Joe, your insistence on using html makes it impossible to respond to all of 
your points inline
which is the reason for my top-posts. And by top-posting, I am unable to 
respond to each of
your points individually – so if it seems I am ignoring some points I am not; 
some simply get
lost as a result of the top-posting. So, here is my attempt at addressing this 
message:

Parcels that contain a single segment whether 64K or considerably less are 
still sent as
(singleton) parcels and not ordinary packets. That way, nodes in the network 
can know
that it is OK to encapsulate and fragment since by asserting its interest in 
receiving parcels
the destination has also subscribed to being able to reassemble up to a full 
64K.

Parcels do not set (Payload Length / Total Length) to 0; they set it to the 
length of the
first element of the parcel (which is also the same length of each non-final 
element of
the parcel). What happens then is that network equipment will see a unit with 
an L3
length that may be considerably shorter than the L2 length. You are right that 
legacy
routers might not like this (or, they might truncate the packet according to L3 
length),
and so for paths that might traverse legacy routers the first-hop node that 
recognizes
parcels instead encapsulates the parcel in an IPv4 or IPv6 header then performs 
(source)
fragmentation if necessary. These IP fragments will then travel through legacy 
routers
just fine.

About RFC793bis, you and Wes Eddy know far more about its status than I do; I 
only
noted that this is something with TCP implications and so made mention of it in 
case
there is still room for a few more engine tweaks while the hood is still open.

About IPv4, I am currently running IPv4 edge networks with IPv4-in-IPv6 tunnel 
endpoints
connected to an IPv6 transit network and it works really good. End systems get 
to use
smaller addresses and smaller headers, and they can talk to remote 
correspondents using
IPv4 as if they were all on the same IPv4 network. So yes, I think we might 
still want to
consider IPv4 for edge networks like that.

About getting 64K packets across, only the edge networks or end systems see 
them as
large packets; in the core thy are typically broken up into something much 
smaller by
ingress nodes that apply segmentation/fragmentation. We don’t need the core to 
move
to jumbo links; we only need that at the edges. ATM taught us that.

About our “nail”, end systems get to see larger packets/parcels and get to take 
advantage
of the reduced interrupts and system call overhead they provide. That is what 
makes it
worthwhile.

Fred

From: to...@strayalpha.com [mailto:to...@strayalpha.com]
Sent: Saturday, December 18, 2021 8:13 PM
To: Templin (US), Fred L <fred.l.temp...@boeing.com>
Cc: int-area@ietf.org; Wes Eddy <w...@mti-systems.com>
Subject: Re: [Int-area] IP parcels

HI, Fred,

If you have one segment that’s less than 64K, you don’t need the parcel option 
at all.

If you have something longer than 64K, either as a single segment or multiple 
smaller segments, by setting total length to 0, you end up being dropped by 
legacy routers, which either ignore options they don’t understand or drop 
packets with options they don’t support.

RFC793bis does talk about IPv6 jumbos, but this new work is out of scope for 
RFC793bis - furthermore, it’s too late. It has passed WGLC, IETF LC, and is 
currently in IESG review for publication.

You also haven’t addressed why the IETF should be taking up this *new* work for 
IPv4, which I thought also had been considered ineligible.

But overall, again, what’s the point? We can’t even get 64K IP packets through 
the Internet; making them larger doesn’t make that easier or more likely. Such 
large sizes are of diminishing benefit; routers already forward at 40Gbps per 
link for minimal packets and end systems have other problems that this 
exacerbates.

This seems a lot like a huge hammer in search of a nail. Where’s the nail?

Joe

—
Joe Touch, temporal epistemologist
www.strayalpha.com<http://www.strayalpha.com>


On Dec 18, 2021, at 7:18 PM, Templin (US), Fred L 
<fred.l.temp...@boeing.com<mailto:fred.l.temp...@boeing.com>> wrote:

Joe, I never said that I wanted to restrict this to small transport segments; 
in fact, I want
just the opposite – I want large segments. A perfectly legal parcel is one 
which includes 1
~64KB segment - another legal parcel is one which includes 64 of them! If you 
want bigger
segments than that, then true jumbos are necessary and this spec does not 
preclude that.

About RFC793(bis), I see there is a section on Jumbos and IP parcels is (sort 
of) an application
of Jumbos.

Fred

From: to...@strayalpha.com<mailto:to...@strayalpha.com> 
[mailto:to...@strayalpha.com]
Sent: Saturday, December 18, 2021 4:57 PM
To: Templin (US), Fred L 
<fred.l.temp...@boeing.com<mailto:fred.l.temp...@boeing.com>>
Cc: int-area@ietf.org<mailto:int-area@ietf.org>; Wes Eddy 
<w...@mti-systems.com<mailto:w...@mti-systems.com>>
Subject: [EXTERNAL] Re: [Int-area] IP parcels


EXT email: be mindful of links/attachments.




