CC_HTCP(4) | Device Drivers Manual | CC_HTCP(4) |
cc_htcp
— H-TCP
Congestion Control Algorithm
The H-TCP congestion control algorithm was designed to provide increased throughput in fast and long-distance networks. It attempts to maintain fairness when competing with legacy NewReno TCP in lower speed scenarios where NewReno is able to operate adequately.
The congestion window is increased as a function of the time elapsed since the last congestion event. The window increase algorithm operates like NewReno for the first second after a congestion event, and then switches to a high-speed mode based on a quadratic increase function.
The implementation was done in a clean-room fashion, and is based on the Internet Draft and other documents referenced in the SEE ALSO section below.
The algorithm exposes the following tunable variables in the net.inet.tcp.cc.htcp branch of the sysctl(3) MIB:
cc_chd(4), cc_cubic(4), cc_hd(4), cc_newreno(4), cc_vegas(4), mod_cc(4), tcp(4), mod_cc(9)
D. Leith and R. Shorten, H-TCP: TCP Congestion Control for High Bandwidth-Delay Product Paths, http://tools.ietf.org/id/draft-leith-tcp-htcp-06.txt.
D. Leith, R. Shorten, and T. Yee, H-TCP: A framework for congestion control in high-speed and long-distance networks, Proc. PFLDnet, 2005.
G. Armitage, L. Stewart, M. Welzl, and J. Healy, An independent H-TCP implementation under FreeBSD 7.0: description and observed behaviour, SIGCOMM Comput. Commun. Rev., 3, 38, 27-38, July 2008.
Development and testing of this software were made possible in part by grants from the FreeBSD Foundation and Cisco University Research Program Fund at Community Foundation Silicon Valley.
The cc_htcp
congestion control module
first appeared in FreeBSD 9.0.
The module was first released in 2007 by James Healy and Lawrence Stewart whilst working on the NewTCP research project at Swinburne University of Technology's Centre for Advanced Internet Architectures, Melbourne, Australia, which was made possible in part by a grant from the Cisco University Research Program Fund at Community Foundation Silicon Valley. More details are available at:
http://caia.swin.edu.au/urp/newtcp/
The cc_htcp
congestion control module was
written by James Healy
<jimmy@deefa.com> and
Lawrence Stewart
<lstewart@FreeBSD.org>.
This manual page was written by Lawrence Stewart <lstewart@FreeBSD.org> and David Hayes <david.hayes@ieee.org>.
September 15, 2011 | Debian |