.
target_bitrate_last_max (1 bps) Inflection point of the media target bitrate, i.e., the last known highest target_bitrate. Used to limit bitrate increase speed close to the last known congestion point.
This section explains the network congestion control, which performs two main functions:
o Computation of congestion window at the sender: This gives an upper limit to the number of bytes in flight.
o Calculation of send window at the sender: RTP packets are transmitted if allowed by the relation between the number of bytes in flight and the congestion window. This is controlled by the send window.
SCReAM is a window-based and byte-oriented congestion control protocol, where the number of bytes transmitted is inferred from the size of the transmitted RTP packets. Thus, a list of transmitted RTP packets and their respective transmission times (wall-clock time) MUST be kept for further calculation.
The number of bytes in flight (bytes_in_flight) is computed as the sum of the sizes of the RTP packets ranging from the RTP packet most recently transmitted, down to but not including the acknowledged packet with the highest sequence number. This can be translated to the difference between the highest transmitted byte sequence number and the highest acknowledged byte sequence number. As an example: If an RTP packet with sequence number SN is transmitted and the last acknowledgement indicates SN-5 as the highest received sequence number, then bytes_in_flight is computed as the sum of the size of RTP packets with sequence number SN-4, SN-3, SN-2, SN-1, and SN. It
Johansson & Sarker Experimental [Page 14]
RFC 8298 SCReAM December 2017
does not matter if, for instance, the packet with sequence number SN-3 was lost -- the size of RTP packet with sequence number SN-3 will still be considered in the computation of bytes_in_flight.
Furthermore, a variable bytes_newly_acked is incremented with a value corresponding to how much the highest sequence number has increased since the last feedback. As an example: If the previous acknowledgement indicated the highest sequence number N and the new acknowledgement indicated N+3, then bytes_newly_acked is incremented by a value equal to the sum of the sizes of RTP packets with sequence number N+1, N+2, and N+3. Packets that are lost are also included, which means that even though, e.g., packet N+2 was lost, its size is still included in the update of bytes_newly_acked. The bytes_newly_acked variable is reset to zero after a CWND update.
The feedback from the receiver is assumed to consist of the following elements.
o A list of received RTP packets' sequence numbers.
o The wall-clock timestamp corresponding to the received RTP packet with the highest sequence number.
o The accumulated number of ECN-CE-marked packets (n_ECN). Here, "CE" refers to "Congestion Experienced".
When the sender receives RTCP feedback, the qdelay is calculated as outlined in [RFC6817]. A qdelay sample is obtained for each received acknowledgement. No smoothing of the qdelay is performed; however, some smoothing occurs anyway because the CWND computation is a low- pass filter function. A number of variables are updated as illustrated by the pseudocode below; temporary variables are appended with '_t'. As mentioned in Section 6, calculation of the proper congestion window and media bitrate may benefit from additional optimizations to handle very high and very low bitrates, and from additional damping to handle periodic packet bursts. Some such optimizations are implemented in [SCReAM-CPP-implementation], but they do not form part of the specification of SCReAM at this time.
Johansson & Sarker Experimental [Page 15]
RFC 8298 SCReAM December 2017
<CODE BEGINS> update_variables(qdelay): qdelay_fraction_t = qdelay / qdelay_target # Calculate moving average qdelay_fraction_avg = (1 - QDELAY_WEIGHT) * qdelay_fraction_avg + QDELAY_WEIGHT * qdelay_fraction_t update_qdelay_fraction_hist(qdelay_fraction_t) # Compute the average of the values in qdelay_fraction_hist avg_t = average(qdelay_fraction_hist) # R is an autocorrelation function of qdelay_fraction_hist, # with the mean (DC component) removed, at lag K # The subtraction of the scalar avg_t from # qdelay_fraction_hist is performed element-wise a_t = R(qdelay_fraction_hist-avg_t, 1) / R(qdelay_fraction_hist-avg_t, 0) # Calculate qdelay trend qdelay_trend = min(1.0, max(0.0, a_t * qdelay_fraction_avg)) # Calculate a 'peak-hold' qdelay_trend; this gives a memory # of congestion in the past qdelay_trend_mem = max(0.99 * qdelay_trend_mem, qdelay_trend) <CODE ENDS>
The qdelay fraction is sampled every 50 ms, and the last 20 samples are stored in a vector (qdelay_fraction_hist). This vector is used in the computation of a qdelay trend that gives a value between 0.0 and 1.0 depending on the estimated congestion level. The prediction coefficient 'a_t' has positive values if qdelay shows an increasing or decreasing trend; thus, an indication of congestion is obtained before the qdelay target is reached. As a side effect, if qdelay decreases, it's taken as a sign of congestion; however, experiments have shown that this is beneficial, as increasing or decreasing queue delay is an indication that the transmit rate is very close to the path capacity.
