CAKE(8) | Linux | CAKE(8) |
CAKE - Common Applications Kept Enhanced (CAKE)
tc qdisc ... cake
[ bandwidth RATE | unlimited* | autorate-ingress ]
[ rtt TIME | datacentre | lan | metro |
regional | internet* | oceanic | satellite |
interplanetary ]
[ besteffort | diffserv8 | diffserv4 | diffserv3*
]
[ flowblind | srchost | dsthost | hosts |
flows | dual-srchost | dual-dsthost |
triple-isolate* ]
[ nat | nonat* ]
[ wash | nowash* ]
[ split-gso* | no-split-gso ]
[ ack-filter | ack-filter-aggressive | no-ack-filter* ]
[ memlimit LIMIT ]
[ ptm | atm | noatm* ]
[ overhead N | conservative | raw* ]
[ mpu N ]
[ ingress | egress* ]
(* marks defaults)
CAKE (Common Applications Kept Enhanced) is a shaping-capable queue discipline which uses both AQM and FQ. It combines COBALT, which is an AQM algorithm combining Codel and BLUE, a shaper which operates in deficit mode, and a variant of DRR++ for flow isolation. 8-way set-associative hashing is used to virtually eliminate hash collisions. Priority queuing is available through a simplified diffserv implementation. Overhead compensation for various encapsulation schemes is tightly integrated.
All settings are optional; the default settings are chosen to be sensible in most common deployments. Most people will only need to set the bandwidth parameter to get useful results, but reading the Overhead Compensation and Round Trip Time sections is strongly encouraged.
CAKE uses a deficit-mode shaper, which does not exhibit the initial burst typical of token-bucket shapers. It will automatically burst precisely as much as required to maintain the configured throughput. As such, it is very straightforward to configure.
unlimited (default)
No limit on the bandwidth.
bandwidth RATE
Set the shaper bandwidth. See tc(8) or examples below for details of
the RATE value.
autorate-ingress
Automatic capacity estimation based on traffic arriving at this qdisc. This
is most likely to be useful with cellular links, which tend to change
quality randomly. A bandwidth parameter can be used in conjunction to
specify an initial estimate. The shaper will periodically be set to a
bandwidth slightly below the estimated rate. This estimator cannot estimate
the bandwidth of links downstream of itself.
The size of each packet on the wire may differ from that seen by Linux. The following parameters allow CAKE to compensate for this difference by internally considering each packet to be bigger than Linux informs it. To assist users who are not expert network engineers, keywords have been provided to represent a number of common link technologies.
overhead BYTES
Adds BYTES to the size of each packet. BYTES may be negative; values between
-64 and 256 (inclusive) are accepted.
mpu BYTES
Rounds each packet (including overhead) up to a minimum length BYTES. BYTES
may not be negative; values between 0 and 256 (inclusive) are accepted.
atm
Compensates for ATM cell framing, which is normally found on ADSL links. This
is performed after the overhead parameter above. ATM uses fixed
53-byte cells, each of which can carry 48 bytes payload.
ptm
Compensates for PTM encoding, which is normally found on VDSL2 links and uses
a 64b/65b encoding scheme. It is even more efficient to simply derate the
specified shaper bandwidth by a factor of 64/65 or 0.984. See ITU G.992.3
Annex N and IEEE 802.3 Section 61.3 for details.
noatm
Disables ATM and PTM compensation.
These two keywords are provided for quick-and-dirty setup. Use them if you can't be bothered to read the rest of this section.
raw (default)
Turns off all overhead compensation in CAKE. The packet size reported by
Linux will be used directly.
Other overhead keywords may be added after "raw". The effect of this is to make the overhead compensation operate relative to the reported packet size, not the underlying IP packet size.
conservative
Compensates for more overhead than is likely to occur on any widely-deployed
link technology.
Equivalent to overhead 48 atm.
Most ADSL modems have a way to check which framing scheme is in use. Often this is also specified in the settings document provided by the ISP. The keywords in this section are intended to correspond with these sources of information. All of them implicitly set the atm flag.
pppoa-vcmux
Equivalent to overhead 10 atm
pppoa-llc
Equivalent to overhead 14 atm
pppoe-vcmux
Equivalent to overhead 32 atm
pppoe-llcsnap
Equivalent to overhead 40 atm
bridged-vcmux
Equivalent to overhead 24 atm
bridged-llcsnap
Equivalent to overhead 32 atm
ipoa-vcmux
Equivalent to overhead 8 atm
ipoa-llcsnap
Equivalent to overhead 16 atm
See also the Ethernet Correction Factors section below.
