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+
+Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) A. Morton
+Request for Comments: 8912 AT&T Labs
+Category: Standards Track M. Bagnulo
+ISSN: 2070-1721 UC3M
+ P. Eardley
+ BT
+ K. D'Souza
+ AT&T Labs
+ November 2021
+
+
+ Initial Performance Metrics Registry Entries
+
+Abstract
+
+ This memo defines the set of initial entries for the IANA Registry of
+ Performance Metrics. The set includes UDP Round-Trip Latency and
+ Loss, Packet Delay Variation, DNS Response Latency and Loss, UDP
+ Poisson One-Way Delay and Loss, UDP Periodic One-Way Delay and Loss,
+ ICMP Round-Trip Latency and Loss, and TCP Round-Trip Delay and Loss.
+
+Status of This Memo
+
+ This is an Internet Standards Track document.
+
+ This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force
+ (IETF). It represents the consensus of the IETF community. It has
+ received public review and has been approved for publication by the
+ Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG). Further information on
+ Internet Standards is available in Section 2 of RFC 7841.
+
+ Information about the current status of this document, any errata,
+ and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at
+ https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8912.
+
+Copyright Notice
+
+ Copyright (c) 2021 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the
+ document authors. All rights reserved.
+
+ This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal
+ Provisions Relating to IETF Documents
+ (https://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of
+ publication of this document. Please review these documents
+ carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect
+ to this document. Code Components extracted from this document must
+ include Revised BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of the
+ Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as described
+ in the Revised BSD License.
+
+Table of Contents
+
+ 1. Introduction
+ 1.1. Requirements Language
+ 2. Scope
+ 3. Registry Categories and Columns
+ 4. UDP Round-Trip Latency and Loss Registry Entries
+ 4.1. Summary
+ 4.1.1. ID (Identifier)
+ 4.1.2. Name
+ 4.1.3. URI
+ 4.1.4. Description
+ 4.1.5. Change Controller
+ 4.1.6. Version (of Registry Format)
+ 4.2. Metric Definition
+ 4.2.1. Reference Definition
+ 4.2.2. Fixed Parameters
+ 4.3. Method of Measurement
+ 4.3.1. Reference Methods
+ 4.3.2. Packet Stream Generation
+ 4.3.3. Traffic Filtering (Observation) Details
+ 4.3.4. Sampling Distribution
+ 4.3.5. Runtime Parameters and Data Format
+ 4.3.6. Roles
+ 4.4. Output
+ 4.4.1. Type
+ 4.4.2. Reference Definition
+ 4.4.3. Metric Units
+ 4.4.4. Calibration
+ 4.5. Administrative Items
+ 4.5.1. Status
+ 4.5.2. Requester
+ 4.5.3. Revision
+ 4.5.4. Revision Date
+ 4.6. Comments and Remarks
+ 5. Packet Delay Variation Registry Entry
+ 5.1. Summary
+ 5.1.1. ID (Identifier)
+ 5.1.2. Name
+ 5.1.3. URI
+ 5.1.4. Description
+ 5.1.5. Change Controller
+ 5.1.6. Version (of Registry Format)
+ 5.2. Metric Definition
+ 5.2.1. Reference Definition
+ 5.2.2. Fixed Parameters
+ 5.3. Method of Measurement
+ 5.3.1. Reference Methods
+ 5.3.2. Packet Stream Generation
+ 5.3.3. Traffic Filtering (Observation) Details
+ 5.3.4. Sampling Distribution
+ 5.3.5. Runtime Parameters and Data Format
+ 5.3.6. Roles
+ 5.4. Output
+ 5.4.1. Type
+ 5.4.2. Reference Definition
+ 5.4.3. Metric Units
+ 5.4.4. Calibration
+ 5.5. Administrative Items
+ 5.5.1. Status
+ 5.5.2. Requester
+ 5.5.3. Revision
+ 5.5.4. Revision Date
+ 5.6. Comments and Remarks
+ 6. DNS Response Latency and Loss Registry Entries
+ 6.1. Summary
+ 6.1.1. ID (Identifier)
+ 6.1.2. Name
+ 6.1.3. URI
+ 6.1.4. Description
+ 6.1.5. Change Controller
+ 6.1.6. Version (of Registry Format)
+ 6.2. Metric Definition
+ 6.2.1. Reference Definition
+ 6.2.2. Fixed Parameters
