Internet Engineering Task Force | R. Geib, Ed. |
Internet-Draft | Deutsche Telekom |
Intended status: Standards Track | A. Morton |
Expires: December 31, 2011 | AT&T Labs |
R. Fardid | |
Cariden Technologies | |
A. Steinmitz | |
Deutsche Telekom | |
June 29, 2011 |
IPPM standard advancement testing
draft-ietf-ippm-metrictest-03
This document specifies tests to determine if multiple independent instantiations of a performance metric RFC have implemented the specifications in the same way. This is the performance metric equivalent of interoperability, required to advance RFCs along the standards track. Results from different implementations of metric RFCs will be collected under the same underlying network conditions and compared using state of the art statistical methods. The goal is an evaluation of the metric RFC itself, whether its definitions are clear and unambiguous to implementors and therefore a candidate for advancement on the IETF standards track.
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The Internet Standards Process RFC2026 [RFC2026] requires that for a IETF specification to advance beyond the Proposed Standard level, at least two genetically unrelated implementations must be shown to interoperate correctly with all features and options. This requirement can be met by supplying:
In the case of a protocol specification, the notion of "interoperability" is reasonably intuitive - the implementations must successfully "talk to each other", while exercising all features and options. To achieve interoperability, two implementors need to interpret the protocol specifications in equivalent ways. In the case of IP Performance Metrics (IPPM), this definition of interoperability is only useful for test and control protocols like the One-Way Active Measurement Protocol, OWAMP [RFC4656], and the Two-Way Active Measurement Protocol, TWAMP [RFC5357].
A metric specification RFC describes one or more metric definitions, methods of measurement and a way to report the results of measurement. One example would be a way to test and report the One-way Delay that data packets incur while being sent from one network location to another, One-way Delay Metric.
In the case of metric specifications, the conditions that satisfy the "interoperability" requirement are less obvious, and there was a need for IETF agreement on practices to judge metric specification "interoperability" in the context of the IETF Standards Process. This memo provides methods which should be suitable to evaluate metric specifications for standards track advancement. The methods proposed here MAY be generally applicable to metric specification RFCs beyond those developed under the IPPM Framework [RFC2330].
Since many implementations of IP metrics are embedded in measurement systems that do not interact with one another (they were built before OWAMP and TWAMP), the interoperability evaluation called for in the IETF standards process cannot be determined by observing that independent implementations interact properly for various protocol exchanges. Instead, verifying that different implementations give statistically equivalent results under controlled measurement conditions takes the place of interoperability observations. Even when evaluating OWAMP and TWAMP RFCs for standards track advancement, the methods described here are useful to evaluate the measurement results because their validity would not be ascertained in typical interoperability testing.
The standards advancement process aims at producing confidence that the metric definitions and supporting material are clearly worded and unambiguous, or reveals ways in which the metric definitions can be revised to achieve clarity. The process also permits identification of options that were not implemented, so that they can be removed from the advancing specification. Thus, the product of this process is information about the metric specification RFC itself: determination of the specifications or definitions that are clear and unambiguous and those that are not (as opposed to an evaluation of the implementations which assist in the process).
This document defines a process to verify that implementations (or practically, measurement systems) have interpreted the metric specifications in equivalent ways, and produce equivalent results.
Testing for statistical equivalence requires ensuring identical test setups (or awareness of differences) to the best possible extent. Thus, producing identical test conditions is a core goal of the memo. Another important aspect of this process is to test individual implementations against specific requirements in the metric specifications using customized tests for each requirement. These tests can distinguish equivalent interpretations of each specific requirement.
Conclusions on equivalence are reached by two measures.
First, implementations are compared against individual metric specifications to make sure that differences in implementation are minimised or at least known.
Second, a test setup is proposed ensuring identical networking conditions so that unknowns are minimized and comparisons are simplified. The resulting separate data sets may be seen as samples taken from the same underlying distribution. Using state of the art statistical methods, the equivalence of the results is verified. To illustrate application of the process and methods defined here, evaluation of the One-way Delay Metric [RFC2679] is provided in an Appendix. While test setups will vary with the metrics to be validated, the general methodology of determining equivalent results will not. Documents defining test setups to evaluate other metrics should be developed once the process proposed here has been agreed and approved.
The metric RFC advancement process begins with a request for protocol action accompanied by a memo that documents the supporting tests and results. The procedures of [RFC2026] are expanded in[RFC5657], including sample implementation and interoperability reports. Section 3 of [morton-advance-metrics-01] can serve as a template for a metric RFC report which accompanies the protocol action request to the Area Director, including description of the test set-up, procedures, results for each implementation and conclusions.
Changes from WG-02 to WG-03:
Changes from WG-01 to WG-02:
Changes from WG -00 to WG -01 draft
Changes from prior ID -02 to WG -00 draft
Changes from ID -01 to ID -02 version
Changes from ID -00 to ID -01 version
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119 [RFC2119].
The implementation of a standard compliant metric is expected to meet the requirements of the related metric specification. So before comparing two metric implementations, each metric implementation is individually compared against the metric specification.
