> On 17 Jun 2020, at 18:20, Martin Duke <martin.h.d...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> Hi Stewart,
> 
> If there are no further objections, I'm going to declare consensus.
> 
> On Thu, Jun 11, 2020 at 1:45 PM Martin Duke <martin.h.d...@gmail.com 
> <mailto:martin.h.d...@gmail.com>> wrote:
> Stewart,
> 
> do we need more cycles for this, or is draft-15 sufficient to address your 
> concerns?
> 
> On Mon, Jun 8, 2020 at 12:52 PM Mark Allman <mall...@icir.org 
> <mailto:mall...@icir.org>> wrote:
> 
> Hi Stewart, et.al <http://et.al/>.!
> 
> I just submitted a new version of rto-consider.  Please ask the
> datatracker for diffs between this and rev -14.  The highlights:
> 
>   - The diffs with the last rev are here: 
> https://tools.ietf.org/rfcdiff?difftype=--hwdiff&url2=draft-ietf-tcpm-rto-consider-15.txt
>  
> <https://tools.ietf.org/rfcdiff?difftype=--hwdiff&url2=draft-ietf-tcpm-rto-consider-15.txt>

In the general case, delay across a
    network path depends not only on distance, but also a number of
    variable components such as the route and the level of buffering in
    intermediate devices.

Its is more the contending/conflicting traffic rather than the buffering, or 
perhaps the time spent in queues, but “buffering” is a link a transport 
colloquial term.


Since our wide-area network paths are best
    effort, packet loss is a regular occurrence. 

No the best effort Internet experiences this. There ate many well engineered 
WAN that do not.

What I am not seeing is clearer text that distinguishes between user traffic 
and “engineering” traffic that is used to make the network work, and between 
the end to end traffic and traffic within an AS that may be there for other 
purposes (high value service also offered by the provider) and WANs that are 
well engineered.

Perhaps we could include a clearer disclaimer regarding the 
non-best-effort-internet-end-to-end traffic?

You have some text on this down in section 2 but it is a bit buried.

Perhaps something early on of the form: This document is specially concerned 
with end to end behaviour over the best effort Internet. As noted in section 2 
it may not me applicable to other types of WAN, or to the  traffic used in 
affecting the operation of the Internet itself.


 An exception to this rule is if an IETF standardized mechanism
        determines that a particular loss is due to a non-congestion
        event (e.g., packet corruption).  

That is a bit heavy. It should be “a protocol” there than an IETF 
standardarized mechanism. The IETF does not have a monopoly on pre-blessing 
protocols before they are deployed.



> 
>   - All small comments addressed.
> 
>   - I think we all agree that this is not a one-size-fits-all
>     situation.  Rather, this document is meant to be a default case.
>     So, the main action of this rev is to make that point more
>     clearly.  The first paragraph in the intro is new.  Also, there
>     are some more words fleshing out the context more in section 2.
>     In particular, more emphatically making the point that other
>     loss detectors are fine for specific cases.


As I note above from a routing and packet transport (as opposed to the 
transport layer) perspective I think we should more clearly recognise at the 
beginning the fact that this is for the worst case network, not for well 
engineered (WAN and DC) networks  and the mechanisms fundamental to the 
operation of the network itself.

> 
>   - The first paragraph in the intro also makes clear we adopt the
>     loss == congestion model (as that is the conservative default,
>     not because it is always true).
> 
>   - I made one other change that wasn't exactly called for, but
>     seems like an oversight.
> 
>     Previously guideline (4) said loss MUST be taken as an
>     indication of congestion and some standard response taken.  But,
>     this guideline has an explicit exception for cases where we know
>     the loss was caused by some non-congestion event.  Guideline (3)
>     says you MUST backoff.  But, it did not have this exception for
>     cases where we can tell the cause.  But, I think based on the
>     spirit of (4), (3) should also have these words.  So, I added
>     them.

In some cases you cannot tell the cause, but it is more important to ignore the 
loss. OAM being a particularly good example.

> 
>     Also, I swapped (3) and (4) because it seemed more natural in
>     re-reading to first think about taking congestion action and
>     then dealing with backoff.  I think the ordering is a small
>     thing, but folks can yell and I'll put it back if there is
>     angst.
> 
> Please take a look and let me know if this helps things along or
> not.
> 
> allman

We are getting there, but I would ask that you take the transport hat off and 
look again from an infrastructure and packet transport perspective.

Best regards

Stewart


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