ATM was dropped from VDSL2 in favour of PTM, which is a much more straightforward framing scheme. Some ISPs retained PPPoE for compatibility with their existing back-end systems.
pppoe-ptm
Equivalent to overhead 30 ptm
PPPoE: 2B PPP + 6B PPPoE +
ETHERNET: 6B dest MAC + 6B src MAC + 2B ethertype + 4B Frame Check Sequence +
PTM: 1B Start of Frame (S) + 1B End of Frame (Ck) + 2B TC-CRC (PTM-FCS)
bridged-ptm
Equivalent to overhead 22 ptm
ETHERNET: 6B dest MAC + 6B src MAC + 2B ethertype + 4B Frame Check Sequence +
PTM: 1B Start of Frame (S) + 1B End of Frame (Ck) + 2B TC-CRC (PTM-FCS)
See also the Ethernet Correction Factors section below.
DOCSIS is the universal standard for providing Internet service over cable-TV infrastructure.
In this case, the actual on-wire overhead is less important than the packet size the head-end equipment uses for shaping and metering. This is specified to be an Ethernet frame including the CRC (aka FCS).
docsis
Equivalent to overhead 18 mpu 64 noatm
ethernet
Accounts for Ethernet's preamble, inter-frame gap, and Frame Check Sequence.
Use this keyword when the bottleneck being shaped for is an actual Ethernet
cable.
Equivalent to overhead 38 mpu 84 noatm
ether-vlan
Adds 4 bytes to the overhead compensation, accounting for an IEEE 802.1Q VLAN
header appended to the Ethernet frame header. NB: Some ISPs use one or even
two of these within PPPoE; this keyword may be repeated as necessary to
express this.
Active Queue Management (AQM) consists of embedding congestion signals in the packet flow, which receivers use to instruct senders to slow down when the queue is persistently occupied. CAKE uses ECN signalling when available, and packet drops otherwise, according to a combination of the Codel and BLUE AQM algorithms called COBALT.
Very short latencies require a very rapid AQM response to adequately control latency. However, such a rapid response tends to impair throughput when the actual RTT is relatively long. CAKE allows specifying the RTT it assumes for tuning various parameters. Actual RTTs within an order of magnitude of this will generally work well for both throughput and latency management.
At the 'lan' setting and below, the time constants are similar in magnitude to the jitter in the Linux kernel itself, so congestion might be signalled prematurely. The flows will then become sparse and total throughput reduced, leaving little or no back-pressure for the fairness logic to work against. Use the "metro" setting for local lans unless you have a custom kernel.
rtt TIME
Manually specify an RTT.
datacentre
For extremely high-performance 10GigE+ networks only. Equivalent to rtt
100us.
lan
For pure Ethernet (not Wi-Fi) networks, at home or in the office. Don't use
this when shaping for an Internet access link. Equivalent to rtt
1ms.
metro
For traffic mostly within a single city. Equivalent to rtt 10ms.
regional
For traffic mostly within a European-sized country. Equivalent to rtt
30ms.
internet (default)
This is suitable for most Internet traffic. Equivalent to rtt
100ms.
oceanic
For Internet traffic with generally above-average latency, such as that
suffered by Australasian residents. Equivalent to rtt 300ms.
satellite
For traffic via geostationary satellites. Equivalent to rtt
1000ms.
interplanetary
So named because Jupiter is about 1 light-hour from Earth. Use this to
(almost) completely disable AQM actions. Equivalent to rtt 3600s.
With flow isolation enabled, CAKE places packets from different flows into different queues, each of which carries its own AQM state. Packets from each queue are then delivered fairly, according to a DRR++ algorithm which minimises latency for "sparse" flows. CAKE uses a set-associative hashing algorithm to minimise flow collisions.