Most metric specifications leave freedom to implementors on non-fundamental aspects of an individual metric (or options). Comparing different measurement results using a statistical test with the assumption of identical test path and testing conditions requires knowledge of all differences in the overall test setup. Metric specification options chosen by implementors have to be documented. It is REQUIRED to use identical implementation options wherever possible for any test proposed here. Calibrations proposed by metric standards should be performed to further identify (and possibly reduce) potential sources of errors in the test setup.
The Framework for IP Performance Metrics [RFC2330] expects that a "methodology for a metric should have the property that it is repeatable: if the methodology is used multiple times under identical conditions, it should result in consistent measurements." This means an implementation is expected to repeatedly measure a metric with consistent results (repeatability with the same result). Small deviations in the test setup are expected to lead to small deviations in results only. To characterise statistical equivalence in the case of small deviations, RFC 2330 and [RFC2679] suggest to apply a 95% confidence interval. Quoting RFC 2679, "95 percent was chosen because ... a particular confidence level should be specified so that the results of independent implementations can be compared."
Two different implementations are expected to produce statistically equivalent results if they both measure a metric under the same networking conditions. Formulating in statistical terms: separate metric implementations collect separate samples from the same underlying statistical process (the same network conditions). The statistical hypothesis to be tested is the expectation that both samples do not expose statistically different properties. This requires careful test design:
The metric specifications themselves are the primary focus of evaluation, rather than the implementations of metrics. The documentation produced by the advancement process should identify which metric definitions and supporting material were found to be clearly worded and unambiguous, OR, it should identify ways in which the metric specification text should be revised to achieve clarity and unified interpretation.
The process should also permit identification of options that were not implemented, so that they can be removed from the advancing specification (this is an aspect more typical of protocol advancement along the standards track).
Note that this document does not propose to base interoperability indications of performance metric implementations on comparisons of individual singletons. Individual singletons may be impacted by many statistical effects while they are measured. Comparing two singletons of different implementations may result in failures with higher probability than comparing samples.
This section specifies how to verify compliance of two or more IPPM implementations against a metric specification. This document only proposes a general methodology. Compliance criteria to a specific metric implementation need to be defined for each individual metric specification. The only exception is the statistical test comparing two metric implementations which are simultaneously tested. This test is applicable without metric specific decision criteria.
Several testing options exist to compare two or more implementations:
The first two approaches work, but cause higher expenses than the other ones (due to travel and/or shipping+installation). For the third option, ensuring two identically configured impairment generators requires well defined test cases and possibly identical hard- and software.
As documented in a test report [morton-testplan-rfc2679], the last option was required to prove compatibility of two delay metric implementations. An impairment generator is probably required when testing compatibility of most other metrics and it therefore RECOMMENDED to include an impairment generator in metric test set ups.
A metric implementation MUST support the requirements classified as "MUST" and "REQUIRED" of the related metric specification to be compliant to the latter.
Further, supported options of a metric implementation SHOULD be documented in sufficient detail. The documentation of chosen options is RECOMMENDED to minimise (and recognise) differences in the test setup if two metric implementations are compared. Further, this documentation is used to validate and improve the underlying metric specification option, to remove options which saw no implementation or which are badly specified from the metric specification to be promoted to a standard. This documentation SHOULD be made for all implementation-relevant specifications of a metric picked for a comparison that are not explicitly marked as "MUST" or "REQUIRED" in the RFC text. This applies for the following sections of all metric specifications:
RFC2330 and RFC2679 emphasise precision as an aim of IPPM metric implementations. A single IPPM conformant implementation MUST under otherwise identical network conditions produce precise results for repeated measurements of the same metric.
RFC 2330 prefers the "empirical distribution function" EDF to describe collections of measurements. RFC 2330 determines, that "unless otherwise stated, IPPM goodness-of-fit tests are done using 5% significance." The goodness of fit test determines by which precision two or more samples of a metric implementation belong to the same underlying distribution (of measured network performance events). The goodness of fit test suggested for the metric test is the Anderson-Darling K sample test (ADK sample test, K stands for the number of samples to be compared) [ADK]. Please note that RFC 2330 and RFC 2679 apply an Anderson Darling goodness of fit test too.
The results of a repeated test with a single implementation MUST pass an ADK sample test with confidence level of 95%. The conditions for which the ADK test has been passed with the specified confidence level MUST be documented. To formulate this differently: The requirement is to document the set of parameters with the smallest deviation, at which the results of the tested metric implementation pass an ADK test with a confidence level of 95%. The minimum resolution available in the reported results from each implementation MUST be taken into account in the ADK test.
The test conditions which MUST be documented for a passed metric test include:
Two major issues complicate tests for metric compliance across live networks under identical testing conditions. One is the general point that metric definition implementations cannot be conveniently examined in field measurement scenarios. The other one is more broadly described as "parallelism in devices and networks", including mechanisms like those that achieve load balancing (see [RFC4928]).
