Who wants SACK? (Re: was My planned work on networking stack)
Kevin Oberman
oberman at es.net
Tue Mar 9 13:42:06 PST 2004
> Date: Tue, 9 Mar 2004 20:13:11 +0100
> From: Brad Knowles <brad.knowles at skynet.be>
> Sender: owner-freebsd-current at freebsd.org
>
> At 3:32 PM -0800 2004/03/08, Jeffrey Hsu wrote:
>
> > What Luigi says is absolutely correct. It doesn't take a lot to
> > get this done. I've talked to a number of companies about implementing
> > SACK for them and while there was interest, no one wanted to fund
> > it all themselves, potentially for the benefit of their competitors.
>
> Out of curiosity, can someone provide some pointers as to where
> SACK really helps? Is this just for high-speed WANs and doesn't help
> on LANs, or is it useful in both contexts? Also, at what
> speeds/packet sizes does SACK start to become really useful?
>
> I'm just wondering if there aren't a lot of people who could
> benefit from something like this, only they don't know it. If they
> were to find out, it might help provide funding and other resources
> to spur development.
Selective ACKnowledgment (SACK) allows acknowledgment of received
packets in a TCP window so that only the missing/damaged packet needs to
be re-transmitted. This is normally of little value on a LAN where ACKs
arrive quickly and windows are smaller and no use on slow circuits. On
fat pipes with latency and big windows it is a huge win as it allows you to
recover much faster from a packet drop. If you don't have SACK, you need
to re-transmit all of the packets in flight within the window while
with SACK, you need only retransmit the dropped packet(s). If you have a
10 or 20 MB window, this is a big deal.
Dynamic window sizing will make it of less significance in LANs as the
windows will not be very large.
--
R. Kevin Oberman, Network Engineer
Energy Sciences Network (ESnet)
Ernest O. Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab)
E-mail: oberman at es.net Phone: +1 510 486-8634
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