Re: TCP reaching to maximum throughput after a long time

From: Ben Greear
Date: Tue Apr 12 2016 - 16:23:38 EST


On 04/12/2016 01:17 PM, Eric Dumazet wrote:
On Tue, 2016-04-12 at 13:11 -0700, Ben Greear wrote:
On 04/12/2016 12:31 PM, Machani, Yaniv wrote:
On Tue, Apr 12, 2016 at 18:04:52, Ben Greear wrote:
On 04/12/2016 07:52 AM, Eric Dumazet wrote:
On Tue, 2016-04-12 at 12:17 +0000, Machani, Yaniv wrote:


If you are using 'Cubic' TCP congestion control, then please try
something different.
It was broken last I checked, at least when used with the ath10k driver.


Thanks Ben, this indeed seems to be the issue !
Switching to reno got me to max throughput instantly.

I'm still looking through the thread you have shared, but from what I understand there is no planned fix for it ?

I think at the time it was blamed on ath10k and no one cared to try to fix it.

Or, maybe no one really uses CUBIC anymore?

Either way, I have no plans to try to fix CUBIC, but maybe someone who knows
this code better could give it a try.

Well, cubic seems to work in many cases, assuming they are not too many
drops.

Assuming one flow can get nominal speed in few RTT is kind a dream, and
so far nobody claimed a CC was able to do that, while still being fair
and resilient.

TCP CC are full of heuristics, and by definition heuristics that were
working 6 years ago might need to be refreshed.

We are still maintaining Cubic for sure.

It worked well enough for years that I didn't even know other algorithms were
available. It was broken around 4.0 time, and I reported it to the list,
and no one seemed to really care enough to do anything about it. I changed
to reno and ignored the problem as well.

It is trivially easy to see the regression when using ath10k NIC, and from this email
thread, I guess other NICs have similar issues.

Thanks,
Ben


--
Ben Greear <greearb@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Candela Technologies Inc http://www.candelatech.com