+ 6.3. Method of Measurement
+ 6.3.1. Reference Methods
+ 6.3.2. Packet Stream Generation
+ 6.3.3. Traffic Filtering (Observation) Details
+ 6.3.4. Sampling Distribution
+ 6.3.5. Runtime Parameters and Data Format
+ 6.3.6. Roles
+ 6.4. Output
+ 6.4.1. Type
+ 6.4.2. Reference Definition
+ 6.4.3. Metric Units
+ 6.4.4. Calibration
+ 6.5. Administrative Items
+ 6.5.1. Status
+ 6.5.2. Requester
+ 6.5.3. Revision
+ 6.5.4. Revision Date
+ 6.6. Comments and Remarks
+ 7. UDP Poisson One-Way Delay and Loss Registry Entries
+ 7.1. Summary
+ 7.1.1. ID (Identifier)
+ 7.1.2. Name
+ 7.1.3. URI
+ 7.1.4. Description
+ 7.1.5. Change Controller
+ 7.1.6. Version (of Registry Format)
+ 7.2. Metric Definition
+ 7.2.1. Reference Definition
+ 7.2.2. Fixed Parameters
+ 7.3. Method of Measurement
+ 7.3.1. Reference Methods
+ 7.3.2. Packet Stream Generation
+ 7.3.3. Traffic Filtering (Observation) Details
+ 7.3.4. Sampling Distribution
+ 7.3.5. Runtime Parameters and Data Format
+ 7.3.6. Roles
+ 7.4. Output
+ 7.4.1. Type
+ 7.4.2. Reference Definition
+ 7.4.3. Metric Units
+ 7.4.4. Calibration
+ 7.5. Administrative Items
+ 7.5.1. Status
+ 7.5.2. Requester
+ 7.5.3. Revision
+ 7.5.4. Revision Date
+ 7.6. Comments and Remarks
+ 8. UDP Periodic One-Way Delay and Loss Registry Entries
+ 8.1. Summary
+ 8.1.1. ID (Identifier)
+ 8.1.2. Name
+ 8.1.3. URI
+ 8.1.4. Description
+ 8.1.5. Change Controller
+ 8.1.6. Version (of Registry Format)
+ 8.2. Metric Definition
+ 8.2.1. Reference Definition
+ 8.2.2. Fixed Parameters
+ 8.3. Method of Measurement
+ 8.3.1. Reference Methods
+ 8.3.2. Packet Stream Generation
+ 8.3.3. Traffic Filtering (Observation) Details
+ 8.3.4. Sampling Distribution
+ 8.3.5. Runtime Parameters and Data Format
+ 8.3.6. Roles
+ 8.4. Output
+ 8.4.1. Type
+ 8.4.2. Reference Definition
+ 8.4.3. Metric Units
+ 8.4.4. Calibration
+ 8.5. Administrative Items
+ 8.5.1. Status
+ 8.5.2. Requester
+ 8.5.3. Revision
+ 8.5.4. Revision Date
+ 8.6. Comments and Remarks
+ 9. ICMP Round-Trip Latency and Loss Registry Entries
+ 9.1. Summary
+ 9.1.1. ID (Identifier)
+ 9.1.2. Name
+ 9.1.3. URI
+ 9.1.4. Description
+ 9.1.5. Change Controller
+ 9.1.6. Version (of Registry Format)
+ 9.2. Metric Definition
+ 9.2.1. Reference Definition
+ 9.2.2. Fixed Parameters
+ 9.3. Method of Measurement
+ 9.3.1. Reference Methods
+ 9.3.2. Packet Stream Generation
+ 9.3.3. Traffic Filtering (Observation) Details
+ 9.3.4. Sampling Distribution
+ 9.3.5. Runtime Parameters and Data Format
+ 9.3.6. Roles
+ 9.4. Output
+ 9.4.1. Type
+ 9.4.2. Reference Definition
+ 9.4.3. Metric Units
+ 9.4.4. Calibration
+ 9.5. Administrative Items
+ 9.5.1. Status
+ 9.5.2. Requester
+ 9.5.3. Revision
+ 9.5.4. Revision Date
+ 9.6. Comments and Remarks
+ 10. TCP Round-Trip Delay and Loss Registry Entries
+ 10.1. Summary
+ 10.1.1. ID (Identifier)
+ 10.1.2. Name
+ 10.1.3. URI
+ 10.1.4. Description
+ 10.1.5. Change Controller
+ 10.1.6. Version (of Registry Format)
+ 10.2. Metric Definition
+ 10.2.1. Reference Definition
+ 10.2.2. Fixed Parameters
+ 10.3. Method of Measurement
+ 10.3.1. Reference Methods
+ 10.3.2. Packet Stream Generation
+ 10.3.3. Traffic Filtering (Observation) Details
+ 10.3.4. Sampling Distribution
+ 10.3.5. Runtime Parameters and Data Format
+ 10.3.6. Roles
+ 10.4. Output
+ 10.4.1. Type
+ 10.4.2. Reference Definition
+ 10.4.3. Metric Units
+ 10.4.4. Calibration
+ 10.5. Administrative Items
+ 10.5.1. Status
+ 10.5.2. Requester
+ 10.5.3. Revision
+ 10.5.4. Revision Date
+ 10.6. Comments and Remarks
+ 11. Security Considerations
+ 12. IANA Considerations
+ 13. References
+ 13.1. Normative References
+ 13.2. Informative References
+ Acknowledgments
+ Authors' Addresses
+
+1. Introduction
+
+ This memo defines an initial set of entries for the Performance
+ Metrics Registry. It uses terms and definitions from the IP
+ Performance Metrics (IPPM) literature, primarily [RFC2330].
