IETF RFC 7750 PDF

IETF RFC 7750 PDF

Name:
IETF RFC 7750 PDF

Published Date:
02/01/2016

Status:
[ Active ]

Description:

Differentiated Service Code Point and Explicit Congestion Notification Monitoring in the Two-Way Active Measurement Protocol (TWAMP)

Publisher:
Internet Engineering Task Force

Document status:
Active

Format:
Electronic (PDF)

Delivery time:
10 minutes

Delivery time (for Russian version):
200 business days

SKU:

Choose Document Language:
$9.9
Need Help?

Introduction

The One-Way Active Measurement Protocol (OWAMP) [RFC4656] defines the Type-P Descriptor field and negotiation of its value in the OWAMPControl protocol. The Two-Way Active Measurement Protocol (TWAMP) [RFC5357] states that only a Differentiated Services Code Point (DSCP) value (see [RFC2474], [RFC3168], and [RFC3260]) can be defined by Type-P Descriptor, and the negotiated value must be used by both the Session-Sender and Session-Reflector. The TWAMP specification also states that the same DSCP value (found in the Session-Sender packet) MUST be used in the test packet reflected by the Session- Reflector. However, the TWAMP-Test protocol does not specify any methods to determine or report when the DSCP value has changed or is different than expected in the forward or reverse direction. Remarking the DSCP (changing its original value) in IP networks is possible and often accomplished by a Differentiated Services policy configured on a single node along the IP path. In many cases, a change of the DSCP value indicates an unintentional or erroneous behavior. At best, the Session-Sender can detect a change of the DSCP reverse direction, assuming such a change is actually detectable.

This document describes an OPTIONAL feature for TWAMP. It is called DSCP and ECN Monitoring. It allows the Session-Sender to know the actual DSCP value received at the Session-Reflector. Furthermore, this feature tracks the Explicit Congestion Notification (ECN) value (see [RFC2474], [RFC3168], and [RFC3260]) received at the Session-Reflector. This is helpful to determine if the ECN is actually operating or if an ECN-capable node has detected congestion in the forward direction.


Edition : 16
File Size : 1 file , 16 KB
Number of Pages : 11
Published : 02/01/2016

History


Related products

IETF RFC 6578
Published Date: 03/01/2012
Collection Synchronization for Web Distributed Authoring and Versioning (WebDAV)
$12
IETF RFC 3949
Published Date: 02/01/2005
File Format for Internet Fax
$18.3

Best-Selling Products

TMS 1002-08
Published Date: 01/01/2008
A Transition Guide from the 2005 to the 2008 MSJC
$6
TMS 1222-17
Published Date: 2018
Masonry Basics, 2nd Edition
$10.5
TMS 1409-18
Published Date: 2018
Masonry Structures: Behavior and Design, 4th Edition
$54
TMS 1700-17
Published Date: 2017
Guide for Condition Assessment of Masonry Facades, 2017
$6
TMS 216-07
Published Date: 06/01/2007
Determining Fire Resistance - Concrete and Masonry (ACI 216.1-07 / TMS-0216-07)
$15.6