Posts Tagged ‘TCP-testing’

Swinburne TCP Tests over DSL links

Thursday, May 14th, 2009

The folks at Swinburne reported this week on tests comparing the performance of TCP variants over home DSL lines.

In summary, they consider a home DSL link and compare the impact of Reno, Cubic and HTCP on competing voice or games traffic. The find that Cubic is the most aggressive in its impact on the low rate traffic due to a combination of:

(a) Its concave cwnd shape
(b) Backing cwnd off by only 0.8 on loss (rather than by 0.5 in Reno, and also by HTCP in this sort of situation)
(c) Its behaviour at lower cwnds (where HTCP reverts directly to Reno while cubic takes a different approach).

This work appears in the paper Collateral Damage: The Impact of Optimised TCP Variants On Real-time Traffic Latency in Consumer Broadband Environments presented at Networking 2009.

We also carried out some tests at the Hamilton Institute a while back on flow completion times over DSL links and found that the slow convergence of Cubic can penalise later starting flows.