The autocorrelation function 'R' is defined as follows. Let x be a vector constituting N values, the biased autocorrelation function for a given lag=k for the vector x is given by.
n=N-k R(x,k) = SUM x(n) * x(n + k) n=1
The prediction coefficient is further multiplied with qdelay_fraction_avg to reduce sensitivity to increasing qdelay when it is very small. The 50 ms sampling is a simplification that could have the effect that the same qdelay is sampled several times; however, this does not pose any problem, as the vector is only used to determine if the qdelay is increasing or decreasing. The
Johansson & Sarker Experimental [Page 16]
RFC 8298 SCReAM December 2017
qdelay_trend is utilized in the media rate control to indicate incipient congestion and to determine when to exit from fast increase mode. qdelay_trend_mem is used to enforce a less aggressive rate increase after congestion events. The function update_qdelay_fraction_hist(..) removes the oldest element and adds the latest qdelay_fraction element to the qdelay_fraction_hist vector.
A loss event is indicated if one or more RTP packets are declared missing. The loss detection is described in Section 4.1.2.4. Once a loss event is detected, further detected lost RTP packets SHOULD be ignored for a full smoothed round-trip time; the intention is to limit the congestion window decrease to at most once per round trip.
The congestion window back-off due to loss events is deliberately a bit less than is the case with TCP Reno, for example. TCP is generally used to transmit whole files; the file is then like a source with an infinite bitrate until the whole file has been transmitted. SCReAM, on the other hand, has a source whose rate is limited to a value close to the available transmit rate and often below that value; the effect is that SCReAM has less opportunity to grab free capacity than a TCP-based file transfer. To compensate for this, it is RECOMMENDED to let SCReAM reduce the congestion window less than what is the case with TCP when loss events occur.
An ECN event is detected if the n_ECN counter in the feedback report has increased since the previous received feedback. Once an ECN event is detected, the n_ECN counter is ignored for a full smoothed round-trip time; the intention is to limit the congestion window decrease to at most once per round trip. The congestion window back- off due to an ECN event MAY be smaller than if a loss event occurs. This is in line with the idea outlined in [ALT-BACKOFF] to enable ECN marking thresholds lower than the corresponding packet drop thresholds.
The update of the congestion window depends on if loss, ECN-marking, or neither of the two occurs. The pseudocode below describes the actions for each case.
Johansson & Sarker Experimental [Page 17]
RFC 8298 SCReAM December 2017
<CODE BEGINS> on congestion event(qdelay): # Either loss or ECN mark is detected in_fast_increase = false if (is loss) # Loss is detected cwnd = max(MIN_CWND, cwnd * BETA_LOSS) else # No loss, so it is then an ECN mark cwnd = max(MIN_CWND, cwnd * BETA_ECN) end adjust_qdelay_target(qdelay) #compensating for competing flows calculate_send_window(qdelay, qdelay_target)
# When no congestion event on acknowledgement(qdelay): update_bytes_newly_acked() update_cwnd(bytes_newly_acked) adjust_qdelay_target(qdelay) # compensating for competing flows calculate_send_window(qdelay, qdelay_target) check_to_resume_fast_increase() <CODE ENDS>
The methods are described in detail below.
The congestion window update is based on qdelay, except for the occurrence of loss events (one or more lost RTP packets in one RTT) or ECN events, which were described earlier.
Pseudocode for the update of the congestion window is found below.