+
+ Although there are several standard templates for organizing
+ specifications of Performance Metrics (see [RFC7679] for an example
+ of the traditional IPPM template, based to a large extent on the
+ Benchmarking Methodology Working Group's traditional template in
+ [RFC1242], and see [RFC6390] for a similar template), none of these
+ templates were intended to become the basis for the columns of an
+ IETF-wide Registry of metrics. While examining aspects of metric
+ specifications that need to be registered, it became clear that none
+ of the existing metric templates fully satisfy the particular needs
+ of a Registry.
+
+ Therefore, [RFC8911] defines the overall format for a Performance
+ Metrics Registry. Section 5 of [RFC8911] also gives guidelines for
+ those requesting registration of a Metric -- that is, the creation of
+ one or more entries in the Performance Metrics Registry:
+
+ | In essence, there needs to be evidence that (1) a candidate
+ | Registered Performance Metric has significant industry interest or
+ | has seen deployment and (2) there is agreement that the candidate
+ | Registered Performance Metric serves its intended purpose.
+
+ The process defined in [RFC8911] also requires that new entries be
+ administered by IANA through the Specification Required policy
+ [RFC8126], which will ensure that the metrics are tightly defined.
+
+1.1. Requirements Language
+
+ The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
+ "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and
+ "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in
+ BCP 14 [RFC2119] [RFC8174] when, and only when, they appear in all
+ capitals, as shown here.
+
+2. Scope
+
+ This document defines a set of initial Performance Metrics Registry
+ Entries. Most are Active Performance Metrics, which are based on
+ RFCs prepared in the IPPM Working Group of the IETF, according to
+ their framework [RFC2330] and its updates.
+
+3. Registry Categories and Columns
+
+ This memo uses the terminology defined in [RFC8911].
+
+ This section provides the categories and columns of the Registry, for
+ easy reference. An entry (row) therefore gives a complete
+ description of a Registered Metric.
+
+ Registry Categories and Columns are shown below in this format:
+
+ Category
+ ------------------...
+ Column | Column |...
+
+ Summary
+ ---------------------------------------------------------------
+ Identifier | Name | URI | Desc. | Reference | Change | Ver |
+ | | | | | Controller |
+
+ Metric Definition
+ -----------------------------------------
+ Reference Definition | Fixed Parameters |
+
+ Method of Measurement
+ ---------------------------------------------------------------------
+ Reference | Packet | Traffic | Sampling | Runtime | Role |
+ Method | Stream | Filter | Distribution | Parameters | |
+ | Generation |
+ Output
+ -----------------------------------------
+ Type | Reference | Units | Calibration |
+ | Definition | | |
+
+ Administrative Information
+ -------------------------------------
+ Status |Requester | Rev | Rev. Date |
+
+ Comments and Remarks
+ --------------------
+
+4. UDP Round-Trip Latency and Loss Registry Entries
+
+ This section specifies an initial Registry Entry for UDP Round-Trip
+ Latency and another entry for the UDP Round-Trip Loss Ratio.
+
+ Note: Each Registry Entry only produces a "raw" output or a
+ statistical summary. To describe both "raw" and one or more
+ statistics efficiently, the Identifier, Name, and Output
+ categories can be split, and a single section can specify two or
+ more closely related metrics. For example, this section specifies
+ two Registry Entries with many common columns. See Section 7 for
+ an example specifying multiple Registry Entries with many common
+ columns.
+
+ All column entries besides the ID, Name, Description, and Output
+ Reference Method categories are the same; thus, this section defines
+ two closely related Registry Entries. As a result, IANA has also
+ assigned a corresponding URL to each of the two Named Metrics.
+
+4.1. Summary
+
+ This category includes multiple indexes to the Registry Entries: the
+ element ID and Metric Name.
+
+4.1.1. ID (Identifier)
+
+ IANA has allocated the numeric Identifiers 1 and 2 for the two Named
+ Metric Entries in Section 4. See Section 4.1.2 for mapping to Names.
+
+4.1.2. Name
+
+ 1: RTDelay_Active_IP-UDP-Periodic_RFC8912sec4_Seconds_95Percentile
+
+ 2: RTLoss_Active_IP-UDP-Periodic_RFC8912sec4_Percent_LossRatio
+
+4.1.3. URI
+
+ URL: https://www.iana.org/assignments/performance-metrics/
+ RTDelay_Active_IP-UDP-Periodic_RFC8912sec4_Seconds_95Percentile
+
+ URL: https://www.iana.org/assignments/performance-metrics/
+ RTLoss_Active_IP-UDP-Periodic_RFC8912sec4_Percent_LossRatio
+
+4.1.4. Description
+
+ RTDelay: This metric assesses the delay of a stream of packets
+ exchanged between two hosts (which are the two measurement
+ points). The output is the round-trip delay for all successfully
+ exchanged packets expressed as the 95th percentile of their
+ conditional delay distribution.
+
+ RTLoss: This metric assesses the loss ratio of a stream of packets
+ exchanged between two hosts (which are the two measurement
+ points). The output is the round-trip loss ratio for all
+ transmitted packets expressed as a percentage.
