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diff --git a/docs/ietf/draft-ietf-bmwg-mlrsearch-06.md b/docs/ietf/draft-ietf-bmwg-mlrsearch-06.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..27d65e2690 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/ietf/draft-ietf-bmwg-mlrsearch-06.md @@ -0,0 +1,1634 @@ +--- + +title: Multiple Loss Ratio Search +abbrev: MLRsearch +docname: draft-ietf-bmwg-mlrsearch-06 +date: 2024-03-04 + +ipr: trust200902 +area: ops +wg: Benchmarking Working Group +kw: Internet-Draft +cat: info + +coding: us-ascii +pi: # can use array (if all yes) or hash here + toc: yes + sortrefs: # defaults to yes + symrefs: yes + +author: + - + ins: M. Konstantynowicz + name: Maciek Konstantynowicz + org: Cisco Systems + email: mkonstan@cisco.com + - + ins: V. Polak + name: Vratko Polak + org: Cisco Systems + email: vrpolak@cisco.com + +normative: + RFC1242: + RFC2285: + RFC2544: + RFC9004: + +informative: + TST009: + target: https://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_gs/NFV-TST/001_099/009/03.04.01_60/gs_NFV-TST009v030401p.pdf + title: "TST 009" + FDio-CSIT-MLRsearch: + target: https://csit.fd.io/cdocs/methodology/measurements/data_plane_throughput/mlr_search/ + title: "FD.io CSIT Test Methodology - MLRsearch" + date: 2023-10 + PyPI-MLRsearch: + target: https://pypi.org/project/MLRsearch/1.2.1/ + title: "MLRsearch 1.2.1, Python Package Index" + date: 2023-10 + +--- abstract + +This document proposes extensions to [RFC2544] throughput search by +defining a new methodology called Multiple Loss Ratio search +(MLRsearch). MLRsearch aims to minimize search duration, +support multiple loss ratio searches, +and enhance result repeatability and comparability. + +The primary reason for extending [RFC2544] is to address the challenges +and requirements presented by the evaluation and testing +of software-based networking systems' data planes. + +To give users more freedom, MLRsearch provides additional configuration options +such as allowing multiple shorter trials per load instead of one large trial, +tolerating a certain percentage of trial results with higher loss, +and supporting the search for multiple goals with varying loss ratios. + +--- middle + +{::comment} + As we use Kramdown to convert from Markdown, + we use this way of marking comments not to be visible in the rendered draft. + https://stackoverflow.com/a/42323390 + If another engine is used, convert to this way: + https://stackoverflow.com/a/20885980 +{:/comment} + +# Purpose and Scope + +The purpose of this document is to describe Multiple Loss Ratio search +(MLRsearch), a data plane throughput search methodology optimized for software +networking DUTs. + +Applying vanilla [RFC2544] throughput bisection to software DUTs +results in several problems: + +- Binary search takes too long as most trials are done far from the + eventually found throughput. +- The required final trial duration and pauses between trials + prolong the overall search duration. +- Software DUTs show noisy trial results, + leading to a big spread of possible discovered throughput values. +- Throughput requires a loss of exactly zero frames, but the industry + frequently allows for small but non-zero losses. +- The definition of throughput is not clear when trial results are inconsistent. + + +To address the problems mentioned above, +the MLRsearch library employs the following enhancements: + +- Allow multiple shorter trials instead of one big trial per load. + - Optionally, tolerate a percentage of trial results with higher loss. +- Allow searching for multiple search goals, with differing loss ratios. + - Any trial result can affect each search goal in principle. +- Insert multiple coarse targets for each search goal, earlier ones need + to spend less time on trials. + - Earlier targets also aim for lesser precision. + - Use Forwarding Rate (FR) at maximum offered load + [RFC2285] (section 3.6.2) to initialize the initial targets. +- Take care when dealing with inconsistent trial results. + - Reported throughput is smaller than the smallest load with high loss. + - Smaller load candidates are measured first. +- Apply several load selection heuristics to save even more time + by trying hard to avoid unnecessarily narrow bounds. + +Some of these enhancements are formalized as MLRsearch specification, +the remaining enhancements are treated as implementation details, +thus achieving high comparability without limiting future improvements. + +MLRsearch configuration options are flexible enough to +support both conservative settings and aggressive settings. +Where the conservative settings lead to results +unconditionally compliant with [RFC2544], +but longer search duration and worse repeatability. +Conversely, aggressive settings lead to shorter search duration +and better repeatability, but the results are not compliant with [RFC2544]. + +No part of [RFC2544] is intended to be obsoleted by this document. + +# Identified Problems + +This chapter describes the problems affecting usability +of various performance testing methodologies, +mainly a binary search for [RFC2544] unconditionally compliant throughput. + +## Long Search Duration + +The emergence of software DUTs, with frequent software updates and a +number of different frame processing modes and configurations, +has increased both the number of performance tests +required to verify the DUT update and the frequency of running those tests. +This makes the overall test execution time even more important than before. + +The current [RFC2544] throughput definition restricts the potential +for time-efficiency improvements. +A more generalized throughput concept could enable further enhancements +while maintaining the precision of simpler methods. + +The bisection method, when unconditionally compliant with [RFC2544], +is excessively slow. +This is because a significant amount of time is spent on trials +with loads that, in retrospect, are far from the final determined throughput. + +[RFC2544] does not specify any stopping condition for throughput search, +so users already have an access to a limited trade-off +between search duration and achieved precision. +However, each full 60-second trials doubles the precision, +so not many trials can be removed without a substantial loss of precision. + +## DUT in SUT + +[RFC2285] defines: +- DUT as + - The network forwarding device to which stimulus is offered and + response measured [RFC2285] (section 3.1.1). +- SUT as + - The collective set of network devices to which stimulus is offered + as a single entity and response measured [RFC2285] (section 3.1.2). + +[RFC2544] specifies a test setup with an external tester stimulating the +networking system, treating it either as a single DUT, or as a system +of devices, an SUT. + +In the case of software networking, the SUT consists of not only the DUT +as a software program processing frames, but also of +a server hardware and operating system functions, +with server hardware resources shared across all programs +and the operating system running on the same server. + +Given that the SUT is a shared multi-tenant environment +encompassing the DUT and other components, the DUT might inadvertently +experience interference from the operating system +or other software operating on the same server. + +Some of this interference can be mitigated. +For instance, +pinning DUT program threads to specific CPU cores +and isolating those cores can prevent context switching. + +Despite taking all feasible precautions, some adverse effects may still impact +the DUT's network performance. +In this document, these effects are collectively +referred to as SUT noise, even if the effects are not as unpredictable +as what other engineering disciplines call noise. + +DUT can also exhibit fluctuating performance itself, for reasons +not related to the rest of SUT; for example due to pauses in execution +as needed for internal stateful processing. +In many cases this +may be an expected per-design behavior, as it would be observable even +in a hypothetical scenario where all sources of SUT noise are eliminated. +Such behavior affects trial results in a way similar to SUT noise. +As the two phenomenons are hard to distinguish, +in this document the term 'noise' is used to encompass +both the internal performance fluctuations of the DUT +and the genuine noise of the SUT. + +A simple model of SUT performance consists of an idealized noiseless performance, +and additional noise effects. +For a specific SUT, the noiseless performance is assumed to be constant, +with all observed performance variations being attributed to noise. +The impact of the noise can vary in time, sometimes wildly, +even within a single trial. +The noise can sometimes be negligible, but frequently +it lowers the observed SUT performance as observed in trial results. + +In