These keywords specify whether fairness based on source address, destination address, individual flows, or any combination of those is desired.
flowblind
Disables flow isolation; all traffic passes through a single queue for each
tin.
srchost
Flows are defined only by source address. Could be useful on the egress path
of an ISP backhaul.
dsthost
Flows are defined only by destination address. Could be useful on the ingress
path of an ISP backhaul.
hosts
Flows are defined by source-destination host pairs. This is host isolation,
rather than flow isolation.
flows
Flows are defined by the entire 5-tuple of source address, destination
address, transport protocol, source port and destination port. This is the
type of flow isolation performed by SFQ and fq_codel.
dual-srchost
Flows are defined by the 5-tuple, and fairness is applied first over source
addresses, then over individual flows. Good for use on egress traffic from a
LAN to the internet, where it'll prevent any one LAN host from monopolising
the uplink, regardless of the number of flows they use.
dual-dsthost
Flows are defined by the 5-tuple, and fairness is applied first over
destination addresses, then over individual flows. Good for use on ingress
traffic to a LAN from the internet, where it'll prevent any one LAN host
from monopolising the downlink, regardless of the number of flows they
use.
triple-isolate (default)
Flows are defined by the 5-tuple, and fairness is applied over source *and*
destination addresses intelligently (ie. not merely by host-pairs), and also
over individual flows. Use this if you're not certain whether to use
dual-srchost or dual-dsthost; it'll do both jobs at once, preventing any one
host on *either* side of the link from monopolising it with a large number
of flows.
nat
Instructs Cake to perform a NAT lookup before applying flow-isolation rules,
to determine the true addresses and port numbers of the packet, to improve
fairness between hosts "inside" the NAT. This has no practical
effect in "flowblind" or "flows" modes, or if NAT is
performed on a different host.
nonat (default)
Cake will not perform a NAT lookup. Flow isolation will be performed using
the addresses and port numbers directly visible to the interface Cake is
attached to.
CAKE can divide traffic into "tins" based on the Diffserv field. Each tin has its own independent set of flow-isolation queues, and is serviced based on a WRR algorithm. To avoid perverse Diffserv marking incentives, tin weights have a "priority sharing" value when bandwidth used by that tin is below a threshold, and a lower "bandwidth sharing" value when above. Bandwidth is compared against the threshold using the same algorithm as the deficit-mode shaper.
Detailed customisation of tin parameters is not provided. The following presets perform all necessary tuning, relative to the current shaper bandwidth and RTT settings.
besteffort
Disables priority queuing by placing all traffic in one tin.
precedence
Enables legacy interpretation of TOS "Precedence" field. Use of
this preset on the modern Internet is firmly discouraged.
diffserv4
Provides a general-purpose Diffserv implementation with four tins:
Bulk (CS1), 6.25% threshold, generally low priority.
Best Effort (general), 100% threshold.
Video (AF4x, AF3x, CS3, AF2x, CS2, TOS4, TOS1), 50% threshold.
Voice (CS7, CS6, EF, VA, CS5, CS4), 25% threshold.
diffserv3 (default)
Provides a simple, general-purpose Diffserv implementation with three tins:
Bulk (CS1), 6.25% threshold, generally low priority.
Best Effort (general), 100% threshold.
Voice (CS7, CS6, EF, VA, TOS4), 25% threshold, reduced Codel interval.
memlimit LIMIT
Limit the memory consumed by Cake to LIMIT bytes. Note that this does not
translate directly to queue size (so do not size this based on bandwidth
delay product considerations, but rather on worst case acceptable memory
consumption), as there is some overhead in the data structures containing
the packets, especially for small packets.
By default, the limit is calculated based on the bandwidth and RTT settings.
wash
Traffic entering your diffserv domain is frequently mis-marked in transit from the perspective of your network, and traffic exiting yours may be mis-marked from the perspective of the transiting provider.
Apply the wash option to clear all extra diffserv (but not ECN bits), after priority queuing has taken place.
If you are shaping inbound, and cannot trust the diffserv markings (as is the case for Comcast Cable, among others), it is best to use a single queue "besteffort" mode with wash.
split-gso
This option controls whether CAKE will split General Segmentation Offload (GSO) super-packets into their on-the-wire components and dequeue them individually.
Super-packets are created by the networking stack to improve efficiency. However, because they are larger they take longer to dequeue, which translates to higher latency for competing flows, especially at lower bandwidths. CAKE defaults to splitting GSO packets to achieve the lowest possible latency. At link speeds higher than 10 Gbps, setting the no-split-gso parameter can increase the maximum achievable throughput by retaining the full GSO packets.
CAKE supports overriding of its internal classification of packets through the tc filter mechanism. Packets can be assigned to different priority tins by setting the priority field on the skb, and the flow hashing can be overridden by setting the classid parameter.