+
+4.1.5. Change Controller
+
+ IETF
+
+4.1.6. Version (of Registry Format)
+
+ 1.0
+
+4.2. Metric Definition
+
+ This category includes columns to prompt the entry of all necessary
+ details related to the metric definition, including the RFC reference
+ and values of input factors, called "Fixed Parameters".
+
+4.2.1. Reference Definition
+
+ For delay:
+
+ Almes, G., Kalidindi, S., and M. Zekauskas, "A Round-trip Delay
+ Metric for IPPM", RFC 2681, DOI 10.17487/RFC2681, September 1999,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2681>. [RFC2681]
+
+ Section 2.4 of [RFC2681] provides the reference definition of the
+ singleton (single value) round-trip delay metric. Section 3.4 of
+ [RFC2681] provides the reference definition expanded to cover a
+ multi-singleton sample. Note that terms such as "singleton" and
+ "sample" are defined in Section 11 of [RFC2330].
+
+ Note that although the definition of round-trip delay between the
+ Source (Src) and the Destination (Dst) as provided in Section 2.4
+ of [RFC2681] is directionally ambiguous in the text, this metric
+ tightens the definition further to recognize that the host in the
+ Src Role will send the first packet to the host in the Dst Role
+ and will ultimately receive the corresponding return packet from
+ the Dst (when neither is lost).
+
+ Finally, note that the variable "dT" is used in [RFC2681] to refer
+ to the value of round-trip delay in metric definitions and
+ methods. The variable "dT" has been reused in other IPPM
+ literature to refer to different quantities and cannot be used as
+ a global variable name.
+
+ For loss:
+
+ Morton, A., "Round-Trip Packet Loss Metrics", RFC 6673, DOI
+ 10.17487/RFC6673, August 2012, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/
+ rfc6673>. [RFC6673]
+
+ Both Delay and Loss metrics employ a maximum waiting time for
+ received packets, so the count of lost packets to total packets sent
+ is the basis for the loss ratio calculation as per Section 6.1 of
+ [RFC6673].
+
+4.2.2. Fixed Parameters
+
+ Type-P as defined in Section 13 of [RFC2330]:
+ IPv4 header values:
+ DSCP: Set to 0
+ TTL: Set to 255
+ Protocol: Set to 17 (UDP)
+
+ IPv6 header values:
+ DSCP: Set to 0
+ Hop Count: Set to 255
+ Next Header: Set to 17 (UDP)
+ Flow Label: Set to 0
+ Extension Headers: None
+
+ UDP header values:
+ Checksum: The checksum MUST be calculated and the non-zero
+ checksum included in the header
+
+ UDP Payload:
+ Total of 100 bytes
+
+ Other measurement Parameters:
+ Tmax: A loss threshold waiting time with value 3.0, expressed in
+ units of seconds, as a positive value of type decimal64 with
+ fraction digits = 4 (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) and with a
+ resolution of 0.0001 seconds (0.1 ms), with lossless conversion
+ to/from the 32-bit NTP timestamp as per Section 6 of [RFC5905].
+
+4.3. Method of Measurement
+
+ This category includes columns for references to relevant sections of
+ the RFC(s) and any supplemental information needed to ensure an
+ unambiguous method for implementations.
+
+4.3.1. Reference Methods
+
+ The methodology for this metric (equivalent to Type-P-Round-trip-
+ Delay and Type-P-Round-trip-Delay-Poisson-Stream) is defined as in
+ Section 2.6 of [RFC2681] (for singletons) and Section 3.6 of
+ [RFC2681] (for samples) using the Type-P and Tmax defined in the
+ Fixed Parameters column. However, the Periodic stream will be
+ generated according to [RFC3432].
+
+ The reference method distinguishes between long-delayed packets and
+ lost packets by implementing a maximum waiting time for packet
+ arrival. Tmax is the waiting time used as the threshold to declare a
+ packet lost. Lost packets SHALL be designated as having undefined
+ delay and counted for the RTLoss metric [RFC6673].
+
+ The calculations on the delay (RTT) SHALL be performed on the
+ conditional distribution, conditioned on successful packet arrival
+ within Tmax. Also, when all packet delays are stored, the process
+ that calculates the RTT value MUST enforce the Tmax threshold on
+ stored values before calculations. See Section 4.1 of [RFC3393] for
+ details on the conditional distribution to exclude undefined values
+ of delay, and see Section 5 of [RFC6703] for background on this
+ analysis choice.
+
+ The reference method requires some way to distinguish between
+ different packets in a stream to establish correspondence between
+ sending times and receiving times for each successfully arriving
+ packet. Sequence numbers or other send-order identification MUST be
+ retained at the Src or included with each packet to disambiguate
+ packet reordering if it occurs.
+
+ If a standard measurement protocol is employed, then the measurement
+ process will determine the sequence numbers or timestamps applied to
+ test packets after the Fixed and Runtime Parameters are passed to
+ that process. The chosen measurement protocol will dictate the
+ format of sequence numbers and timestamps, if they are conveyed in
+ the packet payload.