this model, SUT does not have a single performance value, it has a spectrum. +One end of the spectrum is the idealized noiseless performance value, +the other end can be called a noiseful performance. +In practice, trial result +close to the noiseful end of the spectrum happens only rarely. +The worse the performance value is, the more rarely it is seen in a trial. +Therefore, the extreme noiseful end of the SUT spectrum is not observable +among trial results. +Also, the extreme noiseless end of the SUT spectrum +is unlikely to be observable, this time because some small noise effects +are likely to occur multiple times during a trial. + +Unless specified otherwise, this document's focus is +on the potentially observable ends of the SUT performance spectrum, +as opposed to the extreme ones. + +When focusing on the DUT, the benchmarking effort should ideally aim +to eliminate only the SUT noise from SUT measurements. +However, +this is currently not feasible in practice, as there are no realistic enough +models available to distinguish SUT noise from DUT fluctuations, +based on the author's experience and available literature. + +Assuming a well-constructed SUT, the DUT is likely its +primary performance bottleneck. +In this case, we can define the DUT's +ideal noiseless performance as the noiseless end of the SUT performance spectrum, +especially for throughput. +However, other performance metrics, such as latency, +may require additional considerations. + +Note that by this definition, DUT noiseless performance +also minimizes the impact of DUT fluctuations, as much as realistically possible +for a given trial duration. + +This document aims to solve the DUT in SUT problem +by estimating the noiseless end of the SUT performance spectrum +using a limited number of trial results. + +Any improvements to the throughput search algorithm, aimed at better +dealing with software networking SUT and DUT setup, should employ +strategies recognizing the presence of SUT noise, allowing the discovery of +(proxies for) DUT noiseless performance +at different levels of sensitivity to SUT noise. + +## Repeatability and Comparability + +[RFC2544] does not suggest to repeat throughput search. +And from just one +discovered throughput value, it cannot be determined how repeatable that value is. +Poor repeatability then leads to poor comparability, +as different benchmarking teams may obtain varying throughput values +for the same SUT, exceeding the expected differences from search precision. + +[RFC2544] throughput requirements (60 seconds trial and +no tolerance of a single frame loss) affect the throughput results +in the following way. +The SUT behavior close to the noiseful end of its performance spectrum +consists of rare occasions of significantly low performance, +but the long trial duration makes those occasions not so rare on the trial level. +Therefore, the binary search results tend to wander away from the noiseless end +of SUT performance spectrum, more frequently and more widely than shorter +trials would, thus causing poor throughput repeatability. + +The repeatability problem can be addressed by defining a search procedure +that identifies a consistent level of performance, +even if it does not meet the strict definition of throughput in [RFC2544]. + +According to the SUT performance spectrum model, better repeatability +will be at the noiseless end of the spectrum. +Therefore, solutions to the DUT in SUT problem +will help also with the repeatability problem. + +Conversely, any alteration to [RFC2544] throughput search +that improves repeatability should be considered +as less dependent on the SUT noise. + +An alternative option is to simply run a search multiple times, and report some +statistics (e.g. average and standard deviation). +This can be used +for a subset of tests deemed more important, +but it makes the search duration problem even more pronounced. + +## Throughput with Non-Zero Loss + +[RFC1242] (section 3.17) defines throughput as: + The maximum rate at which none of the offered frames + are dropped by the device. + +Then, it says: + Since even the loss of one frame in a + data stream can cause significant delays while + waiting for the higher level protocols to time out, + it is useful to know the actual maximum data + rate that the device can support. + +However, many benchmarking teams accept a small, +non-zero loss ratio as the goal for their load search. + +Motivations are many: + +- Modern protocols tolerate frame loss better, + compared to the time when [RFC1242] and [RFC2544] were specified. + +- Trials nowadays send way more frames within the same duration, + increasing the chance of a small SUT performance fluctuation + being enough to cause frame loss. + +- Small bursts of frame loss caused by noise have otherwise smaller impact + on the average frame loss ratio observed in the trial, + as during other parts of the same trial the SUT may work more closely + to its noiseless performance, thus perhaps lowering the trial loss ratio + below the goal loss ratio value. + +- If an approximation of the SUT noise impact on the trial loss ratio is known, + it can be set as the goal loss ratio. + +Regardless of the validity of all similar motivations, +support for non-zero loss goals makes any search algorithm more user-friendly. +[RFC2544] throughput is not user-friendly in this regard. + +Furthermore, allowing users to specify multiple loss ratio values, +and enabling a single search to find all relevant bounds, +significantly enhances the usefulness of the search algorithm. + +Searching for multiple search goals also helps to describe the SUT performance +spectrum better than the result of a single search goal. +For example, the repeated wide gap between zero and non-zero loss loads +indicates the noise has a large impact on the observed performance, +which is not evident from a single goal load search procedure result. + +It is easy to modify the vanilla bisection to find a lower bound +for the intended load that satisfies a non-zero goal loss ratio. +But it is not that obvious how to search for multiple goals at once, +hence the support for multiple search goals remains a problem. + +## Inconsistent Trial Results + +While performing throughput search by executing a sequence of +measurement trials, there is a risk of encountering inconsistencies +between trial results. + +The plain bisection never encounters inconsistent trials. +But [RFC2544] hints about the possibility of inconsistent trial results, +in two places in its text. +The first place is section 24, where full trial durations are required, +presumably because they can be inconsistent with the results +from shorter trial durations. +The second place is section 26.3, where two successive zero-loss trials +are recommended, presumably because after one zero-loss trial +there can be a subsequent inconsistent non-zero-loss trial. + +Examples include: + +- A trial at the same load (same or different trial duration) results + in a different trial loss ratio. +- A trial at a higher load (same or different trial duration) results + in a smaller trial loss ratio. + +Any robust throughput search algorithm needs to decide how to continue +the search in the presence of such inconsistencies. +Definitions of throughput in [RFC1242] and [RFC2544] are not specific enough +to imply a unique way of handling such inconsistencies. + +Ideally, there will be a definition of a new quantity which both generalizes +throughput for non-zero-loss (and other possible repeatability enhancements), +while being precise enough to force a specific way to resolve trial result +inconsistencies. +But until such a definition is agreed upon, the correct way to handle +inconsistent trial results remains an open problem. + +# MLRsearch Specification + +This chapter focuses on technical definitions needed for evaluating +whether a particular test procedure adheres to MLRsearch specification. + +For motivations, explanations, and other comments see other chapters. + +## MLRsearch Architecture + +MLRsearch architecture consists of three main components: +the manager, the controller, and the measurer. +For definitions of the components, see the following sections. + +The architecture also implies the presence of other components, such as the SUT. + +These components can be seen as abstractions present in any testing procedure. + +### Measurer + +The measurer is the component that performs one trial +as described in [RFC2544] section 23. + +Specifically, one call to the measurer accepts a trial load value +and trial duration value, performs the trial, and returns +the measured trial loss ratio, and optionally a different duration value. + +It is the responsibility of the measurer to uphold any requirements +and assumptions present in MLRsearch specification +(e.g. trial forwarding