Johansson & Sarker Experimental [Page 18]
RFC 8298 SCReAM December 2017
<CODE BEGINS> update_cwnd(bytes_newly_acked): # In fast increase mode? if (in_fast_increase) if (qdelay_trend >= QDELAY_TREND_TH) # Incipient congestion detected; exit fast increase mode in_fast_increase = false else # No congestion yet; increase cwnd if it # is sufficiently used # Additional slack of bytes_newly_acked is # added to ensure that CWND growth occurs # even when feedback is sparse if (bytes_in_flight * 1.5 + bytes_newly_acked > cwnd) cwnd = cwnd + bytes_newly_acked end return end end
# Not in fast increase mode # off_target calculated as with LEDBAT off_target_t = (qdelay_target - qdelay) / qdelay_target
gain_t = GAIN # Adjust congestion window cwnd_delta_t = gain_t * off_target_t * bytes_newly_acked * MSS / cwnd if (off_target_t > 0 && bytes_in_flight * 1.25 + bytes_newly_acked <= cwnd) # No cwnd increase if window is underutilized # Additional slack of bytes_newly_acked is # added to ensure that CWND growth occurs # even when feedback is sparse cwnd_delta_t = 0; end
# Apply delta cwnd += cwnd_delta_t # limit cwnd to the maximum number of bytes in flight cwnd = min(cwnd, max_bytes_in_flight * MAX_BYTES_IN_FLIGHT_HEAD_ROOM) cwnd = max(cwnd, MIN_CWND)
<CODE ENDS>
Johansson & Sarker Experimental [Page 19]
RFC 8298 SCReAM December 2017
CWND is updated differently depending on whether or not the congestion control is in fast increase mode, as controlled by the variable in_fast_increase.
When in fast increase mode, the congestion window is increased with the number of newly acknowledged bytes as long as the window is sufficiently used. Sparse feedback can potentially limit congestion window growth; therefore, additional slack is added, given by the number of newly acknowledged bytes.
The congestion window growth when in_fast_increase is false is dictated by the relation between qdelay and qdelay_target; congestion window growth is limited if the window is not used sufficiently.
SCReAM calculates the GAIN in a similar way to what is specified in [RFC6817]. However, [RFC6817] specifies that the CWND increase is limited by an additional function controlled by a constant ALLOWED_INCREASE. This additional limitation is removed in this specification.
Further, the CWND is limited by max_bytes_in_flight and MIN_CWND. The limitation of the congestion window by the maximum number of bytes in flight over the last 5 seconds (max_bytes_in_flight) avoids possible overestimation of the throughput after, for example, idle periods. An additional MAX_BYTES_IN_FLIGHT_HEAD_ROOM provides slack to allow for a certain amount of variability in the media coder output rate.
It is likely that a flow using the SCReAM algorithm will have to share congested bottlenecks with other flows that use a more aggressive congestion control algorithm (for example, large FTP flows using loss-based congestion control). The worst condition occurs when the bottleneck queues are of tail-drop type with a large buffer size. SCReAM takes care of such situations by adjusting the qdelay_target when loss-based flows are detected, as shown in the pseudocode below.
Johansson & Sarker Experimental [Page 20]
RFC 8298 SCReAM December 2017
<CODE BEGINS> adjust_qdelay_target(qdelay) qdelay_norm_t = qdelay / QDELAY_TARGET_LOW update_qdelay_norm_history(qdelay_norm_t) # Compute variance qdelay_norm_var_t = VARIANCE(qdelay_norm_history(200)) # Compensation for competing traffic # Compute average qdelay_norm_avg_t = AVERAGE(qdelay_norm_history(50)) # Compute upper limit to target delay new_target_t = qdelay_norm_avg_t + sqrt(qdelay_norm_var_t) new_target_t *= QDELAY_TARGET_LO if (loss_event_rate > 0.002) # Packet losses detected qdelay_target = 1.5 * new_target_t else if (qdelay_norm_var_t < 0.2) # Reasonably safe to set target qdelay qdelay_target = new_target_t else # Check if target delay can be reduced; this helps prevent # the target delay from being locked to high values forever if (new_target_t < QDELAY_TARGET_LO) # Decrease target delay quickly, as measured queuing # delay is lower than target qdelay_target = max(qdelay_target * 0.5, new_target_t) else # Decrease target delay slowly qdelay_target *= 0.9 end end end
Two temporary variables are calculated. qdelay_norm_avg_t is the long-term average queue delay, qdelay_norm_var_t is the long-term variance of the queue delay. A high qdelay_norm_var_t indicates that the queue delay changes; this can be an indication that bottleneck bandwidth is reduced or that a competing flow has just entered. Thus, it indicates that it is not safe to adjust the queue delay target.
A low qdelay_norm_var_t indicates that the queue delay is relatively stable. The reason could be that the queue delay is low, but it
Johansson & Sarker Experimental [Page 21]
RFC 8298 SCReAM December 2017
could also be that a competing flow is causing the bottleneck to reach the point that packet losses start to occur, in which case the queue delay will stay relatively high for a longer time.