+
+ Refer to Section 4.4 of [RFC6673] for an expanded discussion of the
+ instruction to "send a Type-P packet back to the Src as quickly as
+ possible" in Section 2.6 of [RFC2681]. Section 8 of [RFC6673]
+ presents additional requirements that MUST be included in the Method
+ of Measurement for this metric.
+
+4.3.2. Packet Stream Generation
+
+ This section provides details regarding packet traffic, which is used
+ as the basis for measurement. In IPPM Metrics, this is called the
+ "stream"; this stream can easily be described by providing the list
+ of stream Parameters.
+
+ Section 3 of [RFC3432] prescribes the method for generating Periodic
+ streams using associated Parameters.
+
+ incT: The nominal duration of the inter-packet interval, first bit
+ to first bit, with value 0.0200, expressed in units of seconds, as
+ a positive value of type decimal64 with fraction digits = 4 (see
+ Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) and with a resolution of 0.0001 seconds
+ (0.1 ms).
+
+ dT: The duration of the interval for allowed sample start times,
+ with value 1.0, expressed in units of seconds, as a positive value
+ of type decimal64 with fraction digits = 4 (see Section 9.3 of
+ [RFC6020]) and with a resolution of 0.0001 seconds (0.1 ms).
+
+ Note: An initiation process with a number of control exchanges
+ resulting in unpredictable start times (within a time interval)
+ may be sufficient to avoid synchronization of periodic streams and
+ is a valid replacement for selecting a start time at random from a
+ fixed interval.
+
+ The T0 Parameter will be reported as a measured Parameter.
+ Parameters incT and dT are Fixed Parameters.
+
+4.3.3. Traffic Filtering (Observation) Details
+
+ N/A
+
+4.3.4. Sampling Distribution
+
+ N/A
+
+4.3.5. Runtime Parameters and Data Format
+
+ Runtime Parameters are input factors that must be determined,
+ configured into the measurement system, and reported with the results
+ for the context to be complete.
+
+ Src: The IP address of the host in the Src Role (format
+ ipv4-address-no-zone value for IPv4 or ipv6-address-no-zone value
+ for IPv6; see Section 4 of [RFC6991]).
+
+ Dst: The IP address of the host in the Dst Role (format
+ ipv4-address-no-zone value for IPv4 or ipv6-address-no-zone value
+ for IPv6; see Section 4 of [RFC6991]).
+
+ T0: A time, the start of a measurement interval (format "date-time"
+ as specified in Section 5.6 of [RFC3339]; see also "date-and-time"
+ in Section 3 of [RFC6991]). The UTC Time Zone is required by
+ Section 6.1 of [RFC2330]. When T0 is "all-zeros", a start time is
+ unspecified and Tf is to be interpreted as the duration of the
+ measurement interval. The start time is controlled through other
+ means.
+
+ Tf: A time, the end of a measurement interval (format "date-time" as
+ specified in Section 5.6 of [RFC3339]; see also "date-and-time" in
+ Section 3 of [RFC6991]). The UTC Time Zone is required by
+ Section 6.1 of [RFC2330]. When T0 is "all-zeros", an ending time
+ and date is ignored and Tf is interpreted as the duration of the
+ measurement interval.
+
+4.3.6. Roles
+
+ Src: Launches each packet and waits for return transmissions from
+ the Dst.
+
+ Dst: Waits for each packet from the Src and sends a return packet to
+ the Src.
+
+4.4. Output
+
+ This category specifies all details of the output of measurements
+ using the metric.
+
+4.4.1. Type
+
+ Percentile: For the conditional distribution of all packets with a
+ valid value of round-trip delay (undefined delays are excluded), this
+ is a single value corresponding to the 95th percentile, as follows:
+
+ See Section 4.1 of [RFC3393] for details on the conditional
+ distribution to exclude undefined values of delay, and see Section 5
+ of [RFC6703] for background on this analysis choice.
+
+ The percentile = 95, meaning that the reported delay, "95Percentile",
+ is the smallest value of round-trip delay for which the Empirical
+ Distribution Function, EDF(95Percentile), is greater than or equal to
+ 95% of the singleton round-trip delay values in the conditional
+ distribution. See Section 11.3 of [RFC2330] for the definition of
+ the percentile statistic using the EDF.
+
+ For LossRatio, the count of lost packets to total packets sent is the
+ basis for the loss ratio calculation as per Section 6.1 of [RFC6673].
+
+4.4.2. Reference Definition
+
+ For all outputs:
+
+ T0: The start of a measurement interval (format "date-time" as
+ specified in Section 5.6 of [RFC3339]; see also "date-and-time" in
+ Section 3 of [RFC6991]). The UTC Time Zone is required by
+ Section 6.1 of [RFC2330].
+
+ Tf: The end of a measurement interval (format "date-time" as
+ specified in Section 5.6 of [RFC3339]; see also "date-and-time" in
+ Section 3 of [RFC6991]). The UTC Time Zone is required by
+ Section 6.1 of [RFC2330].