ratio not being larger than one). +Implementers have some freedom, for example in the way they deal with +duplicated frames, or what to return if the tester sent zero frames towards SUT. +Implementations are RECOMMENDED to document their behavior +related to such freedoms in as detailed a way as possible. + +Implementations MUST document any deviations from RFC documents, +for example if the wait time around traffic +is shorter than what [RFC2544] section 23 specifies. + +### Controller + +The controller selects trial load and duration values +to achieve the search goals in the shortest expected time. + +The controller calls the measurer multiple times, +receiving the trial result from each call. +After exit condition is met, the controller returns +the overall search results. + +The controller's role in optimizing trial load and duration selection +distinguishes MLRsearch algorithms from simpler search procedures. + +For controller inputs, see later section Controller Inputs. +For controller outputs, see later section Controller Outputs. + +### Manager + +The controller gets initiated by the manager once, and subsequently calls + +The manager is the component that initializes SUT, the traffic generator +(tester in [RFC2544] terminology), the measurer and the controller +with intended configurations. +It then calls the controller once, and receives its outputs. + +The manager is also responsible for creating reports in the appropriate format, +based on information in controller outputs. + +## Units + +The specification deals with physical quantities, so it is assumed +each numeric value is accompanied by an appropriate physical unit. + +The specification does not state which unit is appropriate, +but implementations MUST make it explicit which unit is used +for each value provided or received by the user. + +For example, load quantities (including the conditional throughput) +returned by the controller are defined to be based on a single-interface +(unidirectional) loads. +For bidirectional traffic, users are likely +to expect bidirectional throughput quantities, so the manager is responsible +for making its report clear. + +## SUT + +As defined in [RFC2285]: +The collective set of network devices to which stimulus is offered +as a single entity and response measured. + +## Trial + +A trial is the part of the test described in [RFC2544] section 23. + +### Trial Load + +The trial load is the intended constant load for a trial. + +Load is the quantity implied by Constant Load of [RFC1242], +Data Rate of [RFC2544] and Intended Load of [RFC2285]. +All three specify this value applies to one (input or output) interface. + +### Trial Duration + +Trial duration is the intended duration of the traffic for a trial. + +In general, this quantity does not include any preparation nor waiting +described in section 23 of [RFC2544]. + +However, the measurer MAY return a duration value that deviates +from the intended duration. +This feature can be beneficial for users +who wish to manage the overall search duration, +rather than solely the traffic portion of it. +The manager MUST report +how the measurer computes the returned duration values in that case. + +### Trial Forwarding Ratio + +The trial forwarding ratio is a dimensionless floating point value +that ranges from 0.0 to 1.0, inclusive. +It is calculated by dividing the number of frames +successfully forwarded by the SUT +by the total number of frames expected to be forwarded during the trial. + +Note that, contrary to loads, frame counts used to compute +trial forwarding ratio are aggregates over all SUT output ports. + +Questions around what is the correct number of frames +that should have been forwarded is outside of the scope of this document. +E.g. what should the measurer return when it detects +that the offered load differs significantly from the intended load. + +### Trial Loss Ratio + +The trial loss ratio is equal to one minus the trial forwarding ratio. + +### Trial Forwarding Rate + +The trial forwarding rate is a derived quantity, calculated by +multiplying the trial load by the trial forwarding ratio. + +It is important to note that while similar, this quantity is not identical +to the Forwarding Rate as defined in [RFC2285] section 3.6.1, +as the latter is specific to one output interface, +whereas the trial forwarding ratio is based +on frame counts aggregated over all SUT output interfaces. + +## Traffic profile + +Any other specifics (besides trial load and trial duration) +the measurer needs in order to perform the trial +are understood as a composite called the traffic profile. +All its attributes are assumed to be constant during the search, +and the composite is configured on the measurer by the manager +before the search starts. + +The traffic profile is REQUIRED by [RFC2544] +to contain some specific quantities, for example frame size. +Several more specific quantities may be RECOMMENDED. + +Depending on SUT configuration, e.g. when testing specific protocols, +additional values need to be included in the traffic profile +and in the test report. +See other IETF documents. + +## Search Goal + +The search goal is a composite consisting of several attributes, +some of them are required. +Implementations are free to add their own attributes. + +A particular set of attribute values is called a search goal instance. + +Subsections list all required attributes and one recommended attribute. +Each subsection contains a short informal description, +but see other chapters for more in-depth explanations. + +The meaning of the attributes is formally given only by their effect +on the controller output attributes (defined in later in section Search Result). + +Informally, later chapters give additional intuitions and examples +to the search goal attribute values. +Later chapters also give motivation to formulas of computation of the outputs. + +### Goal Final Trial Duration + +A threshold value for trial durations. +This attribute is REQUIRED, and the value MUST be positive. + +Informally, while MLRsearch is allowed to perform trials shorter than this, +but results from such short trials have only limited impact on search results. + +The full relation needs definitions is later subsections. +But for example, the conditional throughput +(definition in subsection Conditional Throughput) +for this goal will be computed only from trial results +from trials at least as long as this. + +### Goal Duration Sum + +A threshold value for a particular sum of trial durations. +This attribute is REQUIRED, and the value MUST be positive. + +This uses the duration values returned by the measurer. + +Informally, even when looking only at trials done at this goal's +final trial duration, MLRsearch may spend up to this time measuring +the same load value. +If the goal duration sum is larger than +the goal final trial duration, it means multiple trials need to be measured +at the same load. + +### Goal Loss Ratio + +A threshold value for trial loss ratios. +REQUIRED attribute, MUST be non-negative and smaller than one. + +Informally, if a load causes too many trials with trial loss ratios +larger than this, the conditional throughput for this goal +will be smaller than that load. + +### Goal Exceed Ratio + +A threshold value for a particular ratio of duration sums. +REQUIRED attribute, MUST be non-negative and smaller than one. + +The duration sum values come from the duration values returned by the measurer. + +Informally, the impact of lossy trials is controlled by this value. +The full relation needs definitions is later subsections. + +But for example, the definition of the conditional throughput +(given later in subsection Conditional Throughput) +refers to a q-value for a quantile when selecting +which trial result gives the conditional throughput. +The goal exceed ratio acts as the q-value to use there. + +Specifically, when the goal exceed ratio is 0.5 and MLRsearch happened +to use the whole goal duration sum (using full-length trials), +it means the conditional throughput is the median of trial forwarding rates. + +### Goal Width + +A value used as a threshold for telling when two trial load values +are close enough. + +RECOMMENDED attribute, positive. +Implementations without this attribute +MUST give the manager other ways to control the search exit condition. + +Absolute load difference and relative load difference are two popular choices, +but implementations may choose a different way to specify width. + +Informally, this acts as a stopping condition, controlling the precision +of the search. +The search stops if every goal has reached its precision. + +## Controller Inputs + +The only REQUIRED input for controller is a set of search goal instances. +MLRsearch implementations MAY use additional input parameters for the controller. + +The order of instances SHOULD NOT