The queue delay target is allowed to be increased if either the loss event rate is above a given threshold or qdelay_norm_var_t is low. Both these conditions indicate that a competing flow may be present. In all other cases, the queue delay target is decreased.
The function that adjusts the qdelay_target is simple and could produce false positives and false negatives. The case that self- inflicted congestion by the SCReAM algorithm may be falsely interpreted as the presence of competing loss-based FTP flows is a false positive. The opposite case -- where the algorithm fails to detect the presence of a competing FTP flow -- is a false negative.
Extensive simulations have shown that the algorithm performs well in LTE test cases and that it also performs well in simple bandwidth- limited bottleneck test cases with competing FTP flows. However, the potential failure of the algorithm cannot be completely ruled out. A false positive (i.e., when self-inflicted congestion is mistakenly identified as competing flows) is especially problematic when it leads to increasing the target queue delay, which can cause the end- to-end delay to increase dramatically.
If it is deemed unlikely that competing flows occur over the same bottleneck, the algorithm described in this section MAY be turned off. One such case is QoS-enabled bearers in 3GPP-based access such as LTE. However, when sending over the Internet, often the network conditions are not known for sure, so in general it is not possible to make safe assumptions on how a network is used and whether or not competing flows share the same bottleneck. Therefore, turning this algorithm off must be considered with caution, as it can lead to basically zero throughput if competing with loss-based traffic.
Lost packet detection is based on the received sequence number list. A reordering window SHOULD be applied to prevent packet reordering from triggering loss events. The reordering window is specified as a time unit, similar to the ideas behind Recent ACKnowledgement (RACK) [RACK]. The computation of the reordering window is made possible by means of a lost flag in the list of transmitted RTP packets. This flag is set if the received sequence number list indicates that the given RTP packet is missing. If later feedback indicates that a previously lost marked packet was indeed received, then the reordering window is updated to reflect the reordering delay. The reordering window is given by the difference in time between the
Johansson & Sarker Experimental [Page 22]
RFC 8298 SCReAM December 2017
event that the packet was marked as lost and the event that it was indicated as successfully received. Loss is detected if a given RTP packet is not acknowledged within a time window (indicated by the reordering window) after an RTP packet with a higher sequence number was acknowledged.
The basic design principle behind packet transmission in SCReAM is to allow transmission only if the number of bytes in flight is less than the congestion window. There are, however, two reasons why this strict rule will not work optimally:
o Bitrate variations: Media sources such as video encoders generally produce frames whose size always vary to a larger or smaller extent. The RTP queue absorbs the natural variations in frame sizes. However, the RTP queue should be as short as possible to prevent the end-to-end delay from increasing. To achieve that, the media rate control takes the RTP queue size into account when the target bitrate for the media is computed. A strict 'send only when bytes in flight is less than the congestion window' rule can cause the RTP queue to grow simply because the send window is limited; in turn, this can cause the target bitrate to be pushed down. The consequence is that the congestion window will not increase, or will increase very slowly, because the congestion window is only allowed to increase when there is a sufficient amount of data in flight. The final effect is that the media bitrate increases very slowly or not at all.
o Reverse (feedback) path congestion: Especially in transport over buffer-bloated networks, the one-way delay in the reverse direction can jump due to congestion. The effect is that the acknowledgements are delayed, and the self-clocking is temporarily halted, even though the forward path is not congested.
The send window is adjusted depending on qdelay, its relation to the qdelay target, and the relation between the congestion window and the number of bytes in flight. A strict rule is applied when qdelay is higher than qdelay_target, to avoid further queue buildup in the network. For cases when qdelay is lower than the qdelay_target, a more relaxed rule is applied. This allows the bitrate to increase quickly when no congestion is detected while still being able to exhibit stable behavior in congested situations.
The send window is given by the relation between the adjusted congestion window and the amount of bytes in flight according to the pseudocode below.
Johansson & Sarker Experimental [Page 23]
RFC 8298 SCReAM December 2017
<CODE BEGINS> calculate_send_window(qdelay, qdelay_target) # send window is computed differently depending on congestion level if (qdelay <= qdelay_target) send_wnd = cwnd + MSS - bytes_in_flight else send_wnd = cwnd - bytes_in_flight end <CODE ENDS>
The send window is updated whenever an RTP packet is transmitted or an RTCP feedback messaged is received.