+
+ TotalPkts: The count of packets sent by the Src to the Dst during
+ the measurement interval.
+
+ 95Percentile: The time value of the result is expressed in units of
+ seconds, as a positive value of type decimal64 with fraction
+ digits = 9 (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) with a resolution of
+ 0.000000001 seconds (1.0 ns).
+
+ Percent_LossRatio: The numeric value of the result is expressed in
+ units of lost packets to total packets times 100%, as a positive
+ value of type decimal64 with fraction digits = 9 (see Section 9.3
+ of [RFC6020]) with a resolution of 0.0000000001.
+
+4.4.3. Metric Units
+
+ The 95th percentile of round-trip delay is expressed in seconds.
+
+ The round-trip loss ratio is expressed as a percentage of lost
+ packets to total packets sent.
+
+4.4.4. Calibration
+
+ Section 3.7.3 of [RFC7679] provides a means to quantify the
+ systematic and random errors of a time measurement. Calibration in-
+ situ could be enabled with an internal loopback at the Source host
+ that includes as much of the measurement system as possible, performs
+ address manipulation as needed, and provides some form of isolation
+ (e.g., deterministic delay) to avoid send-receive interface
+ contention. Some portion of the random and systematic error can be
+ characterized in this way.
+
+ When a measurement controller requests a calibration measurement, the
+ loopback is applied and the result is output in the same format as a
+ normal measurement, with an additional indication that it is a
+ calibration result.
+
+ Both internal loopback calibration and clock synchronization can be
+ used to estimate the available accuracy of the Output Metric Units.
+ For example, repeated loopback delay measurements will reveal the
+ portion of the output result resolution that is the result of system
+ noise and is thus inaccurate.
+
+4.5. Administrative Items
+
+4.5.1. Status
+
+ Current
+
+4.5.2. Requester
+
+ RFC 8912
+
+4.5.3. Revision
+
+ 1.0
+
+4.5.4. Revision Date
+
+ 2021-11-17
+
+4.6. Comments and Remarks
+
+ None
+
+5. Packet Delay Variation Registry Entry
+
+ This section gives an initial Registry Entry for a Packet Delay
+ Variation (PDV) metric.
+
+5.1. Summary
+
+ This category includes multiple indexes to the Registry Entry: the
+ element ID and Metric Name.
+
+5.1.1. ID (Identifier)
+
+ IANA has allocated the numeric Identifier 3 for the Named Metric
+ Entry in Section 5. See Section 5.1.2 for mapping to Name.
+
+5.1.2. Name
+
+ 3: OWPDV_Active_IP-UDP-Periodic_RFC8912sec5_Seconds_95Percentile
+
+5.1.3. URI
+
+ URL: https://www.iana.org/assignments/performance-metrics/
+ OWPDV_Active_IP-UDP-Periodic_RFC8912sec5_Seconds_95Percentile
+
+5.1.4. Description
+
+ This metric assesses packet delay variation with respect to the
+ minimum delay observed on the periodic stream. The output is
+ expressed as the 95th percentile of the one-way packet delay
+ variation distribution.
+
+5.1.5. Change Controller
+
+ IETF
+
+5.1.6. Version (of Registry Format)
+
+ 1.0
+
+5.2. Metric Definition
+
+ This category includes columns to prompt the entry of all necessary
+ details related to the metric definition, including the RFC reference
+ and values of input factors, called "Fixed Parameters".
+
+5.2.1. Reference Definition
+
+ Paxson, V., Almes, G., Mahdavi, J., and M. Mathis, "Framework for IP
+ Performance Metrics", RFC 2330, DOI 10.17487/RFC2330, May 1998,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2330>. [RFC2330]
+
+ Demichelis, C. and P. Chimento, "IP Packet Delay Variation Metric
+ for IP Performance Metrics (IPPM)", RFC 3393, DOI 10.17487/RFC3393,
+ November 2002, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3393>. [RFC3393]
+
+ Morton, A. and B. Claise, "Packet Delay Variation Applicability
+ Statement", RFC 5481, DOI 10.17487/RFC5481, March 2009,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5481>. [RFC5481]
+
+ Mills, D., Martin, J., Ed., Burbank, J., and W. Kasch, "Network Time
+ Protocol Version 4: Protocol and Algorithms Specification", RFC 5905,
+ DOI 10.17487/RFC5905, June 2010, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/
+ rfc5905>. [RFC5905]
+
+ See Sections 2.4 and 3.4 of [RFC3393]. The measured singleton delay
+ differences are referred to by the variable name "ddT" (applicable to
+ all forms of delay variation). However, this Metric Entry specifies
+ the PDV form defined in Section 4.2 of [RFC5481], where the singleton
+ PDV for packet i is referred to by the variable name "PDV(i)".