This section proposes two measures to deal with both issues. Tunneling mechanisms can be used to avoid parallel processing of different flows in the network. Measuring by separate parallel probe flows results in repeated collection of data. If both measures are combined, WAN network conditions are identical for a number of independent measurement flows, no matter what the network conditions are in detail.
Any measurement setup MUST be made to avoid the probing traffic itself to impede the metric measurement. The created measurement load MUST NOT result in congestion at the access link connecting the measurement implementation to the WAN. The created measurement load MUST NOT overload the measurement implementation itself, e.g., by causing a high CPU load or by creating imprecisions due to internal transmit (receive respectively) probe packet collisions.
Tunneling multiple flows reaching a network element on a single physical port may allow to transmit all packets of the tunnel via the same path. Applying tunnels to avoid undesired influence of standard routing for measurement purposes is a concept known from literature, see e.g. GRE encapsulated multicast probing [GU+Duffield]. An existing IP in IP tunnel protocol can be applied to avoid Equal-Cost Multi-Path (ECMP) routing of different measurement streams if it meets the following criteria:
An illustration of a test setup with two layer 2 tunnels and two flows between two linecards of one implementation is given in Figure 1.
Implementation ,---. +--------+ +~~~~~~~~~~~/ \~~~~~~| Remote | +------->-----F2->-| / \ |->---+ | | +---------+ | Tunnel 1( ) | | | | | transmit|-F1->-| ( ) |->+ | | | | LC1 | +~~~~~~~~~| |~~~~| | | | | | receive |-<--+ ( ) | F1 F2 | | +---------+ | |Internet | | | | | *-------<-----+ F2 | | | | | | +---------+ | | +~~~~~~~~~| |~~~~| | | | | transmit|-* *-| | | |--+<-* | | LC2 | | Tunnel 2( ) | | | | receive |-<-F1-| \ / |<-* | +---------+ +~~~~~~~~~~~\ /~~~~~~| Router | `-+-' +--------+
Illustration of a test setup with two layer 2 tunnels. For simplicity, only two linecards of one implementation and two flows F between them are shown.
Figure 2 shows the network elements required to set up layer 2 tunnels as shown by figure 1.
Implementation +-----+ ,---. | LC1 | / \ +-----+ / \ +------+ | +-------+ ( ) +-------+ |Remote| +--------+ | | | | | | | | |Ethernet| | Tunnel| |Internet | | Tunnel| | | |Switch |--| Head |--| |--| Head |--| | +--------+ | Router| | | | Router| | | | | | ( ) | | |Router| +-----+ +-------+ \ / +-------+ +------+ | LC2 | \ / +-----+ `-+-'
Illustration of a hardware setup to realise the test setup illustrated by figure 1 with layer 2 tunnels or Pseudowires.
The test set up successfully used during a delay metric test [morton-testplan-rfc2679] is given as an example in figure 3. Note that the shown set up allows a metric test between two remote sites.
+----+ +----+ +----+ +----+ |LC10| |LC11| ,---. |LC20| |LC21| +----+ +----+ / \ +-------+ +----+ +----+ | V10 | V11 / \ | Tunnel| | V20 | V21 | | ( ) | Head | | | +--------+ +------+ | | | Router|__+----------+ |Ethernet| |Tunnel| |Internet | +---B---+ |Ethernet | |Switch |--|Head |-| | | |Switch | +-+--+---+ |Router| | | +---+---+ +--+--+----+ |__| +--A---+ ( )--|Option.| |__| \ / |Impair.| Bridge \ / |Gener. | Bridge V20 to V21 `-+-? +-------+ V10 to V11
In figure 3, LC10 identify measurement clients /line cards. V10 and the others denote VLANs. All VLANs are using the same tunnel from A to B and in the reverse direction. The remote site VLANs are U-bridged at the local site Ethernet switch. The measurement packets of site 1 travel tunnel A->B first, are U-bridged at site 2 and travel tunnel B->A second. Measurement packets of site 2 travel tunnel B->A first, are U-bridged at site 1 and travel tunnel A->B second. So all measurement packets pass the same tunnel segments, but in different segment order.
If tunneling is applied, two tunnels MUST carry all test traffic in between the test site and the remote site. For example, if 802.1Q Ethernet Virtual LANs (VLAN) are applied and the measurement streams are carried in different VLANs, the IP tunnel or Pseudo Wires respectively MUST be set up in physical port mode to avoid set up of Pseudo Wires per VLAN (which may see different paths due to ECMP routing), see RFC 4448. The remote router and the Ethernet switch shown in figure 3 has to support 802.1Q in this set up.
The IP packet size of the metric implementation SHOULD be chosen small enough to avoid fragmentation due to the added Ethernet and tunnel headers. Otherwise, the impact of tunnel overhead on fragmentation and interface MTU size MUST be understood and taken into account (see [RFC4459]).
An Ethernet port mode IP tunnel carrying several 802.1Q VLANs each containing measurement traffic of a single measurement system was successfully applied when testing compatibility of two metric implementations [morton-testplan-rfc2679].