Hi, Fred,

Regarding 793bis, new ideas are out of scope. It’s supposed to be a roll-in of 
existing items only.

Nevermind the problems below, which “TCP will find a way” doesn’t magically fix.

The problem is this:
- end systems need to send larger transport segments (not just IP segments)
- if they can do that, they should, filling up to the largest IP payload

Having an IP packet have the opportunity to include lots of small transport 
packets assumes transport packets either work better or faster when they’re 
small. It’s the opposite.

Joe

—
Joe Touch, temporal epistemologist
www.strayalpha.com<http://www.strayalpha.com/>



On Dec 18, 2021, at 4:42 PM, Templin (US), Fred L 
<fred.l.temp...@boeing.com<mailto:fred.l.temp...@boeing.com>> wrote:

Joe, TCP will find a way to adapt – it always has. I also see that TCP is 
currently undergoing
a second edition revision so the timing seems right to consider IP parcels in 
the analysis.
I am Cc’ing the second edition editor for his information – Wesley, please 
consider this
new concept called “IP Parcels” as it relates to your document.

Here is the latest draft version – it expands on the “Motivation” section and 
adds a number
of important feature such as a new “Parcels Permitted” TCP option:

https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-templin-intarea-parcels/

Fred

From: to...@strayalpha.com<mailto:to...@strayalpha.com> 
[mailto:to...@strayalpha.com]
Sent: Friday, December 17, 2021 6:01 PM
To: Templin (US), Fred L 
<fred.l.temp...@boeing.com<mailto:fred.l.temp...@boeing.com>>
Cc: int-area@ietf.org<mailto:int-area@ietf.org>
Subject: Re: [Int-area] IP parcels

Hi, Fred,

I’m first concerned at the use of an IP option at all, due to the problems with 
*any* options forcing processing to slow-path.

From TCP’s viewpoint, it seems like you’ve just created a nightmare for SACK 
and ECN, basically because you will encourage drops of large bursts of packets.

This will also increase the bustiness of TCP, i.e., rather than letting the 
ACKs support pacing.

Any part of the system that currently coalesces TCP packets is likely to 
generate errors here, because they might see only the first TCP segment.

However, AFAICT the most significant consideration is that  the issue with 
per-packet performance is at the TCP and UDP layers, not as much at the IP 
layer.

So what problem is this trying to solve?

Joe
—
Joe Touch, temporal epistemologist
www.strayalpha.com<http://www.strayalpha.com/>




On Dec 17, 2021, at 5:06 PM, Templin (US), Fred L 
<fred.l.temp...@boeing.com<mailto:fred.l.temp...@boeing.com>> wrote:

Here's one that should help with shipping, just in time for Christmas. Thanks
to everyone for the past and future list exchanges.

Fred

-----Original Message-----
From: I-D-Announce [mailto:i-d-announce-boun...@ietf.org] On Behalf Of 
internet-dra...@ietf.org<mailto:internet-dra...@ietf.org>
Sent: Friday, December 17, 2021 5:00 PM
To: i-d-annou...@ietf.org<mailto:i-d-annou...@ietf.org>
Subject: I-D Action: draft-templin-intarea-parcels-00.txt


A New Internet-Draft is available from the on-line Internet-Drafts directories.


       Title           : IP Parcels
       Author          : Fred L. Templin
               Filename        : draft-templin-intarea-parcels-00.txt
               Pages           : 8
               Date            : 2021-12-17

Abstract:
  IP packets (both IPv4 and IPv6) are understood to contain a unit of
  data which becomes the retransmission unit in case of loss.  Upper
  layer protocols such as the Transmission Control Protocol (TCP)
  prepare data units known as "segments", with traditional arrangements
  including a single segment per packet.  This document presents a new
  construct known as the "IP Parcel" which permits a single packet to
  carry multiple segments.  The parcel can be opened at middleboxes on
  the path with the included segments broken out into individual
  packets, then rejoined into one or more repackaged parcels to be
  forwarded further toward the final destination.  Reordering of
  segments within parcels is unimportant; what matters is that the
  number of parcels delivered to the final destination should be kept
  to a minimum, and that loss or receipt of individual segments (and
  not parcel size) determines the retransmission unit.


The IETF datatracker status page for this draft is:
https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-templin-intarea-parcels/

There is also an htmlized version available at:
https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/draft-templin-intarea-parcels-00


Internet-Drafts are also available by rsync at 
rsync.ietf.org<http://rsync.ietf.org/>::internet-drafts


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or ftp://ftp.ietf.org/ietf/1shadow-sites.txt

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