Packet pacing is used in order to mitigate coalescing, i.e., when packets are transmitted in bursts, with the risks of increased jitter and potentially increased packet loss. Packet pacing also mitigates possible issues with queue overflow due to key-frame generation in video coders. The time interval between consecutive packet transmissions is greater than or equal to t_pace, where t_pace is given by the equations below :
Fast increase mode can resume in order to speed up the bitrate increase if congestion abates. The condition to resume fast increase mode (in_fast_increase = true) is that qdelay_trend is less than QDELAY_TREND_LO for T_RESUME_FAST_INCREASE seconds or more.
The SCReAM algorithm makes a good distinction between network congestion control and media rate control. This is easily extended to many streams -- RTP packets from two or more RTP queues are scheduled at the rate permitted by the network congestion control.
The scheduling can be done by means of a few different scheduling regimes. For example, the method for coupled congestion control
Johansson & Sarker Experimental [Page 24]
RFC 8298 SCReAM December 2017
specified in [COUPLED-CC] can be used. One implementation of SCReAM [SCReAM-CPP-implementation] uses credit-based scheduling. In credit- based scheduling, credit is accumulated by queues as they wait for service and is spent while the queues are being serviced. For instance, if one queue is allowed to transmit 1000 bytes, then a credit of 1000 bytes is allocated to the other unscheduled queues. This principle can be extended to weighted scheduling, where the credit allocated to unscheduled queues depends on the relative weights. The latter is also implemented in [SCReAM-CPP-implementation].
The media rate control algorithm is executed at regular intervals, indicated by RATE_ADJUSTMENT_INTERVAL, with the exception of a prompt reaction to loss events. The media rate control operates based on the size of the RTP packet send queue and observed loss events. In addition, qdelay_trend is also considered in the media rate control in order to reduce the amount of induced network jitter.
The role of the media rate control is to strike a reasonable balance between a low amount of queuing in the RTP queue(s) and a sufficient amount of data to send in order to keep the data path busy. Setting the media rate control too cautiously leads to possible underutilization of network capacity; this can cause the flow to become starved out by other more opportunistic traffic. On the other hand, setting it too aggressively leads to increased jitter.
The target_bitrate is adjusted depending on the congestion state. The target bitrate can vary between a minimum value (TARGET_BITRATE_MIN) and a maximum value (TARGET_BITRATE_MAX). TARGET_BITRATE_MIN SHOULD be set to a low enough value to prevent RTP packets from becoming queued up when the network throughput is reduced. The sender SHOULD also be equipped with a mechanism that discards RTP packets when the network throughput becomes very low and RTP packets are excessively delayed.
For the overall bitrate adjustment, two network throughput estimates are computed :
o rate_transmit: The measured transmit bitrate.
o rate_ack: The ACKed bitrate, i.e., the volume of ACKed bits per second.
Both estimates are updated every 200 ms.
Johansson & Sarker Experimental [Page 25]
RFC 8298 SCReAM December 2017
The current throughput, current_rate, is computed as the maximum value of rate_transmit and rate_ack. The rationale behind the use of rate_ack in addition to rate_transmit is that rate_transmit is affected also by the amount of data that is available to transmit, thus a lack of data to transmit can be seen as reduced throughput that can cause an unnecessary rate reduction. To overcome this shortcoming, rate_ack is used as well. This gives a more stable throughput estimate.
The rate change behavior depends on whether a loss or ECN event has occurred and whether the congestion control is in fast increase mode.
<CODE BEGINS> # The target_bitrate is updated at a regular interval according # to RATE_ADJUST_INTERVAL
on loss: # Loss event detected target_bitrate = max(BETA_R * target_bitrate, TARGET_BITRATE_MIN) exit on ecn_mark: # ECN event detected target_bitrate = max(BETA_ECN * target_bitrate, TARGET_BITRATE_MIN) exit
ramp_up_speed_t = min(RAMP_UP_SPEED, target_bitrate / 2.0) scale_t = (target_bitrate - target_bitrate_last_max) / target_bitrate_last_max scale_t = max(0.2, min(1.0, (scale_t * 4)^2)) # min scale_t value 0.2, as the bitrate should be allowed to # increase slowly. This prevents locking the rate to # target_bitrate_last_max if (in_fast_increase = true) increment_t = ramp_up_speed_t * RATE_ADJUST_INTERVAL increment_t *= scale_t target_bitrate += increment_t else current_rate_t = max(rate_transmit, rate_ack) # Compute a bitrate change delta_rate_t = current_rate_t * (1.0 - PRE_CONGESTION_GUARD * queue_delay_trend) - TX_QUEUE_SIZE_FACTOR * rtp_queue_size # Limit a positive increase if close to target_bitrate_last_max if (delta_rate_t > 0) delta_rate_t *= scale_t delta_rate_t = min(delta_rate_t, ramp_up_speed_t * RATE_ADJUST_INTERVAL)
Johansson & Sarker Experimental [Page 26]
RFC 8298 SCReAM December 2017
end target_bitrate += delta_rate_t # Force a slight reduction in bitrate if RTP queue # builds up rtp_queue_delay_t = rtp_queue_size / current_rate_t if (rtp_queue_delay_t > RTP_QDELAY_TH) target_bitrate *= TARGET_RATE_SCALE_RTP_QDELAY end end
In case of a loss event, the target_bitrate is updated and the rate change procedure is exited. Otherwise, the rate change procedure continues. The rationale behind the rate reduction due to loss is that a congestion window reduction will take effect, and a rate reduction proactively prevents RTP packets from being queued up when the transmit rate decreases due to the reduced congestion window. A similar rate reduction happens when ECN events are detected.