The following headers may have to be accounted for when calculating total packet length, if VLANs and Ethernet over L2TPv3 tunnels are applied:
The applicability of one or more of the following tunneling protocols may be investigated by interested parties if Ethernet over L2TPv3 is felt to be not suitable: IP in IP [RFC2003] or Generic Routing Encapsulation (GRE) [RFC2784]. RFC 4928 [RFC4928] proposes measures how to avoid ECMP treatment in MPLS networks.
L2TP is a commodity tunneling protocol [RFC2661]. By the time of writing, L2TPv3 [RFC3931]is the latest version of L2TP. If L2TPv3 is applied, software based implementations of this protocol are not suitable for the test set up, as such implementations may cause incalculable delay shifts.
Ethernet Pseudo Wires may also be set up on MPLS networks [RFC4448]. While there's no technical issue with this solution, MPLS interfaces are mostly found in the network provider domain. Hence not all of the above criteria to select a tunneling protocol are met.
Note that setting up a metric test environment isn't a plug and play issue. Skilled networking engineers should be consulted and involved, if a set up between remote sites is preferred.
Passing or failing an ADK test with 2 samples could be a random result (note that [RFC2330] defines a sample as a set of singleton metric values produced by a measurement stream, and we continue to use this terminology here). The error margin of a statistical test is higher if the number of samples it is based on is low (the number of samples taken influences the so called "degree of freedom" of a statistical test and a higher degree of freedom produces more reliable results). To pass ADK with higher probability, the number of samples collected per implementation under identical networking conditions SHOULD be greater than 2. Hardware and load constraints may enforce an upper limit on the number of simultaneous measurement streams. The ADK test allows one to combine different samples (see section 9 [ADK]) and then to run a two sample test between combined samples. At least 4 samples per implementation captured under identical networking conditions is RECOMMENDED when comparing different metric implementations by a statistical test.
It is RECOMMENDED that tests be carried out by establishing N different parallel measurement flows. Two or three linecards per implementation serving to send or receive measurement flows should be sufficient to create 4 or more parallel measurement flows. Other options are to separate flows by DiffServ marks (without deploying any QoS in the inner or outer tunnel) or using a single CBR flow and evaluating every n-th singleton to belong to a specific measurement flow. Note that a practical test indeed showed that ADK was passed with 4 samples even if a 2 sample test failed[morton-testplan-rfc2679].
Some additional guidelines to calculate and compare samples to perform a metric test are:
RFC2330 expects "a methodology for a given metric [to] exhibit continuity if, for small variations in conditions, it results in small variations in the resulting measurements. Slightly more precisely, for every positive epsilon, there exists a positive delta, such that if two sets of conditions are within delta of each other, then the resulting measurements will be within epsilon of each other." A small variation in conditions in the context of the metric test proposed here can be seen as different implementations measuring the same metric along the same path.
IPPM metric specifications however allow for implementor options to the largest possible degree. It cannot be expected that two implementors allow 100% identical options in their implementations. Testers SHOULD to the highest degree possible pick the same configurations for their systems when comparing their implementations by a metric test.
In some cases, a goodness of fit test may not be possible or show disappointing results. To clarify the difficulties arising from different implementation options, the individual options picked for every compared implementation SHOULD be documented in sufficient detail. Based on this documentation, the underlying metric specification should be improved before it is promoted to a standard.
The same statistical test as applicable to quantify precision of a single metric implementation MUST be used to compare metric result equivalence for different implementations. To document compatibility, the smallest measurement resolution at which the compared implementations passed the ADK sample test MUST be documented.
For different implementations of the same metric, "variations in conditions" are reasonably expected. The ADK test comparing samples of the different implementations MAY result in a lower precision than the test for precision in the same-implementation comparison.
Clock synchronization effects require special attention. Accuracy of one-way active delay measurements for any metrics implementation depends on clock synchronization between the source and destination of tests. Ideally, one-way active delay measurement (RFC 2679, [RFC2679]) test endpoints either have direct access to independent GPS or CDMA-based time sources or indirect access to nearby NTP primary (stratum 1) time sources, equipped with GPS receivers. Access to these time sources may not be available at all test locations associated with different Internet paths, for a variety of reasons out of scope of this document.
When secondary (stratum 2 and above) time sources are used with NTP running across the same network, whose metrics are subject to comparative implementation tests, network impairments can affect clock synchronization, distort sample one-way values and their interval statistics. It is RECOMMENDED to discard sample one-way delay values for any implementation, when one of the following reliability conditions is met:
Examination of the second condition requires RTT measurement for reference, e.g., based on TWAMP (RFC5357, RFC 5357 [RFC5357]), in conjunction with one-way delay measurement.
Specification of X% to strike a balance between identification of unreliable one-way delay samples and misidentification of reliable samples under a wide range of Internet path RTTs probably requires further study.
An IPPM compliant metric implementation of an RFC that requires synchronized clocks is expected to provide precise measurement results.