have a big impact on controller outputs, +but MLRsearch implementations MAY base their behavior on the order +of search goal instances. + +The search goal instances SHOULD NOT be identical. +MLRsearch implementation MAY allow identical instances. + +## Goal Result + +Before defining the output of the controller, +it is useful to define what the goal result is. + +The goal result is a composite object consisting of several attributes. +A particular set of attribute values is called a goal result instance. + +Any goal result instance can be either regular or irregular. +MLRsearch specification puts requirements on regular goal result instances. +Any instance that does not meet the requirements is deemed irregular. + +Implementations are free to define their own irregular goal results, +but the manager MUST report them clearly as not regular according to this section. + +All attribute values in one goal result instance +are related to a single search goal instance, +referred to as the given search goal. + +Some of the attributes of a regular goal result instance are required, +some are recommended, implementations are free to add their own. + +The subsections define two required and one optional attribute +for a regular goal result. + +A typical irregular result is when all trials at the maximal offered load +have zero loss, as the relevant upper bound does not exist in that case. + +### Relevant Upper Bound + +The relevant upper bound is the smallest intended load value that is classified +at the end of the search as an upper bound (see Appendix A) +for the given search goal. +This is a REQUIRED attribute. + +Informally, this is the smallest intended load that failed to uphold +all the requirements of the given search goal, mainly the goal loss ratio +in combination with the goal exceed ratio. + +### Relevant Lower Bound + +The relevant lower bound is the largest intended load value +among those smaller than the relevant upper bound +that got classified at the end of the search +as a lower bound (see Appendix A) for the given search goal. +This is a REQUIRED attribute. + +For a regular goal result, the distance between the relevant lower bound +and the relevant upper bound MUST NOT be larger than the goal width, +if the implementation offers width as a goal attribute. + +Informally, this is the largest intended load that managed to uphold +all the requirements of the given search goal, mainly the goal loss ratio +in combination with the goal exceed ratio, while not being larger +than the relevant upper bound. + +### Conditional Throughput + +The conditional throughput (see Appendix B) +as evaluated at the relevant lower bound of the given search goal +at the end of the search. +This is a RECOMMENDED attribute. + +Informally, this is a typical forwarding rate expected to be seen +at the relevant lower bound of the given search goal. +But frequently just a conservative estimate thereof, +as MLRsearch implementations tend to stop gathering more data +as soon as they confirm the result cannot get worse than this estimate +within the goal duration sum. + +## Search Result + +The search result is a single composite object +that maps each search goal to a corresponding goal result. + +In other words, search result is an unordered list of key-value pairs, +where no two pairs contain equal keys. +The key is a search goal instance, acting as the given search goal +for the goal result instance in the value portion of the key-value pair. + +The search result (as a mapping) +MUST map from all the search goals present in the controller input. + +## Controller Outputs + +The search result is the only REQUIRED output +returned from the controller to the manager. + +MLRsearch implementation MAY return additional data in the controller output. + +# Further Explanations + +This chapter focuses on intuitions and motivations +and skips over some important details. + +Familiarity with the MLRsearch specification is not required here, +so this chapter can act as an introduction. +For example, this chapter starts talking about the tightest lower bounds +before it is ready to talk about the relevant lower bound from the specification. + +## MLRsearch Versions + +The MLRsearch algorithm has been developed in a code-first approach, +a Python library has been created, debugged, and used in production +before the first descriptions (even informal) were published. +In fact, multiple versions of the library were used in the production +over the past few years, and later code was usually not compatible +with earlier descriptions. + +The code in (any version of) MLRsearch library fully determines +the search process (for given configuration parameters), +leaving no space for deviations. +MLRsearch, as a name for a broad class of possible algorithms, +leaves plenty of space for future improvements, at the cost +of poor comparability of results of different MLRsearch implementations. + +There are two competing needs. +There is the need for standardization in areas critical to comparability. +There is also the need to allow flexibility for implementations +to innovate and improve in other areas. +This document defines the MLRsearch specification +in a manner that aims to fairly balances both needs. + +## Exit Condition + +[RFC2544] prescribes that after performing one trial at a specific offered load, +the next offered load should be larger or smaller, based on frame loss. + +The usual implementation uses binary search. +Here a lossy trial becomes +a new upper bound, a lossless trial becomes a new lower bound. +The span of values between (including both) the tightest lower bound +and the tightest upper bound forms an interval of possible results, +and after each trial the width of that interval halves. + +Usually the binary search implementation tracks only the two tightest bounds, +simply calling them bounds. +But the old values still B remain valid bounds, +just not as tight as the new ones. + +After some number of trials, the tightest lower bound becomes the throughput. +[RFC2544] does not specify when (if ever) should the search stop. + +MLRsearch library introduces a concept of goal width. +The search stops +when the distance between the tightest upper bound and the tightest lower bound +is smaller than a user-configured value, called goal width from now on. +In other words, the interval width at the end of the search +has to be no larger than the goal width. + +This goal width value therefore determines the precision of the result. +As MLRsearch specification requires a particular structure of the result, +the result itself does contain enough information to determine its precision, +thus it is not required to report the goal width value. + +This allows MLRsearch implementations to use exit conditions +different from goal width. + +## Load Classification + +MLRsearch keeps the basic logic of binary search (tracking tightest bounds, +measuring at the middle), perhaps with minor technical clarifications. +The algorithm chooses an intended load (as opposed to the offered load), +the interval between bounds does not need to be split +exactly into two equal halves, +and the final reported structure specifies both bounds. + +The biggest difference is that to classify a load +as an upper or lower bound, MLRsearch may need more than one trial +(depending on configuration options) to be performed at the same intended load. + +As a consequence, even if a load already does have few trial results, +it still may be classified as undecided, neither a lower bound nor an upper bound. + +An explanation of the classification logic is given in the next chapter, +as it relies heavily on other sections of this chapter. + +For repeatability and comparability reasons, it is important that +given a set of trial results, all implementations of MLRsearch +classify the load equivalently. + +## Loss Ratios + +The next difference is in the goals of the search. +[RFC2544] has a single goal, +based on classifying full-length trials as either lossless or lossy. + +As the name suggests, MLRsearch can search for multiple goals, +differing in their loss ratios. +The precise definition of the goal loss ratio will be given later. +The [RFC2544] throughput goal then simply becomes a zero goal loss ratio. +Different goals also may have different goal widths. + +A set of trial results for one specific intended load value +can classify the load as an upper bound for some goals, but a lower bound +for some other goals, and undecided for the rest of the goals. + +Therefore, the load classification depends not only on trial results, +but also on the goal. +The overall search procedure becomes more complicated +(compared to binary search with a single goal), +but most of the complications do not affect the final result, +except for one phenomenon, loss inversion. + +## Loss Inversion + +In [RFC2544] throughput search using bisection, any load with a lossy trial +becomes a hard upper bound, meaning every subsequent trial has a smaller +intended load. + +But in MLRsearch, a load that is classified as an upper bound for one goal +may still be a lower bound for another goal, and due to the other goal +MLRsearch will probably perform trials at even higher loads. +What to do when all such higher load trials happen to have zero loss? +Does it mean the earlier upper bound was not real? +Does it mean the later lossless trials are not considered a lower bound? +Surely we do not want to have an upper bound at a load smaller than a lower bound. + +MLRsearch is conservative in these situations. +The upper bound is considered real, and the lossless trials at higher loads +are considered to be a coincidence, at least when computing the final result. + +This is formalized using new notions, the relevant upper bound and +the relevant lower bound. +Load classification is still based just on the set of trial results +at a given intended load (trials at other loads are ignored), +making it possible to have a lower load classified as an upper bound, +and a higher load classified as a lower bound (for the same goal). +The relevant upper bound (for a goal) is the smallest load classified +as an upper bound. +But the relevant lower bound is not simply +the largest among lower bounds. +It is the largest load among loads +that are lower bounds while also being smaller than the relevant upper bound. + +With these definitions, the relevant lower bound is always smaller +than the relevant upper bound (if both exist), and the two relevant bounds +are used analogously as the two tightest bounds in the binary search. +When they are less than the goal width apart, +the relevant bounds are used in the output. + +One consequence is that every trial result can have an impact on the search result. +That means if your SUT (or your traffic generator) needs a warmup, +be sure to warm it up before starting the search. + +## Exceed Ratio + +The idea of performing multiple trials at the same load comes from +a model where some trial results (those with high loss) are affected +by infrequent effects, causing poor repeatability of [RFC2544] throughput results. +See the discussion about noiseful and noiseless ends +of the SUT performance spectrum. +Stable results are closer to the noiseless end of the SUT performance spectrum, +so MLRsearch may need to allow some frequency of high-loss trials +to ignore the rare but big effects near the noiseful end. + +MLRsearch can do such trial result filtering, but it needs +a configuration option to tell it how frequent can the infrequent big loss be. +This option is called the exceed ratio. +It tells MLRsearch what ratio of trials +(more exactly what ratio of trial seconds) can have a trial loss ratio +larger than the goal loss ratio and still be classified as a lower bound. +Zero exceed ratio means all trials have to have a trial loss ratio +equal to or smaller than the goal loss ratio. + +For explainability reasons, the RECOMMENDED value for exceed ratio is 0.5, +as it simplifies some later concepts by relating them to the concept of median. + +## Duration Sum + +When more than one trial is needed to classify a load, +MLRsearch also needs something that controls the number of trials needed. +Therefore, each goal also has an attribute called duration sum. + +The meaning of a goal duration sum is that when a load has trials +(at full trial duration, details later) +whose trial durations when summed up give a value at least this long, +the load is guaranteed to be classified as an upper bound or a lower bound +for the goal. + +As the duration sum has a big impact on the overall search duration, +and [RFC2544] prescribes wait intervals around trial traffic, +the MLRsearch algorithm is allowed to sum durations that are different +from the actual trial traffic durations. + +## Short Trials + +MLRsearch requires each goal to specify its final trial duration. +Full-length trial is a shorter name for a trial whose intended trial duration +is equal to (or longer than) the goal final trial duration. + +Section 24 of [RFC2544] already anticipates possible time savings +when short trials (shorter than full-length trials) are used. +Full-length trials are the opposite of short trials, +so they may also be called long trials. + +Any MLRsearch implementation may include its own configuration options +which control when and how MLRsearch chooses to use shorter trial durations. + +For explainability reasons, when exceed ratio of 0.5 is used, +it is recommended for the goal duration sum to be an odd multiple +of the full trial durations, so conditional throughput becomes identical to +a median of a particular set of forwarding rates. + +The presence of shorter trial results complicates the load classification logic. +Full details are given later. +In short, results from short trials +may cause a load to be classified as an upper bound. +This may cause loss inversion, and thus lower the relevant lower bound +(below what would classification say when considering full-length trials only). + +For explainability reasons, it is RECOMMENDED users use such configurations +that guarantee all trials have the same length. +Alas, such configurations are usually not compliant with [RFC2544] requirements, +or not time-saving enough. + +## Conditional Throughput + +As testing equipment takes the intended load as an input parameter +for a trial measurement, any load search algorithm needs to deal +with intended load values internally. + +But in the presence of goals with a non-zero loss ratio, the intended load +usually does not match the user's intuition of what a throughput is. +The forwarding rate (as defined in [RFC2285] section 3.6.1) is better, +but it is not obvious how to generalize it +for loads with multiple trial results and a non-zero goal loss ratio. + +MLRsearch defines one such generalization, called the conditional throughput. +It is the forwarding rate from one of the trials performed at the load +in question. +Specification of which trial exactly is quite technical, +see the specification and Appendix B. + +Conditional throughput is partially related to load classification. +If a load is classified as a lower bound for a goal, +the conditional throughput can be calculated, +and guaranteed to show an effective loss ratio +no larger than the goal loss ratio. + +While the conditional throughput gives more intuitive-looking values +than the relevant lower bound, especially for non-zero goal loss ratio values, +the actual definition is more complicated than the definition of the relevant +lower bound. +In the future, other intuitive values may become popular, +but they are unlikely to supersede the definition of the relevant lower bound +as the most fitting value for comparability purposes, +therefore the relevant lower bound remains a required attribute +of the goal result structure, while the conditional throughput is only optional. + +Note that comparing the best and worst case, the same relevant lower bound value +may result in the conditional throughput differing up to the goal loss ratio. +Therefore it is rarely needed to set the goal width (if expressed +as the relative difference of loads) below the goal loss ratio. +In other words, setting the goal width below the goal loss ratio +may cause the conditional throughput for a larger loss ratio to become smaller +than a conditional throughput for a goal with a smaller goal loss ratio, +which is counter-intuitive, considering they come from the same search. +Therefore it is RECOMMENDED to set the goal width to a value no smaller +than the goal loss ratio. + +## Search Time + +MLRsearch was primarily developed to reduce the time +required to determine a throughput, either the [RFC2544] compliant one, +or some generalization thereof. +The art of achieving short search times +is mainly in the smart selection of intended loads (and intended durations) +for the next trial to perform. + +While there is an indirect impact of the load selection on the reported values, +in practice such impact tends to be small, +even for SUTs with quite a broad performance spectrum. + +A typical example of two approaches to load selection leading to different +relevant lower bounds is when the interval is split in a very uneven way. +Any implementation choosing loads very close to the current relevant lower bound +is quite likely to eventually stumble upon a trial result +with poor performance (due to SUT noise). +For an implementation choosing loads very close +to the current relevant upper bound, this is unlikely, +as it examines more loads that can see a performance +close to the noiseless end of the SUT performance spectrum. + +However, as even splits optimize search duration at give