+
+5.2.2. Fixed Parameters
+
+ IPv4 header values:
+ DSCP: Set to 0
+ TTL: Set to 255
+ Protocol: Set to 17 (UDP)
+
+ IPv6 header values:
+ DSCP: Set to 0
+ Hop Count: Set to 255
+ Next Header: Set to 17 (UDP)
+ Flow Label: Set to 0
+ Extension Headers: None
+
+ UDP header values:
+ Checksum: The checksum MUST be calculated and the non-zero
+ checksum included in the header
+
+ UDP Payload:
+ Total of 200 bytes
+
+ Other measurement Parameters:
+ Tmax: A loss threshold waiting time with value 3.0, expressed in
+ units of seconds, as a positive value of type decimal64 with
+ fraction digits = 4 (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) and with a
+ resolution of 0.0001 seconds (0.1 ms), with lossless conversion
+ to/from the 32-bit NTP timestamp as per Section 6 of [RFC5905].
+
+ F: A selection function unambiguously defining the packets from
+ the stream selected for the metric. See Section 4.2 of
+ [RFC5481] for the PDV form.
+
+ See the Packet Stream Generation section for two additional Fixed
+ Parameters.
+
+5.3. Method of Measurement
+
+ This category includes columns for references to relevant sections of
+ the RFC(s) and any supplemental information needed to ensure an
+ unambiguous method for implementations.
+
+5.3.1. Reference Methods
+
+ See Sections 2.6 and 3.6 of [RFC3393] for general singleton element
+ calculations. This Metric Entry requires implementation of the PDV
+ form defined in Section 4.2 of [RFC5481]. Also see measurement
+ considerations in Section 8 of [RFC5481].
+
+ The reference method distinguishes between long-delayed packets and
+ lost packets by implementing a maximum waiting time for packet
+ arrival. Tmax is the waiting time used as the threshold to declare a
+ packet lost. Lost packets SHALL be designated as having undefined
+ delay.
+
+ The calculations on the one-way delay SHALL be performed on the
+ conditional distribution, conditioned on successful packet arrival
+ within Tmax. Also, when all packet delays are stored, the process
+ that calculates the one-way delay value MUST enforce the Tmax
+ threshold on stored values before calculations. See Section 4.1 of
+ [RFC3393] for details on the conditional distribution to exclude
+ undefined values of delay, and see Section 5 of [RFC6703] for
+ background on this analysis choice.
+
+ The reference method requires some way to distinguish between
+ different packets in a stream to establish correspondence between
+ sending times and receiving times for each successfully arriving
+ packet. Sequence numbers or other send-order identification MUST be
+ retained at the Src or included with each packet to disambiguate
+ packet reordering if it occurs.
+
+ If a standard measurement protocol is employed, then the measurement
+ process will determine the sequence numbers or timestamps applied to
+ test packets after the Fixed and Runtime Parameters are passed to
+ that process. The chosen measurement protocol will dictate the
+ format of sequence numbers and timestamps, if they are conveyed in
+ the packet payload.
+
+5.3.2. Packet Stream Generation
+
+ This section provides details regarding packet traffic, which is used
+ as the basis for measurement. In IPPM Metrics, this is called the
+ "stream"; this stream can easily be described by providing the list
+ of stream Parameters.
+
+ Section 3 of [RFC3432] prescribes the method for generating Periodic
+ streams using associated Parameters.
+
+ incT: The nominal duration of the inter-packet interval, first bit
+ to first bit, with value 0.0200, expressed in units of seconds, as
+ a positive value of type decimal64 with fraction digits = 4 (see
+ Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) and with a resolution of 0.0001 seconds
+ (0.1 ms).
+
+ dT: The duration of the interval for allowed sample start times,
+ with value 1.0, expressed in units of seconds, as a positive value
+ of type decimal64 with fraction digits = 4 (see Section 9.3 of
+ [RFC6020]) and with a resolution of 0.0001 seconds (0.1 ms).
+
+ Note: An initiation process with a number of control exchanges
+ resulting in unpredictable start times (within a time interval)
+ may be sufficient to avoid synchronization of periodic streams and
+ is a valid replacement for selecting a start time at random from a
+ fixed interval.
+
+ The T0 Parameter will be reported as a measured Parameter.
+ Parameters incT and dT are Fixed Parameters.
+
+5.3.3. Traffic Filtering (Observation) Details
+
+ N/A
+
+5.3.4. Sampling Distribution
+
+ N/A
+
+5.3.5. Runtime Parameters and Data Format
+
+ Src: The IP address of the host in the Src Role (format
+ ipv4-address-no-zone value for IPv4 or ipv6-address-no-zone value
+ for IPv6; see Section 4 of [RFC6991]).
+
+ Dst: The IP address of the host in the Dst Role (format
+ ipv4-address-no-zone value for IPv4 or ipv6-address-no-zone value
+ for IPv6; see Section 4 of [RFC6991]).
+
+ T0: A time, the start of a measurement interval (format "date-time"
+ as specified in Section 5.6 of [RFC3339]; see also "date-and-time"
+ in Section 3 of [RFC6991]). The UTC Time Zone is required by
+ Section 6.1 of [RFC2330]. When T0 is "all-zeros", a start time is
+ unspecified and Tf is to be interpreted as the duration of the
+ measurement interval. The start time is controlled through other
+ means.