IF an implementation publishes a specification of its precision, such as "a precision of 1 ms (+/- 500 us) with a confidence of 95%", then the specification SHOULD be met over a useful measurement duration. For example, if the metric is measured along an Internet path which is stable and not congested, then the precision specification SHOULD be met over durations of an hour or more.
In order to meet their obligations under the IETF Standards Process the IESG must be convinced that each metric specification advanced to Draft Standard or Internet Standard status is clearly written, that there are a sufficient number of verified equivalent implementations, and that options that have been implemented are documented.
In the context of this document, metrics are designed to measure some characteristic of a data network. An aim of any metric definition should be that it should be specified in a way that can reliably measure the specific characteristic in a repeatable way across multiple independent implementations.
Each metric, statistic or option of those to be validated MUST be compared against a reference measurement or another implementation by as specified by this document.
Finally, the metric definitions, embodied in the text of the RFCs, are the objects that require evaluation and possible revision in order to advance to the next step on the standards track.
IF two (or more) implementations do not measure an equivalent metric as specified by this document,
AND sources of measurement error do not adequately explain the lack of agreement,
THEN the details of each implementation should be audited along with the exact definition text, to determine if there is a lack of clarity that has caused the implementations to vary in a way that affects the correspondence of the results.
IF there was a lack of clarity or multiple legitimate interpretations of the definition text,
THEN the text should be modified and the resulting memo proposed for consensus and (possible) advancement along the standards track.
Finally, all the findings MUST be documented in a report that can support advancement on the standards track, similar to those described in [RFC5657]. The list of measurement devices used in testing satisfies the implementation requirement, while the test results provide information on the quality of each specification in the metric RFC (the surrogate for feature interoperability).
The complete process of advancing a metric specification to a standard as defined by this document is illustrated in Figure 4.
,---. / \ ( Start ) \ / Implementations `-+-' +-------+ | /| 1 `. +---+----+ / +-------+ `.-----------+ ,-------. | RFC | / |Check for | ,' was RFC `. YES | | / |Equivalence.... clause x ------+ | |/ +-------+ |under | `. clear? ,' | | Metric \.....| 2 ....relevant | `---+---' +----+-----+ | Metric |\ +-------+ |identical | No | |Report | | Metric | \ |network | +--+----+ |results + | | ... | \ |conditions | |Modify | |Advance | | | \ +-------+ | | |Spec +--+RFC | +--------+ \| n |.'+-----------+ +-------+ |request(?)| +-------+ +----------+
Illustration of the metric standardisation process
Any recommendation for the advancement of a metric specification MUST be accompanied by an implementation report, as is the case with all requests for the advancement of IETF specifications. The implementation report needs to include the tests performed, the applied test setup, the specific metrics in the RFC and reports of the tests performed with two or more implementations. The test plan needs to specify the precision reached for each measured metric and thus define the meaning of "statistically equivalent" for the specific metrics being tested.
Ideally, the test plan would co-evolve with the development of the metric, since that's when people have the most context in their thinking regarding the different subtleties that can arise.
In particular, the implementation report MUST as a minimum document:
All of the tests for each set SHOULD be run in a test setup as specified in the section "Test setup resulting in identical live network testing conditions."
If a different test set up is chosen, it is RECOMMENDED to avoid effects falsifying results of validation measurements caused by real data networks (like parallelism in devices and networks). Data networks may forward packets differently in the case of:
This section describes a proposal for maximum error of "equivalence", based on performance comparison of identical implementations. This comparison may be useful for both ADK and non-ADK comparisons.
Each metric tested by two or more implementations (cross-implementation testing).
Each metric is also tested twice simultaneously by the *same* implementation, using different Src/Dst Address pairs and other differences such that the connectivity differences of the cross-implementation tests are also experienced and measured by the same implementation.
Comparative results for the same implementation represent a bound on cross-implementation equivalence. This should be particularly useful when the metric does *not* produces a continuous distribution of singleton values, such as with a loss metric, or a duplication metric. Appendix A indicates how the ADK will work for 0ne-way delay, and should be likewise applicable to distributions of delay variation.
Proposal: the implementation with the largest difference in homogeneous comparison results is the lower bound on the equivalence threshold, noting that there may be other systematic errors to account for when comparing between implementations.
Thus, when evaluating equivalence in cross-implementation results:
Maximum_Error = Same_Implementation_Error + Systematic_Error
and only the systematic error need be decided beforehand.
In the case of ADK comparison, the largest same-implementation resolution of distribution equivalence can be used as a limit on cross-implementation resolutions (at the same confidence level).
Gerhard Hasslinger commented a first version of this document, suggested statistical tests and the evaluation of time series information. Matthias Wieser's thesis on a metric test resulted in new input for this draft. Henk Uijterwaal and Lars Eggert have encouraged and helped to orgainize this work. Mike Hamilton, Scott Bradner, David Mcdysan and Emile Stephan commented on this draft. Carol Davids reviewed the 01 version of the ID before it was promoted to WG draft.
Scott Bradner, Vern Paxson and Allison Mankin drafted bradner-metrictest [bradner-metrictest], and major parts of it are included in this document.