precision, +MLRsearch implementations that prioritize minimizing search time +are unlikely to suffer from any such bias. + +Therefore, this document remains quite vague on load selection +and other optimization details, and configuration attributes related to them. +Assuming users prefer libraries that achieve short overall search time, +the definition of the relevant lower bound +should be strict enough to ensure result repeatability +and comparability between different implementations, +while not restricting future implementations much. + +Sadly, different implementations may exhibit their sweet spot of +the best repeatability for a given search duration +at different goals attribute values, especially concerning +any optional goal attributes such as the initial trial duration. +Thus, this document does not comment much on which configurations +are good for comparability between different implementations. +For comparability between different SUTs using the same implementation, +refer to configurations recommended by that particular implementation. + +## [RFC2544] compliance + +The following search goal ensures unconditional compliance with +[RFC2544] throughput search procedure: + +- Goal loss ratio: zero. + +- Goal final trial duration: 60 seconds. + +- Goal duration sum: 60 seconds. + +- Goal exceed ratio: zero. + +The presence of other search goals does not affect the compliance +of this goal result. +The relevant lower bound and the conditional throughput are in this case +equal to each other, and the value is the [RFC2544] throughput. + +If the 60 second quantity is replaced by a smaller quantity in both attributes, +the conditional throughput is still conditionally compliant with +[RFC2544] throughput. + +# Logic of Load Classification + +This chapter continues with explanations, +but this time more precise definitions are needed +for readers to follow the explanations. +The definitions here are wordy, implementers should read the specification +chapter and appendices for more concise definitions. + +The two related areas of focus in this chapter are load classification +and the conditional throughput, starting with the latter. + +The section Performance Spectrum contains definitions +needed to gain insight into what conditional throughput means. +The rest of the subsections discuss load classification, +they do not refer to Performance Spectrum, only to a few duration sums. + +For load classification, it is useful to define good and bad trials. +A trial is called bad (according to a goal) if its trial loss ratio +is larger than the goal loss ratio. +The trial that is not bad is called good. + +## Performance Spectrum + +There are several equivalent ways to explain +the conditional throughput computation. +One of the ways relies on an object called the performance spectrum. +First, two heavy definitions are needed. + +Take an intended load value, a trial duration value, and a finite set +of trial results, all trials measured at that load value and duration value. +The performance spectrum is the function that maps +any non-negative real number into a sum of trial durations among all trials +in the set that has that number as their forwarding rate, +e.g. map to zero if no trial has that particular forwarding rate. + +A related function, defined if there is at least one trial in the set, +is the performance spectrum divided by the sum of the durations +of all trials in the set. +That function is called the performance probability function, as it satisfies +all the requirements for probability mass function function +of a discrete probability distribution, +the one-dimensional random variable being the trial forwarding rate. + +These functions are related to the SUT performance spectrum, +as sampled by the trials in the set. + +As for any other probability function, we can talk about percentiles +of the performance probability function, including the median. +The conditional throughput will be one such quantile value +for a specifically chosen set of trials. + +Take a set of all full-length trials performed at the relevant lower bound, +sorted by decreasing forwarding rate. +The sum of the durations of those trials +may be less than the goal duration sum, or not. +If it is less, add an imaginary trial result with zero forwarding rate, +such that the new sum of durations is equal to the goal duration sum. +This is the set of trials to use. +The q-value for the quantile +is the goal exceed ratio. +If the quantile touches two trials, +the larger forwarding rate (from the trial result sorted earlier) is used. +The resulting quantity is the conditional throughput of the goal in question. + +First example. +For zero exceed ratio, when goal duration sum has been reached. +The conditional throughput is the smallest forwarding rate among the trials. + +Second example. +For zero exceed ratio, when goal duration sum has not been reached yet. +Due to the missing duration sum, the worst case may still happen, +so the conditional throughput is zero. +This is not reported to the user, +as this load cannot become the relevant lower bound yet. + +Third example. +Exceed ratio 50%, goal duration sum two seconds, +one trial present with the duration of one second and zero loss. +The imaginary trial is added with the duration +of one second and zero forwarding rate. +The median would touch both trials, so the conditional throughput +is the forwarding rate of the one non-imaginary trial. +As that had zero loss, the value is equal to the offered load. + +Note that Appendix B does not take into account short trial results. + +### Summary + +While the conditional throughput is a generalization of the forwarding rate, +its definition is not an obvious one. + +Other than the forwarding rate, the other source of intuition +is the quantile in general, and the median the the recommended case. + +In future, different quantities may prove more useful, +especially when applying to specific problems, +but currently the conditional throughput is the recommended compromise, +especially for repeatability and comparability reasons. + +## Single Trial Duration + +When goal attributes are chosen in such a way that every trial has the same +intended duration, the load classification is simpler. + +The following description looks technical, but it follows the motivation +of goal loss ratio, goal exceed ratio, and goal duration sum. +If the sum of the durations of all trials (at the given load) +is less than the goal duration sum, imagine best case scenario +(all subsequent trials having zero loss) and worst case scenario +(all subsequent trials having 100% loss). +Here we assume there are as many subsequent trials as needed +to make the sum of all trials equal to the goal duration sum. +As the exceed ratio is defined just using sums of durations +(number of trials does not matter), it does not matter whether +the "subsequent trials" can consist of an integer number of full-length trials. + +In any of the two scenarios, we can compute the load exceed ratio, +As the duration sum of good trials divided by the duration sum of all trials, +in both cases including the assumed trials. + +If even in the best case scenario the load exceed ratio would be larger +than the goal exceed ratio, the load is an upper bound. +If even in the worst case scenario the load exceed ratio would not be larger +than the goal exceed ratio, the load is a lower bound. + +Even more specifically. +Take all trials measured at a given load. +The sum of the durations of all bad full-length trials is called the bad sum. +The sum of the durations of all good full-length trials is called the good sum. +The result of adding the bad sum plus the good sum is called the measured sum. +The larger of the measured sum and the goal duration sum is called the whole sum. +The whole sum minus the measured sum is called the missing sum. +The optimistic exceed ratio is the bad sum divided by the whole sum. +The pessimistic exceed ratio is the bad sum plus the missing sum, +that divided by the whole sum. +If the optimistic exceed ratio is larger than the goal exceed ratio, +the load is classified as an upper bound. +If the pessimistic exceed ratio is not larger than the goal exceed ratio, +the load is classified as a lower bound. +Else, the load is classified as undecided. + +The definition of pessimistic exceed ratio is compatible with the logic in +the conditional throughput computation, so in this single trial duration case, +a load is a lower bound if and only if the conditional throughput +effective loss ratio is not larger than the goal loss ratio. +If it is larger, the load is either an upper bound or undecided. + +## Short Trial Scenarios + +Trials with intended duration smaller than the goal final trial duration +are called short trials. +The motivation for load classification logic in the presence of