Hi Ariel, some comments inlined below. Regards, Cristian

-----Original Message-----
From: dev [mailto:dev-boun...@dpdk.org] On Behalf Of Ariel Rodriguez
Sent: Thursday, November 28, 2013 8:53 PM
To: dev at dpdk.org
Subject: [dpdk-dev] 4 Traffic classes per Pipe limitation

         Hi, im working with the qos scheduler framework and i have a few
questions. Why the 4 traffic classes per pipe limitation? .

[Cristian] The DPDK hierarchical scheduler allows for 4 traffic classes with 4 
packet queues per traffic class for each pipe (user). Traffic classes and 
scheduled in strict priority, while queues within a pipe traffic class are 
scheduled using byte-level Weighted Round Robin (WRR) with configured weights. 
Since we have 16 packet queues per pipe (user), we could argue that actually 16 
(sub)traffic classes are supported. When the weight ratio between different 
queues of the same traffic class is high (e.g. 4:1, 8:1, 16:1, etc), then WRR 
starts behaving like strict priority. If your mapping to traffic classes is 
done using DSCP, you can simply map some DSCP values to different queues within 
same traffic class as well.

Im developing a deep packet inspection solution for a telecom company and i
we need more than just 4 traffic classes per pipe. Im able to recognise
almost all layer 7 applications, such as  youtube, p2p , netflix ,
google-ads , etc, etc and i really need to map this type of flows in
differents traffic classes.

[Cristian] Not sure I completely agree with you here. 
The traffic classes are there for the reason of providing different levels of 
delay (latency), delay variation (jitter), packet loss rate, etc. So, for 
example, one possible mapping of traffic types to the 4 traffic classes might 
be: voice = TC0 (highest priority), interactive video = TC1, 
non-interactive/cached video = TC2, best effort traffic (file downloads, web 
browsing, email, etc) = TC3 (lowest priority). In my opinion, youtube and 
netflix could be considered as being part of the same traffic class (e.g. TC2), 
as they have very similar (if not identical) requirements, probably same for 
p2p and google-ads, email, web browsing, etc (where best effort traffic class 
is probably applicable). If really needed, youtube and netflix could be mapped 
to different queues of TC2.
If different service / actions need to be applied to different applications 
that have the same scheduling requirements (and part of the same traffic 
class), then this would probably have to be decided earlier during the 
classification phase and e.g. rate limit youtube traffic per user using traffic 
metering algorithms, block p2p traffic if you are a firewall, etc; these are 
probably actions that could be enforced outside of scheduling/traffic 
management.

         The idea is mark each flow depending on the provisioning
information and assign that flows to different subport depending on the
information given and assign a pipe with the subscriber contract rate, but
we really need to have more than 4 traffic clases, because we want to
control the bandwidth of different  layer 7 protocols flows. At most we
need 32 or 64 traffic classes per subscriber.

[Cristian] Bandwidth control could be done on both ingress side as well as 
egress side. 
On ingress, the amount of incoming traffic for a specific user 
(flow/connection/application) could be limited to predefined values, with 
potentially different levels for different classes of users (e.g. regular / 
premium / company / etc).
On egress, several pipe profiles can be defined using the DPDK hierarchical 
scheduler, which would allow setting up a different rate limit for each traffic 
class for each user. Likewise, traffic classes can be rate limited at the 
subport level (group of users).

         I understand that in a given interval of time  a subscriber dont
use more than 4 protocols simultaneously , generally speaking , or 4
traffic classes in dpdk qos terminology, but the framework doesnt allow us
to configure more traffic classes.

         Im looking the code of qos scheduler and im not seeing why this
restriction. Is a performance problem, or a waste of resource problem? ,
 maybe when the port grinder search for the active queues for each traffic
class  the delay of iterating over all pipes and each traffic class is too
high.
         Cisco have a bandwidth managment solution that claims to control a
million of subscribers simoultaneosly with 64 traffic classes per
subscriber (pipes) and 4 queues per traffic classes (Cisco solution calls
traffic clases  as "Bandwith controller per service or BWC , a subscriber
can have 64 BWC simoultaneasly). Its this posible? maybe this guys
implements the bandwidth managment in hardware?.
         Anyway i really need this feature , but if the qos scheduller
cannot scale to more than 4 traffic classes per pipe i would have to
implement a custom packet scheduler from scratch and i really dont want to
do that.

         Thanks for the patience, and sorry for my rusty english, im from
Argentina.

 Best Regards.


Ariel Horacio Rodriguez, Callis Technologies.
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Registered in Ireland
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