This memo includes no request to IANA.
This draft does not raise any specific security issues.
The text of this appendix is not binding. It is an example how parts of a One-way Delay metric test could look like. http://xml.resource.org/public/rfc/bibxml/
One-way Delay, Loss threshold, RFC 2679
This test determines if implementations use the same configured maximum waiting time delay from one measurement to another under different delay conditions, and correctly declare packets arriving in excess of the waiting time threshold as lost. See Section 3.5 of RFC2679, 3rd bullet point and also Section 3.8.2 of RFC2679.
One-way Delay, First-bit to Last bit, RFC 2679
This test determines if implementations register the same relative increase in delay from one measurement to another under different delay conditions. This test tends to cancel the sources of error which may be present in an implementation. See Section 3.7.2 of RFC2679, and Section 10.2 of RFC2330.
One-way Delay, RFC 2679
This test determines if implementations register the same relative increase in delay from one measurement to another under different delay conditions. This test tends to cancel the sources of error which may be present in an implementation. This test is intended to evaluate measurments in sections 3 and 4 of RFC2679.
Error Calibration, RFC 2679
This is a simple check to determine if an implementation reports the error calibration as required in Section 4.8 of RFC2679. Note that the context (Type-P) must also be reported.
A one way delay measurement may pass an ADK test with a timestamp resultion of 1 ms. The same test may fail, if timestamps with a resolution of 100 microseconds are eavluated. The implementation then is then conforming to the metric specification up to a timestamp resolution of 1 ms.
Let's assume another one way delay measurement comparison between implementation 1, probing with a frequency of 2 probes per second and implementation 2 probing at a rate of 2 probes every 3 minutes. To ensure reasonable confidence in results, sample metrics are calculated from at least 5 singletons per compared time interval. This means, sample delay values are calculated for each system for identical 6 minute intervals for the whole test duration. Per 6 minute interval, the sample metric is calculated from 720 singletons for implementation 1 and from 6 singletons for implementation 2. Note, that if outliers are not filtered, moving averages are an option for an evaluation too. The minimum move of an averaging interval is three minutes in this example.
The data in table 1 may result from measuring One-Way Delay with implementation 1 (see column Implemnt_1) and implementation 2 (see column implemnt_2). Each data point in the table represents a (rounded) average of the sampled delay values per interval. The resolution of the clock is one micro-second. The difference in the delay values may result eg. from different probe packet sizes.
Implemnt_1 | Implemnt_2 | Implemnt_2 - Delta_Averages |
---|---|---|
5000 | 6549 | 4997 |
5008 | 6555 | 5003 |
5012 | 6564 | 5012 |
5015 | 6565 | 5013 |
5019 | 6568 | 5016 |
5022 | 6570 | 5018 |
5024 | 6573 | 5021 |
5026 | 6575 | 5023 |
5027 | 6577 | 5025 |
5029 | 6580 | 5028 |
5030 | 6585 | 5033 |
5032 | 6586 | 5034 |
5034 | 6587 | 5035 |
5036 | 6588 | 5036 |
5038 | 6589 | 5037 |
5039 | 6591 | 5039 |
5041 | 6592 | 5040 |
5043 | 6599 | 5047 |
5046 | 6606 | 5054 |
5054 | 6612 | 5060 |
Average values of sample metrics captured during identical time intervals are compared. This excludes random differences caused by differing probing intervals or differing temporal distance of singletons resulting from their Poisson distributed sending times.
In the example, 20 values have been picked (note that at least 100 values are recommended for a single run of a real test). Data must be ordered by ascending rank. The data of Implemnt_1 and Implemnt_2 as shown in the first two columns of table 1 clearly fails an ADK test with 95% confidence.
The results of Implemnt_2 are now reduced by difference of the averages of column 2 (rounded to 6581 us) and column 1 (rounded to 5029 us), which is 1552 us. The result may be found in column 3 of table 1. Comparing column 1 and column 3 of the table by an ADK test shows, that the data contained in these columns passes an ADK tests with 95% confidence.
>>> Comment: Extensive averaging was used in this example, because of the vastly different sampling frequencies. As a result, the distributions compared do not exactly align with a metric in [RFC2679], but illustrate the ADK process adequately.