short trials +is based around a counter-factual case: What would the trial result be +if a short trial has been measured as a full-length trial instead? + +There are three main scenarios where human intuition guides +the intended behavior of load classification. + +False good scenario. +The user had their reason for not configuring a shorter goal +final trial duration. +Perhaps SUT has buffers that may get full at longer +trial durations. +Perhaps SUT shows periodic decreases in performance +the user does not want to be treated as noise. +In any case, many good short trials may become bad full-length trials +in the counter-factual case. +In extreme cases, there are plenty of good short trials and no bad short trials. +In this scenario, we want the load classification NOT to classify the load +as a lower bound, despite the abundance of good short trials. +Effectively, we want the good short trials to be ignored, so they +do not contribute to comparisons with the goal duration sum. + +True bad scenario. +When there is a frame loss in a short trial, +the counter-factual full-length trial is expected to lose at least as many +frames. +And in practice, bad short trials are rarely turning into +good full-length trials. +In extreme cases, there are no good short trials. +In this scenario, we want the load classification +to classify the load as an upper bound just based on the abundance +of short bad trials. +Effectively, we want the bad short trials +to contribute to comparisons with the goal duration sum, +so the load can be classified sooner. + +Balanced scenario. +Some SUTs are quite indifferent to trial duration. +Performance probability function constructed from short trial results +is likely to be similar to the performance probability function constructed +from full-length trial results (perhaps with larger dispersion, +but without a big impact on the median quantiles overall). +For a moderate goal exceed ratio value, this may mean there are both +good short trials and bad short trials. +This scenario is there just to invalidate a simple heuristic +of always ignoring good short trials and never ignoring bad short trials. +That simple heuristic would be too biased. +Yes, the short bad trials +are likely to turn into full-length bad trials in the counter-factual case, +but there is no information on what would the good short trials turn into. +The only way to decide safely is to do more trials at full length, +the same as in scenario one. + +## Short Trial Logic + +MLRsearch picks a particular logic for load classification +in the presence of short trials, but it is still RECOMMENDED +to use configurations that imply no short trials, +so the possible inefficiencies in that logic +do not affect the result, and the result has better explainability. + +With that said, the logic differs from the single trial duration case +only in different definition of the bad sum. +The good sum is still the sum across all good full-length trials. + +Few more notions are needed for defining the new bad sum. +The sum of durations of all bad full-length trials is called the bad long sum. +The sum of durations of all bad short trials is called the bad short sum. +The sum of durations of all good short trials is called the good short sum. +One minus the goal exceed ratio is called the inceed ratio. +The goal exceed ratio divided by the inceed ratio is called the exceed coefficient. +The good short sum multiplied by the exceed coefficient is called the balancing sum. +The bad short sum minus the balancing sum is called the excess sum. +If the excess sum is negative, the bad sum is equal to the bad long sum. +Otherwise, the bad sum is equal to the bad long sum plus the excess sum. + +Here is how the new definition of the bad sum fares in the three scenarios, +where the load is close to what would the relevant bounds be +if only full-length trials were used for the search. + +False good scenario. +If the duration is too short, we expect to see a higher frequency +of good short trials. +This could lead to a negative excess sum, +which has no impact, hence the load classification is given just by +full-length trials. +Thus, MLRsearch using too short trials has no detrimental effect +on result comparability in this scenario. +But also using short trials does not help with overall search duration, +probably making it worse. + +True bad cenario. +Settings with a small exceed ratio +have a small exceed coefficient, so the impact of the good short sum is small, +and the bad short sum is almost wholly converted into excess sum, +thus bad short trials have almost as big an impact as full-length bad trials. +The same conclusion applies to moderate exceed ratio values +when the good short sum is small. +Thus, short trials can cause a load to get classified as an upper bound earlier, +bringing time savings (while not affecting comparability). + +Balanced scenario. +Here excess sum is small in absolute value, as the balancing sum +is expected to be similar to the bad short sum. +Once again, full-length trials are needed for final load classification; +but usage of short trials probably means MLRsearch needed +a shorter overall search time before selecting this load for measurement, +thus bringing time savings (while not affecting comparability). + +Note that in presence of short trial results, +the comparibility between the load classification +and the conditional throughput is only partial. +The conditional throughput still comes from a good long trial, +but a load higher than the relevant lower bound may also compute to a good value. + +## Longer Trial Durations + +If there are trial results with an intended duration larger +than the goal trial duration, the precise definitions +in Appendix A and Appendix B treat them in exactly the same way +as trials with duration equal to the goal trial duration. + +But in configurations with moderate (including 0.5) or small +goal exceed ratio and small goal loss ratio (especially zero), +bad trials with longer than goal durations may bias the search +towards the lower load values, as the noiseful end of the spectrum +gets a larger probability of causing the loss within the longer trials. + +For some users, this is an acceptable price +for increased configuration flexibility +(perhaps saving time for the related goals), +so implementations SHOULD allow such configurations. +Still, users are encouraged to avoid such configurations +by making all goals use the same final trial duration, +so their results remain comparable across implementations. + +# Addressed Problems + +Now when MLRsearch is clearly specified and explained, +it is possible to summarize how does MLRsearch specification help with problems. + +Here, "multiple trials" is a shorthand for having the goal final trial duration +significantly smaller than the goal duration sum. +This results in MLRsearch performing multiple trials at the same load, +which may not be the case with other configurations. + +## Long Test Duration + +As shortening the overall search duration is the main motivation +of MLRsearch library development, the library implements +multiple improvements on this front, both big and small. + +Most of implementation details are not constrained by the MLRsearch specification, +so that future implementations may keep shortening the search duration even more. + +One exception is the impact of short trial results on the relevant lower bound. +While motivated by human intuition, the logic is not straightforward. +In practice, configurations with only one common trial duration value +are capable of achieving good overal search time and result repeatability +without the need to consider short trials. + +### Impact of goal attribute values + +From the required goal attributes, the goal duration sum +remains the best way to get even shorter searches. + +Usage of multiple trials can also save time, +depending on wait times around trial traffic. + +The farther the goal exceed ratio is from 0.5 (towards zero or one), +the less predictable the overal search duration becomes in practice. + +Width parameter does not change search duration much in practice +(compared to other, mainly optional goal attributes). + +## DUT in SUT + +In practice, using multiple trials and moderate exceed ratios +often improves result repeatability without increasing the overall search time, +depending on the specific SUT and DUT characteristics. +Benefits for separating SUT noise are less clear though, +as it is not easy to distinguish SUT noise from DUT instability in general. + +Conditional throughput has an intuitive meaning when described +using the performance spectrum, so this is an improvement +over existing simple (less configurable) search procedures. + +Multiple trials can save time also when the noisy end of +the preformance spectrum needs to be examined, e.g. for [RFC9004]. + +Under some circumstances, testing the same DUT and SUT setup with different +DUT configurations can give some hints on what part of noise is SUT noise +and what part is DUT performance fluctuations. +In practice, both types of noise tend to be too complicated for that analysis. + +MLRsearch enables users to search for multiple goals, +potentially providing more insight at the cost of a longer overall search time. +However, for a thorough and reliable examination of DUT-SUT interactions, +it is necessary to employ additional methods beyond black-box benchmarking, +such as collecting and analyzing DUT and SUT telemetry. + +## Repeatability and Comparability + +Multiple trials improve repeatability, depending on exceed ratio. + +In practice, one-second goal final trial duration with exceed ratio 0.5 +is good enough for modern SUTs. +However, unless smaller wait times around the traffic part of the trial +are allowed, too much of overal search time would be wasted on waiting. + +It is not clear whether exceed ratios higher than 0.5 are better +for repeatability. +The 0.5 value is still preferred due to explainability using median. + +It is possible that the conditional throughput values (with non-zero goal +loss ratio) are better for repeatability than the relevant lower bound values. +This is especially for implementations +which pick load from a small set of discrete values, +as that hides small variances in relevant lower bound values +other implementations may find. + +Implementations focusing on shortening the overall search time +are automatically forced to avoid comparability issues due to load selection, +as they must prefer even splits wherever possible. +But this conclusion only holds when the same goals are used. +Larger adoption is needed before any further claims on comparability +between MLRsearch implementations can be made. + +## Throughput with Non-Zero Loss + +Trivially suported by the goal loss ratio attribute. + +In practice, usage of non-zero loss ratio values +improves the result repeatability +(exactly as expected based on results from simpler search methods). + +## Inconsistent Trial Results + +MLRsearch is conservative wherever possible. +This is built into the definition of conditional throughput, +and into the treatment of short trial results for load classification. + +This is consistent with [RFC2544] zero loss tolerance motivation. + +If the noiseless part of the SUT performance spectrum is of interest, +it should be enough to set small value for the goal final trial duration, +and perhaps also a large value for the goal exceed ratio. + +Implementations may offer other (optional) configuration attributes +to become less conservative, but currently it is not clear +what impact would that have on repeatability. + +# IANA Considerations + +No requests of IANA. + +# Security Considerations + +Benchmarking activities as described in this memo are limited to +technology characterization of a DUT/SUT using controlled stimuli in a +laboratory environment, with dedicated address space and the constraints +specified in the sections above. + +The benchmarking network topology will be an independent test setup and +MUST NOT be connected to devices that may forward the test traffic into +a production network or misroute traffic to the test management network. + +Further, benchmarking is performed on a "black-box" basis, relying +solely on measurements observable external to the DUT/SUT. + +Special capabilities SHOULD NOT exist in the DUT/SUT specifically for +benchmarking purposes. Any implications for network security arising +from the DUT/SUT SHOULD be identical in the lab and in production +networks. + +# Acknowledgements + +Some phrases and statements in this document were created +with help of Mistral AI (mistral.ai). + +Many thanks to Alec Hothan of the OPNFV NFVbench project for thorough +review and numerous useful comments and suggestions. + +Special wholehearted gratitude and thanks to the late Al Morton for his +thorough reviews filled with very specific feedback and constructive +guidelines. Thank you Al for the close collaboration over the years, +for your continuous unwavering encouragement full of empathy and +positive attitude. +Al, you are dearly missed. + +# Appendix A: Load Classification + +This is the specification of how to perform the load classification. + +Any intended load value can be classified, according to the given search goal. + +The algorithm uses (some subsets of) the set of all available trial results +from trials measured at a given intended load at the end of the search. +All durations are those returned by the measurer. + +The block at the end of this appendix holds pseudocode +which computes two values, stored in variables named optimistic and pessimistic. +The pseudocode happens to be a valid Python code. + +If both values are computed to be true, the load in question +is classified as a lower bound according to the given search goal. +If both values are false, the load is classified as an upper bound. +Otherwise, the load is classified as undecided. + +The pseudocode expects the following variables to hold values as follows: + +- goal_duration_sum: The duration sum value of the given search goal. + +- goal_exceed_ratio: The exceed ratio value of the given search goal. + +- good_long_sum: Sum of durations across trials with trial duration + at least equal to the goal final trial duration and with a trial loss ratio + not higher than the goal loss ratio. + +- bad_long_sum: Sum of durations across trials with trial duration + at least equal to the goal final trial duration and with a trial loss ratio + higher than the goal loss ratio. + +- good_short_sum: Sum of durations across trials with trial duration + shorter than the goal final trial duration and with a trial loss ratio + not higher than the goal loss ratio. + +- bad_short_sum: Sum of durations across trials with trial duration + shorter than the goal final trial duration and with a trial loss ratio + higher than the goal loss ratio. + +The code works correctly also when there are no trial results at the given load. + +~~~ python +balancing_sum = good_short_sum * goal_exceed_ratio / (1.0 - goal_exceed_ratio) +effective_bad_sum = bad_long_sum + max(0.0, bad_short_sum - balancing_sum) +effective_whole_sum = max(good_long_sum + effective_bad_sum, goal_duration_sum) +quantile_duration_sum = effective_whole_sum * goal_exceed_ratio +optimistic = effective_bad_sum <= quantile_duration_sum +pessimistic = (effective_whole_sum - good_long_sum) <= quantile_duration_sum +~~~ + +# Appendix B: Conditional Throughput + +This is the specification of how to compute conditional throughput. + +Any intended load value can be used as the basis for the following computation, +but only the relevant lower bound (at the end of the search) +leads to the value called the conditional throughput for a given search goal. + +The algorithm uses (some subsets of) the set of all available trial results +from trials measured at a given intended load at the end of the search. +All durations are those returned by the measurer. + +The block at the end of this appendix holds pseudocode +which computes a value stored as variable conditional_throughput. +The pseudocode happens to be a valid Python code. + +The pseudocode expects the following variables to hold values as follows: + +- goal_duration_sum: The duration sum value of the given search goal. + +- goal_exceed_ratio: The exceed ratio value of the given search goal. + +- good_long_sum: Sum of durations across trials with trial duration + at least equal to the goal final trial duration and with a trial loss ratio + not higher than the goal loss ratio. + +- bad_long_sum: Sum of durations across trials with trial duration + at least equal to the goal final trial duration and with a trial loss ratio + higher than the goal loss ratio. + +- long_trials: An iterable of all trial results from trials with trial duration + at least equal to the goal final trial duration, + sorted by increasing the trial loss ratio. + A trial result is a composite with the following two attributes available: + + - trial.loss_ratio: The trial loss ratio as measured for this trial. + + - trial.duration: The trial duration of this trial. + +The code works correctly only when there if there is at least one +trial result measured at a given load. + +~~~ python +all_long_sum = max(goal_duration_sum, good_long_sum + bad_long_sum) +remaining = all_long_sum * (1.0 - goal_exceed_ratio) +quantile_loss_ratio = None +for trial in long_trials: + if quantile_loss_ratio is None or remaining > 0.0: + quantile_loss_ratio = trial.loss_ratio + remaining -= trial.duration + else: + break +else: + if remaining > 0.0: + quantile_loss_ratio = 1.0 +conditional_throughput = intended_load * (1.0 - quantile_loss_ratio) +~~~ + +--- back |