github.com/apernet/quic-go@v0.43.1-0.20240515053213-5e9e635fd9f0/internal/congestion/cubic.go (about)

     1  package congestion
     2  
     3  import (
     4  	"math"
     5  	"time"
     6  
     7  	"github.com/apernet/quic-go/internal/protocol"
     8  )
     9  
    10  // This cubic implementation is based on the one found in Chromiums's QUIC
    11  // implementation, in the files net/quic/congestion_control/cubic.{hh,cc}.
    12  
    13  // Constants based on TCP defaults.
    14  // The following constants are in 2^10 fractions of a second instead of ms to
    15  // allow a 10 shift right to divide.
    16  
    17  // 1024*1024^3 (first 1024 is from 0.100^3)
    18  // where 0.100 is 100 ms which is the scaling round trip time.
    19  const (
    20  	cubeScale                                    = 40
    21  	cubeCongestionWindowScale                    = 410
    22  	cubeFactor                protocol.ByteCount = 1 << cubeScale / cubeCongestionWindowScale / maxDatagramSize
    23  	// TODO: when re-enabling cubic, make sure to use the actual packet size here
    24  	maxDatagramSize = protocol.ByteCount(protocol.InitialPacketSizeIPv4)
    25  )
    26  
    27  const defaultNumConnections = 1
    28  
    29  // Default Cubic backoff factor
    30  const beta float32 = 0.7
    31  
    32  // Additional backoff factor when loss occurs in the concave part of the Cubic
    33  // curve. This additional backoff factor is expected to give up bandwidth to
    34  // new concurrent flows and speed up convergence.
    35  const betaLastMax float32 = 0.85
    36  
    37  // Cubic implements the cubic algorithm from TCP
    38  type Cubic struct {
    39  	clock Clock
    40  
    41  	// Number of connections to simulate.
    42  	numConnections int
    43  
    44  	// Time when this cycle started, after last loss event.
    45  	epoch time.Time
    46  
    47  	// Max congestion window used just before last loss event.
    48  	// Note: to improve fairness to other streams an additional back off is
    49  	// applied to this value if the new value is below our latest value.
    50  	lastMaxCongestionWindow protocol.ByteCount
    51  
    52  	// Number of acked bytes since the cycle started (epoch).
    53  	ackedBytesCount protocol.ByteCount
    54  
    55  	// TCP Reno equivalent congestion window in packets.
    56  	estimatedTCPcongestionWindow protocol.ByteCount
    57  
    58  	// Origin point of cubic function.
    59  	originPointCongestionWindow protocol.ByteCount
    60  
    61  	// Time to origin point of cubic function in 2^10 fractions of a second.
    62  	timeToOriginPoint uint32
    63  
    64  	// Last congestion window in packets computed by cubic function.
    65  	lastTargetCongestionWindow protocol.ByteCount
    66  }
    67  
    68  // NewCubic returns a new Cubic instance
    69  func NewCubic(clock Clock) *Cubic {
    70  	c := &Cubic{
    71  		clock:          clock,
    72  		numConnections: defaultNumConnections,
    73  	}
    74  	c.Reset()
    75  	return c
    76  }
    77  
    78  // Reset is called after a timeout to reset the cubic state
    79  func (c *Cubic) Reset() {
    80  	c.epoch = time.Time{}
    81  	c.lastMaxCongestionWindow = 0
    82  	c.ackedBytesCount = 0
    83  	c.estimatedTCPcongestionWindow = 0
    84  	c.originPointCongestionWindow = 0
    85  	c.timeToOriginPoint = 0
    86  	c.lastTargetCongestionWindow = 0
    87  }
    88  
    89  func (c *Cubic) alpha() float32 {
    90  	// TCPFriendly alpha is described in Section 3.3 of the CUBIC paper. Note that
    91  	// beta here is a cwnd multiplier, and is equal to 1-beta from the paper.
    92  	// We derive the equivalent alpha for an N-connection emulation as:
    93  	b := c.beta()
    94  	return 3 * float32(c.numConnections) * float32(c.numConnections) * (1 - b) / (1 + b)
    95  }
    96  
    97  func (c *Cubic) beta() float32 {
    98  	// kNConnectionBeta is the backoff factor after loss for our N-connection
    99  	// emulation, which emulates the effective backoff of an ensemble of N
   100  	// TCP-Reno connections on a single loss event. The effective multiplier is
   101  	// computed as:
   102  	return (float32(c.numConnections) - 1 + beta) / float32(c.numConnections)
   103  }
   104  
   105  func (c *Cubic) betaLastMax() float32 {
   106  	// betaLastMax is the additional backoff factor after loss for our
   107  	// N-connection emulation, which emulates the additional backoff of
   108  	// an ensemble of N TCP-Reno connections on a single loss event. The
   109  	// effective multiplier is computed as:
   110  	return (float32(c.numConnections) - 1 + betaLastMax) / float32(c.numConnections)
   111  }
   112  
   113  // OnApplicationLimited is called on ack arrival when sender is unable to use
   114  // the available congestion window. Resets Cubic state during quiescence.
   115  func (c *Cubic) OnApplicationLimited() {
   116  	// When sender is not using the available congestion window, the window does
   117  	// not grow. But to be RTT-independent, Cubic assumes that the sender has been
   118  	// using the entire window during the time since the beginning of the current
   119  	// "epoch" (the end of the last loss recovery period). Since
   120  	// application-limited periods break this assumption, we reset the epoch when
   121  	// in such a period. This reset effectively freezes congestion window growth
   122  	// through application-limited periods and allows Cubic growth to continue
   123  	// when the entire window is being used.