/* Routines for computing the Anderson-Darling 2 sample * test statistic. * * Implemented based on the description in * "Anderson-Darling K Sample Test" Heckert, Alan and * Filliben, James, editors, Dataplot Reference Manual, * Chapter 15 Auxiliary, NIST, 2004. * Official Reference by 2010 * Heckert, N. A. (2001). Dataplot website at the * National Institute of Standards and Technology: * http://www.itl.nist.gov/div898/software/dataplot.html/ * June 2001. */ #include <iostream> #include <fstream> #include <vector> #include <sstream> using namespace std; vector<double> vec1, vec2; double adk_result; double adk_criterium = 1.993; /* vec1 and vec2 to be initialised with sample 1 and * sample 2 values in ascending order. */ /* example for iterating the vectors * for(vector<double>::iterator it = vec1->begin(); * it != vec1->end(); it++ * { * cout << *it << endl; * } */ static int k, val_st_z_samp1, val_st_z_samp2, val_eq_z_samp1, val_eq_z_samp2, j, n_total, n_sample1, n_sample2, L, max_number_samples, line, maxnumber_z; static int column_1, column_2; static double adk, n_value, z, sum_adk_samp1, sum_adk_samp2, z_aux; static double H_j, F1j, hj, F2j, denom_1_aux, denom_2_aux; static bool next_z_sample2, equal_z_both_samples; static int stop_loop1, stop_loop2, stop_loop3,old_eq_line2, old_eq_line1; static double adk_criterium = 1.993; k = 2; n_sample1 = vec1->size() - 1; n_sample2 = vec2->size() - 1; // -1 because vec[0] is a dummy value n_total = n_sample1 + n_sample2; /* value equal to the line with a value = zj in sample 1. * Here j=1, so the line is 1. */ val_eq_z_samp1 = 1; /* value equal to the line with a value = zj in sample 2. * Here j=1, so the line is 1. */ val_eq_z_samp2 = 1; /* value equal to the last line with a value < zj * in sample 1. Here j=1, so the line is 0. */ val_st_z_samp1 = 0; /* value equal to the last line with a value < zj * in sample 1. Here j=1, so the line is 0. */ val_st_z_samp2 = 0; sum_adk_samp1 = 0; sum_adk_samp2 = 0; j = 1; // as mentioned above, j=1 equal_z_both_samples = false; next_z_sample2 = false; //assuming the next z to be of sample 1 stop_loop1 = n_sample1 + 1; // + 1 because vec[0] is a dummy, see n_sample1 declaration stop_loop2 = n_sample2 + 1; stop_loop3 = n_total + 1; /* The required z values are calculated until all values * of both samples have been taken into account. See the * lines above for the stoploop values. Construct required * to avoid a mathematical operation in the While condition */ while (((stop_loop1 > val_eq_z_samp1) || (stop_loop2 > val_eq_z_samp2)) && stop_loop3 > j) { if(val_eq_z_samp1 < n_sample1+1) { /* here, a preliminary zj value is set. * See below how to calculate the actual zj. */ z = (*vec1)[val_eq_z_samp1]; /* this while sequence calculates the number of values * equal to z. */ while ((val_eq_z_samp1+1 < n_sample1) && z == (*vec1)[val_eq_z_samp1+1] ) { val_eq_z_samp1++; } } else { val_eq_z_samp1 = 0; val_st_z_samp1 = n_sample1; // this should be val_eq_z_samp1 - 1 = n_sample1 } if(val_eq_z_samp2 < n_sample2+1) { z_aux = (*vec2)[val_eq_z_samp2];; /* this while sequence calculates the number of values * equal to z_aux */ while ((val_eq_z_samp2+1 < n_sample2) && z_aux == (*vec2)[val_eq_z_samp2+1] ) { val_eq_z_samp2++; } /* the smaller of the two actual data values is picked * as the next zj. */ if(z > z_aux) { z = z_aux; next_z_sample2 = true; } else { if (z == z_aux) { equal_z_both_samples = true; } /* This is the case, if the last value of column1 is * smaller than the remaining values of column2. */ if (val_eq_z_samp1 == 0) { z = z_aux; next_z_sample2 = true; } } } else { val_eq_z_samp2 = 0; val_st_z_samp2 = n_sample2; // this should be val_eq_z_samp2 - 1 = n_sample2 } /* in the following, sum j = 1 to L is calculated for * sample 1 and sample 2. */ if (equal_z_both_samples) { /* hj is the number of values in the combined sample * equal to zj */ hj = val_eq_z_samp1 - val_st_z_samp1 + val_eq_z_samp2 - val_st_z_samp2; /* H_j is the number of values in the combined sample * smaller than zj plus one half the the number of * values in the combined sample equal to zj * (that's hj/2). */ H_j = val_st_z_samp1 + val_st_z_samp2 + hj / 2; /* F1j is the number of values in the 1st sample * which are less than zj plus one half the number * of values in this sample which are equal to zj. */ F1j = val_st_z_samp1 + (double) (val_eq_z_samp1 - val_st_z_samp1) / 2; /* F2j is the number of values in the 1st sample * which are less than zj plus one half the number * of values in this sample which are equal to zj. */ F2j = val_st_z_samp2 + (double) (val_eq_z_samp2 - val_st_z_samp2) / 2; /* set the line of values equal to zj to the * actual line of the last value picked for zj. */ val_st_z_samp1 = val_eq_z_samp1; /* Set the line of values equal to zj to the actual * line of the last value picked for zjof each * sample. This is required as data smaller than zj * is accounted differently than values equal to zj. */ val_st_z_samp2 = val_eq_z_samp2; /* next the lines of the next values z, ie. zj+1 * are addressed. */ val_eq_z_samp1++; /* next the lines of the next values z, ie. * zj+1 are addressed */ val_eq_z_samp2++; } else { /* the smaller z value was contained in sample 2, * hence this value is the zj to base the following * calculations on. */ if (next_z_sample2) { /* hj is the number of values in the combined * sample equal to zj, in this case these are * within sample 2 only. */ hj = val_eq_z_samp2 - val_st_z_samp2; /* H_j is the number of values in the combined sample * smaller than zj plus one half the the number of * values in the combined sample equal to zj * (that's hj/2). */ H_j = val_st_z_samp1 + val_st_z_samp2 + hj / 2; /* F1j is the number of values in the 1st sample which * are less than zj plus one half the number of values in * this sample which are equal to zj. * As val_eq_z_samp2 < val_eq_z_samp1, these are the * val_st_z_samp1 only. */ F1j = val_st_z_samp1; /* F2j is the number of values in the 1st sample which * are less than zj plus one half the number of values in * this sample which are equal to zj. The latter are from * sample 2 only in this case. */ F2j = val_st_z_samp2 + (double) (val_eq_z_samp2 - val_st_z_samp2) / 2; /* Set the line of values equal to zj to the actual line * of the last value picked for zj of sample 2 only in * this case. */ val_st_z_samp2 = val_eq_z_samp2; /* next the line of the next value z, ie. zj+1 is * addressed. Here, only sample 2 must be addressed. */ val_eq_z_samp2++; if (val_eq_z_samp1 == 0) { val_eq_z_samp1 = stop_loop1; } } /* the smaller z value was contained in sample 2, * hence this value is the zj to base the following * calculations on. */ else { /* hj is the number of values in the combined * sample equal to zj, in this case these are * within sample 1 only. */ hj = val_eq_z_samp1 - val_st_z_samp1; /* H_j is the number of values in the combined * sample smaller than zj plus one half the the number * of values in the combined sample equal to zj * (that's hj/2). */ H_j = val_st_z_samp1 + val_st_z_samp2 + hj / 2; /* F1j is the number of values in the 1st sample which * are less than zj plus, in this case these are within * sample 1 only one half the number of values in this * sample which are equal to zj. The latter are from * sample 1 only in this case. */ F1j = val_st_z_samp1 + (double) (val_eq_z_samp1 - val_st_z_samp1) / 2; /* F2j is the number of values in the 1st sample which * are less than zj plus one half the number of values * in this sample which are equal to zj. As * val_eq_z_samp1 < val_eq_z_samp2, these are the * val_st_z_samp2 only. */ F2j = val_st_z_samp2; /* Set the line of values equal to zj to the actual line * of the last value picked for zj of sample 1 only in * this case */ val_st_z_samp1 = val_eq_z_samp1; /* next the line of the next value z, ie. zj+1 is * addressed. Here, only sample 1 must be addressed. */ val_eq_z_samp1++; if (val_eq_z_samp2 == 0) { val_eq_z_samp2 = stop_loop2; } } } denom_1_aux = n_total * F1j - n_sample1 * H_j; denom_2_aux = n_total * F2j - n_sample2 * H_j; sum_adk_samp1 = sum_adk_samp1 + hj * (denom_1_aux * denom_1_aux) / (H_j * (n_total - H_j) - n_total * hj / 4); sum_adk_samp2 = sum_adk_samp2 + hj * (denom_2_aux * denom_2_aux) / (H_j * (n_total - H_j) - n_total * hj / 4); next_z_sample2 = false; equal_z_both_samples = false; /* index to count the z. It is only required to prevent * the while slope to execute endless */ j++; } // calculating the adk value is the final step. adk_result = (double) (n_total - 1) / (n_total * n_total * (k - 1)) * (sum_adk_samp1 / n_sample1 + sum_adk_samp2 / n_sample2); /* if(adk_result <= adk_criterium) * adk_2_sample test is passed */
ADK | Anderson-Darling K-Sample test, a test used to check whether two samples have the same statistical distribution. |
ECMP | Equal Cost Multipath, a load balancing mechanism evaluating MPLS labels stacks, IP addresses and ports. |
EDF | The "Empirical Distribution Function" of a set of scalar measurements is a function F(x) which for any x gives the fractional proportion of the total measurements that were smaller than or equal as x. |
Metric | A measured quantity related to the performance and reliability of the Internet, expressed by a value. This could be a singleton (single value), a sample of single values or a statistic based on a sample of singletons. |
OWAMP | One-way Active Measurement Protocol, a protocol for communication between IPPM measurement systems specified by IPPM. |
OWD | One-Way Delay, a performance metric specified by IPPM. |
Sample metric | A sample metric is derived from a given singleton metric by evaluating a number of distinct instances together. |
Singleton metric | A singleton metric is, in a sense, one atomic measurement of this metric. |
Statistical metric | A 'statistical' metric is derived from a given sample metric by computing some statistic of the values defined by the singleton metric on the sample. |
TWAMP | Two-way Active Measurement Protocol, a protocol for communication between IPPM measurement systems specified by IPPM. |