The rate update frequency is limited by RATE_ADJUST_INTERVAL, unless a loss event occurs. The value is based on experimentation with real-life limitations in video coders taken into account [SCReAM-CPP-implementation]. A too short interval is shown to make the rate control loop in video coders more unstable; a too long interval makes the overall congestion control sluggish.
When in fast increase mode (in_fast_increase = true), the bitrate increase is given by the desired ramp-up speed (RAMP_UP_SPEED). The ramp-up speed is limited when the target bitrate is low to avoid rate oscillation at low bottleneck bitrates. The setting of RAMP_UP_SPEED depends on preferences. A high setting such as 1000 kbps/s makes it possible to quickly get high-quality media; however, this is at the expense of increased jitter, which can manifest itself as choppy video rendering, for example.
When in_fast_increase is false, the bitrate increase is given by the current bitrate and is also controlled by the estimated RTP queue and the qdelay trend, thus it is sufficient that an increased congestion level is sensed by the network congestion control to limit the bitrate. The target_bitrate_last_max is updated when congestion is detected.
Johansson & Sarker Experimental [Page 27]
RFC 8298 SCReAM December 2017
Finally, the target_bitrate is within the defined min and max values.
The aware reader may notice the dependency on the qdelay in the computation of the target bitrate; this manifests itself in the use of the qdelay_trend. As these parameters are used also in the network congestion control, one may suspect some odd interaction between the media rate control and the network congestion control. This is in fact the case if the parameter PRE_CONGESTION_GUARD is set to a high value. The use of qdelay_trend in the media rate control is solely to reduce jitter; the dependency can be removed by setting PRE_CONGESTION_GUARD=0. The effect is a somewhat larger rate increase after congestion, at the expense of increased jitter in congested situations.
The simple task of the SCReAM receiver is to feed back acknowledgements of received packets and total ECN count to the SCReAM sender. In addition, the receive time of the RTP packet with the highest sequence number is echoed back. Upon reception of each RTP packet, the receiver MUST maintain enough information to send the aforementioned values to the SCReAM sender via an RTCP transport- layer feedback message. The frequency of the feedback message depends on the available RTCP bandwidth. The requirements on the feedback elements and the feedback interval are described below.
The following feedback elements are REQUIRED for basic functionality in SCReAM.
o A list of received RTP packets. This list SHOULD be sufficiently long to cover all received RTP packets. This list can be realized with the Loss RLE (Run Length Encoding) Report Block in [RFC3611].
o A wall-clock timestamp corresponding to the received RTP packet with the highest sequence number is required in order to compute the qdelay. This can be realized by means of the Packet Receipt Times Report Block in [RFC3611]. begin_seq MUST be set to the highest received sequence number (which has possibly wrapped around); end_seq MUST be set to begin_seq+1 modulo 65536. The timestamp clock MAY be set according to [RFC3611], i.e., equal to the RTP timestamp clock. Detailed individual packet receive times are not necessary, as SCReAM does currently not describe how they can be used.
Johansson & Sarker Experimental [Page 28]
RFC 8298 SCReAM December 2017
The basic feedback needed for SCReAM involves the use of the Loss RLE Report Block and the Packet Receipt Times Report Block as shown in Figure 2.
Figure 2: Basic Feedback Message for SCReAM, Based on RFC 3611
In a typical use case, no more than four Loss RLE chunks are needed, thus the feedback message will be 44 bytes. It is obvious from Figure 2 that there is a lot of redundant information in the feedback message. A more optimized feedback format, including the additional feedback elements listed below, could reduce the feedback message size a bit.