   124  	c.epoch = time.Time{}
   125  }
   126  
   127  // CongestionWindowAfterPacketLoss computes a new congestion window to use after
   128  // a loss event. Returns the new congestion window in packets. The new
   129  // congestion window is a multiplicative decrease of our current window.
   130  func (c *Cubic) CongestionWindowAfterPacketLoss(currentCongestionWindow protocol.ByteCount) protocol.ByteCount {
   131  	if currentCongestionWindow+maxDatagramSize < c.lastMaxCongestionWindow {
   132  		// We never reached the old max, so assume we are competing with another
   133  		// flow. Use our extra back off factor to allow the other flow to go up.
   134  		c.lastMaxCongestionWindow = protocol.ByteCount(c.betaLastMax() * float32(currentCongestionWindow))
   135  	} else {
   136  		c.lastMaxCongestionWindow = currentCongestionWindow
   137  	}
   138  	c.epoch = time.Time{} // Reset time.
   139  	return protocol.ByteCount(float32(currentCongestionWindow) * c.beta())
   140  }
   141  
   142  // CongestionWindowAfterAck computes a new congestion window to use after a received ACK.
   143  // Returns the new congestion window in packets. The new congestion window
   144  // follows a cubic function that depends on the time passed since last
   145  // packet loss.
   146  func (c *Cubic) CongestionWindowAfterAck(
   147  	ackedBytes protocol.ByteCount,
   148  	currentCongestionWindow protocol.ByteCount,
   149  	delayMin time.Duration,
   150  	eventTime time.Time,
   151  ) protocol.ByteCount {
   152  	c.ackedBytesCount += ackedBytes
   153  
   154  	if c.epoch.IsZero() {
   155  		// First ACK after a loss event.
   156  		c.epoch = eventTime            // Start of epoch.
   157  		c.ackedBytesCount = ackedBytes // Reset count.
   158  		// Reset estimated_tcp_congestion_window_ to be in sync with cubic.
   159  		c.estimatedTCPcongestionWindow = currentCongestionWindow
   160  		if c.lastMaxCongestionWindow <= currentCongestionWindow {
   161  			c.timeToOriginPoint = 0
   162  			c.originPointCongestionWindow = currentCongestionWindow
   163  		} else {
   164  			c.timeToOriginPoint = uint32(math.Cbrt(float64(cubeFactor * (c.lastMaxCongestionWindow - currentCongestionWindow))))
   165  			c.originPointCongestionWindow = c.lastMaxCongestionWindow
   166  		}
   167  	}
   168  
   169  	// Change the time unit from microseconds to 2^10 fractions per second. Take
   170  	// the round trip time in account. This is done to allow us to use shift as a
   171  	// divide operator.
   172  	elapsedTime := int64(eventTime.Add(delayMin).Sub(c.epoch)/time.Microsecond) << 10 / (1000 * 1000)
   173  
   174  	// Right-shifts of negative, signed numbers have implementation-dependent
   175  	// behavior, so force the offset to be positive, as is done in the kernel.
   176  	offset := int64(c.timeToOriginPoint) - elapsedTime
   177  	if offset < 0 {
   178  		offset = -offset
   179  	}
   180  
   181  	deltaCongestionWindow := protocol.ByteCount(cubeCongestionWindowScale*offset*offset*offset) * maxDatagramSize >> cubeScale
   182  	var targetCongestionWindow protocol.ByteCount
   183  	if elapsedTime > int64(c.timeToOriginPoint) {
   184  		targetCongestionWindow = c.originPointCongestionWindow + deltaCongestionWindow
   185  	} else {
   186  		targetCongestionWindow = c.originPointCongestionWindow - deltaCongestionWindow
   187  	}
   188  	// Limit the CWND increase to half the acked bytes.
   189  	targetCongestionWindow = min(targetCongestionWindow, currentCongestionWindow+c.ackedBytesCount/2)
   190  
   191  	// Increase the window by approximately Alpha * 1 MSS of bytes every
   192  	// time we ack an estimated tcp window of bytes.  For small
   193  	// congestion windows (less than 25), the formula below will
   194  	// increase slightly slower than linearly per estimated tcp window
   195  	// of bytes.
   196  	c.estimatedTCPcongestionWindow += protocol.ByteCount(float32(c.ackedBytesCount) * c.alpha() * float32(maxDatagramSize) / float32(c.estimatedTCPcongestionWindow))
   197  	c.ackedBytesCount = 0
   198  
   199  	// We have a new cubic congestion window.
   200  	c.lastTargetCongestionWindow = targetCongestionWindow
   201  
   202  	// Compute target congestion_window based on cubic target and estimated TCP
   203  	// congestion_window, use highest (fastest).
   204  	if targetCongestionWindow < c.estimatedTCPcongestionWindow {
   205  		targetCongestionWindow = c.estimatedTCPcongestionWindow
   206  	}
   207  	return targetCongestionWindow
   208  }
   209  
   210  // SetNumConnections sets the number of emulated connections
   211  func (c *Cubic) SetNumConnections(n int) {
   212  	c.numConnections = n
   213  }