Tin override
To assign a priority tin, the major number of the priority field needs to
match the qdisc handle of the cake instance; if it does, the minor number
will be interpreted as the tin index. For example, to classify all ICMP
packets as 'bulk', the following filter can be used:
# tc qdisc replace dev eth0 handle 1: root cake diffserv3
# tc filter add dev eth0 parent 1: protocol ip prio 1 \
u32 match icmp type 0 0 action skbedit priority 1:1
Flow hash override
To override flow hashing, the classid can be set. CAKE will interpret the
major number of the classid as the host hash used in host isolation mode,
and the minor number as the flow hash used for flow-based queueing. One or
both of those can be set, and will be used if the relevant flow isolation
parameter is set (i.e., the major number will be ignored if CAKE is not
configured in hosts mode, and the minor number will be ignored if CAKE is
not configured in flows mode).
This example will assign all ICMP packets to the first queue:
# tc qdisc replace dev eth0 handle 1: root cake
# tc filter add dev eth0 parent 1: protocol ip prio 1 \
u32 match icmp type 0 0 classid 0:1
If only one of the host and flow overrides is set, CAKE will compute the other hash from the packet as normal. Note, however, that the host isolation mode works by assigning a host ID to the flow queue; so if overriding both host and flow, the same flow cannot have more than one host assigned. In addition, it is not possible to assign different source and destination host IDs through the override mechanism; if a host ID is assigned, it will be used as both source and destination host.
# tc qdisc delete root dev eth0
# tc qdisc add root dev eth0 cake bandwidth 100Mbit ethernet
# tc -s qdisc show dev eth0
qdisc cake 1: root refcnt 2 bandwidth 100Mbit diffserv3 triple-isolate rtt
100.0ms noatm overhead 38 mpu 84
Sent 0 bytes 0 pkt (dropped 0, overlimits 0 requeues 0)
backlog 0b 0p requeues 0
memory used: 0b of 5000000b
capacity estimate: 100Mbit
min/max network layer size: 65535 / 0
min/max overhead-adjusted size: 65535 / 0
average network hdr offset: 0
Bulk Best Effort Voice
thresh 6250Kbit 100Mbit 25Mbit
target 5.0ms 5.0ms 5.0ms
interval 100.0ms 100.0ms 100.0ms
pk_delay 0us 0us 0us
av_delay 0us 0us 0us
sp_delay 0us 0us 0us
pkts 0 0 0
bytes 0 0 0
way_inds 0 0 0
way_miss 0 0 0
way_cols 0 0 0
drops 0 0 0
marks 0 0 0
ack_drop 0 0 0
sp_flows 0 0 0
bk_flows 0 0 0
un_flows 0 0 0
max_len 0 0 0
quantum 300 1514 762
After some use:
# tc -s qdisc show dev eth0
qdisc cake 1: root refcnt 2 bandwidth 100Mbit diffserv3
triple-isolate rtt 100.0ms noatm overhead 38 mpu 84
Sent 44709231 bytes 31931 pkt (dropped 45, overlimits 93782 requeues 0)
backlog 33308b 22p requeues 0
memory used: 292352b of 5000000b
capacity estimate: 100Mbit
min/max network layer size: 28 / 1500
min/max overhead-adjusted size: 84 / 1538
average network hdr offset: 14
Bulk Best Effort Voice
thresh 6250Kbit 100Mbit 25Mbit
target 5.0ms 5.0ms 5.0ms
interval 100.0ms 100.0ms 100.0ms
pk_delay 8.7ms 6.9ms 5.0ms
av_delay 4.9ms 5.3ms 3.8ms
sp_delay 727us 1.4ms 511us
pkts 2590 21271 8137
bytes 3081804 30302659 11426206
way_inds 0 46 0
way_miss 3 17 4
way_cols 0 0 0
drops 20 15 10
marks 0 0 0
ack_drop 0 0 0
sp_flows 2 4 1
bk_flows 1 2 1
un_flows 0 0 0
max_len 1514 1514 1514
quantum 300 1514 762
Cake's principal author is Jonathan Morton, with contributions from Tony Ambardar, Kevin Darbyshire-Bryant, Toke Høiland-Jørgensen, Sebastian Moeller, Ryan Mounce, Dean Scarff, Nils Andreas Svee, and Dave Täht.
This manual page was written by Loganaden Velvindron. Please report corrections to the Linux Networking mailing list <netdev@vger.kernel.org>.
19 July 2018 | iproute2 |