An additional feedback element that can improve the performance of SCReAM is:
o Accumulated number of ECN-CE-marked packets (n_ECN). For instance, this can be realized with the ECN Feedback Report Format in [RFC6679]. The given feedback report format is slightly overkill, as SCReAM would do quite well with only a counter that
Johansson & Sarker Experimental [Page 29]
RFC 8298 SCReAM December 2017
increments by one for each received packet with the ECN-CE codepoint set. The more bulky format could nevertheless be useful for, e.g., ECN black-hole detection.
SCReAM benefits from relatively frequent feedback. It is RECOMMENDED that a SCReAM implementation follows the guidelines below.
The feedback interval depends on the media bitrate. At low bitrates, it is sufficient with a feedback interval of 100 to 400 ms; while at high bitrates, a feedback interval of roughly 20 ms is preferred. At very high bitrates, even shorter feedback intervals MAY be needed in order to keep the self-clocking in SCReAM working well. One indication that feedback is too sparse is that the SCReAM implementation cannot reach high bitrates, even in uncongested links. More frequent feedback might solve this issue.
The numbers above can be formulated as a feedback interval function that can be useful for the computation of the desired RTCP bandwidth. The following equation expresses the feedback rate:
rate_fb = min(50, max(2.5, rate_media / 10000))
rate_media is the RTP media bitrate expressed in bps; rate_fb is the feedback rate expressed in packets/s. Converting to feedback interval, we get:
The transmission interval is not critical. So, in the case of multi- stream handling between two hosts, the feedback for two or more synchronization sources (SSRCs) can be bundled to save UDP/IP overhead. However, the final realized feedback interval SHOULD not exceed 2*fb_int in such cases, meaning that a scheduled feedback transmission event should not be delayed more than fb_int.
SCReAM works with AVPF regular mode; immediate or early mode is not required by SCReAM but can nonetheless be useful for RTCP messages not directly related to SCReAM, such as those specified in [RFC4585]. It is RECOMMENDED to use reduced-size RTCP [RFC5506], where regular full compound RTCP transmission is controlled by trr-int as described in [RFC4585].
o Clock drift: SCReAM can suffer from the same issues with clock drift as is the case with LEDBAT [RFC6817]. However, Appendix A.2 in [RFC6817] describes ways to mitigate issues with clock drift.
o Support for alternate ECN semantics: This specification adopts the proposal in [ALT-BACKOFF] to reduce the congestion window less when ECN-based congestion events are detected. Future work on Low Loss, Low Latency for Scalable throughput (L4S) may lead to updates in a future document that describes SCReAM support for L4S.
o A new transport-layer feedback message (as specified in RFC 4585) could be standardized if the use of the already existing RTCP extensions as described in Section 4.2 is not deemed sufficient.
o The target bitrate given by SCReAM is the bitrate including the RTP and Forward Error Correction (FEC) overhead. The media encoder SHOULD take this overhead into account when the media bitrate is set. This means that the media coder bitrate SHOULD be computed as
It is not necessary to make a 100% perfect compensation for the overhead, as the SCReAM algorithm will inherently compensate for moderate errors. Under-compensating for the overhead has the effect of increasing jitter, while overcompensating will cause the bottleneck link to become underutilized.
SCReAM has been evaluated in a number of different ways, mostly in a simulator. The OpenWebRTC implementation work ([OpenWebRTC] and [SCReAM-implementation]) involved extensive testing with artificial bottlenecks with varying bandwidths and using two different video coders (OpenH264 and VP9).
Johansson & Sarker Experimental [Page 31]
RFC 8298 SCReAM December 2017
Preferably, further experiments will be done by means of implementation in real clients and web browsers. RECOMMENDED experiments are:
o Trials with various access technologies: EDGE/3G/4G, Wi-Fi, DSL. Some experiments have already been carried out with LTE access; see [SCReAM-CPP-implementation] and [SCReAM-implementation-experience].
o Trials with different kinds of media: Audio, video, slideshow content. Evaluation of multi-stream handling in SCReAM.
o Evaluation of functionality of the compensation mechanism when there are competing flows: Evaluate how SCReAM performs with competing TCP-like traffic and to what extent the compensation for competing flows causes self-inflicted congestion.
o Determine proper parameters: A set of default parameters are given that makes SCReAM work over a reasonably large operation range. However, for very low or very high bitrates, it may be necessary to use different values for the RAMP_UP_SPEED, for instance.
o Experimentation with further improvements to the congestion window and media bitrate calculation. [SCReAM-CPP-implementation] implements some optimizations, not described in this memo, that improve performance slightly. Further experiments are likely to lead to more optimizations of the algorithm.
The feedback can be vulnerable to attacks similar to those that can affect TCP. It is therefore RECOMMENDED that the RTCP feedback is at least integrity protected. Furthermore, as SCReAM is self-clocked, a malicious middlebox can drop RTCP feedback packets and thus cause the self-clocking in SCReAM to stall. However, this attack is mitigated by the minimum send rate maintained by SCReAM when no feedback is received.
[RFC4585] Ott, J., Wenger, S., Sato, N., Burmeister, C., and J. Rey, "Extended RTP Profile for Real-time Transport Control Protocol (RTCP)-Based Feedback (RTP/AVPF)", RFC 4585, DOI 10.17487/RFC4585, July 2006, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4585>.
[ALT-BACKOFF] Khademi, N., Welzl, M., Armitage, G., and G. Fairhurst, "TCP Alternative Backoff with ECN (ABE)", Work in Progress, draft-ietf-tcpm-alternativebackoff-ecn-04, November 2017.
[COUPLED-CC] Islam, S., Welzl, M., and S. Gjessing, "Coupled congestion control for RTP media", Work in Progress, draft-ietf- rmcat-coupled-cc-07, September 2017.
[LEDBAT-delay-impact] Ros, D. and M. Welzl, "Assessing LEDBAT's Delay Impact", IEEE Communications Letters, Vol. 17, No. 5, DOI 10.1109/LCOMM.2013.040213.130137, May 2013, <http://home.ifi.uio.no/michawe/research/publications/ ledbat-impact-letters.pdf>.
[Packet-conservation] Jacobson, V., "Congestion Avoidance and Control", ACM SIGCOMM Computer Communication Review, DOI 10.1145/52325.52356, August 1988.
[RACK] Cheng, Y., Cardwell, N., and N. Dukkipati, "RACK: a time- based fast loss detection algorithm for TCP", Work in Progress, draft-ietf-tcpm-rack-02, March 2017.
[SCReAM-implementation] Ericsson Research, "OpenWebRTC specific GStreamer plugins", <https://github.com/EricssonResearch/ openwebrtc-gst-plugins>.
[SCReAM-implementation-experience] Sarker, Z. and I. Johansson, "Updates on SCReAM: An implementation experience", November 2015, <https://www.ietf.org/proceedings/94/slides/ slides-94-rmcat-8.pdf>.
[TFWC] Choi, S. and M. Handley, "Fairer TCP-Friendly Congestion Control Protocol for Multimedia Streaming Applications", DOI 10.1145/1364654.1364717, December 2007, <http://www-dept.cs.ucl.ac.uk/staff/M.Handley/papers/ tfwc-conext.pdf>.
[WIRELESS-TESTS] Sarker, Z., Johansson, I., Zhu, X., Fu, J., Tan, W., and M. Ramalho, "Evaluation Test Cases for Interactive Real- Time Media over Wireless Networks", Work in Progress, draft-ietf-rmcat-wireless-tests-04, May 2017.
Johansson & Sarker Experimental [Page 35]
RFC 8298 SCReAM December 2017
Acknowledgements
We would like to thank the following people for their comments, questions, and support during the work that led to this memo: Markus Andersson, Bo Burman, Tomas Frankkila, Frederic Gabin, Laurits Hamm, Hans Hannu, Nikolas Hermanns, Stefan Haakansson, Erlendur Karlsson, Daniel Lindstroem, Mats Nordberg, Jonathan Samuelsson, Rickard Sjoeberg, Robert Swain, Magnus Westerlund, and Stefan Aalund. Many additional thanks to RMCAT chairs Karen E. E. Nielsen and Mirja Kuehlewind for patiently reading, suggesting improvements and also for asking all the difficult but necessary questions. Thanks to Stefan Holmer, Xiaoqing Zhu, Safiqul Islam, and David Hayes for the additional review of this document. Thanks to Ralf Globisch for taking time to try out SCReAM in his challenging low-bitrate use cases, Robert Hedman for finding a few additional flaws in the running code, and Gustavo Garcia and 'miseri' for code contributions.
Authors' Addresses
Ingemar Johansson Ericsson AB Laboratoriegraend 11 Luleaa 977 53 Sweden