+
+ Tf: A time, the end of a measurement interval (format "date-time" as
+ specified in Section 5.6 of [RFC3339]; see also "date-and-time" in
+ Section 3 of [RFC6991]). The UTC Time Zone is required by
+ Section 6.1 of [RFC2330]. When T0 is "all-zeros", an ending time
+ and date is ignored and Tf is interpreted as the duration of the
+ measurement interval.
+
+5.3.6. Roles
+
+ Src: Launches each packet and waits for return transmissions from
+ the Dst.
+
+ Dst: Waits for each packet from the Src and sends a return packet to
+ the Src (when required by the test protocol).
+
+5.4. Output
+
+ This category specifies all details of the output of measurements
+ using the metric.
+
+5.4.1. Type
+
+ Percentile: For the conditional distribution of all packets with a
+ valid value of one-way delay (undefined delays are excluded), this is
+ a single value corresponding to the 95th percentile, as follows:
+
+ See Section 4.1 of [RFC3393] for details on the conditional
+ distribution to exclude undefined values of delay, and see Section 5
+ of [RFC6703] for background on this analysis choice.
+
+ The percentile = 95, meaning that the reported delay, "95Percentile",
+ is the smallest value of one-way PDV for which the Empirical
+ Distribution Function, EDF(95Percentile), is greater than or equal to
+ 95% of the singleton one-way PDV values in the conditional
+ distribution. See Section 11.3 of [RFC2330] for the definition of
+ the percentile statistic using the EDF.
+
+5.4.2. Reference Definition
+
+ T0: The start of a measurement interval (format "date-time" as
+ specified in Section 5.6 of [RFC3339]; see also "date-and-time" in
+ Section 3 of [RFC6991]). The UTC Time Zone is required by
+ Section 6.1 of [RFC2330].
+
+ Tf: The end of a measurement interval (format "date-time" as
+ specified in Section 5.6 of [RFC3339]; see also "date-and-time" in
+ Section 3 of [RFC6991]). The UTC Time Zone is required by
+ Section 6.1 of [RFC2330].
+
+ 95Percentile: The time value of the result is expressed in units of
+ seconds, as a positive value of type decimal64 with fraction
+ digits = 9 (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) with a resolution of
+ 0.000000001 seconds (1.0 ns), and with lossless conversion to/from
+ the 64-bit NTP timestamp as per Section 6 of [RFC5905].
+
+5.4.3. Metric Units
+
+ The 95th percentile of one-way PDV is expressed in seconds.
+
+5.4.4. Calibration
+
+ Section 3.7.3 of [RFC7679] provides a means to quantify the
+ systematic and random errors of a time measurement. Calibration in-
+ situ could be enabled with an internal loopback that includes as much
+ of the measurement system as possible, performs address manipulation
+ as needed, and provides some form of isolation (e.g., deterministic
+ delay) to avoid send-receive interface contention. Some portion of
+ the random and systematic error can be characterized in this way.
+
+ For one-way delay measurements, the error calibration must include an
+ assessment of the internal clock synchronization with its external
+ reference (this internal clock is supplying timestamps for
+ measurement). In practice, the time offsets [RFC5905] of clocks at
+ both the Source and Destination are needed to estimate the systematic
+ error due to imperfect clock synchronization (the time offsets are
+ smoothed; thus, the random variation is not usually represented in
+ the results).
+
+ time_offset: The time value of the result is expressed in units of
+ seconds, as a signed value of type decimal64 with fraction
+ digits = 9 (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) with a resolution of
+ 0.000000001 seconds (1.0 ns), and with lossless conversion to/from
+ the 64-bit NTP timestamp as per Section 6 of [RFC5905].
+
+ When a measurement controller requests a calibration measurement, the
+ loopback is applied and the result is output in the same format as a
+ normal measurement, with an additional indication that it is a
+ calibration result. In any measurement, the measurement function
+ SHOULD report its current estimate of the time offset [RFC5905] as an
+ indicator of the degree of synchronization.
+
+ Both internal loopback calibration and clock synchronization can be
+ used to estimate the available accuracy of the Output Metric Units.
+ For example, repeated loopback delay measurements will reveal the
+ portion of the output result resolution that is the result of system
+ noise and is thus inaccurate.
+
+5.5. Administrative Items
+
+5.5.1. Status
+
+ Current
+
+5.5.2. Requester
+
+ RFC 8912
+
+5.5.3. Revision
+
+ 1.0
+
+5.5.4. Revision Date
+
+ 2021-11-17
+
+5.6. Comments and Remarks
+
+ Lost packets represent a challenge for delay variation metrics. See
+ Section 4.1 of [RFC3393] and the delay variation applicability
+ statement [RFC5481] for extensive analysis and comparison of PDV and
+ an alternate metric, IPDV (Inter-Packet Delay Variation).
+
+6. DNS Response Latency and Loss Registry Entries
+
+ This section gives initial Registry Entries for DNS Response Latency
+ and Loss from a network user's perspective, for a specific named
+ resource. The metric can be measured repeatedly for different named
+ resources. [RFC2681] defines a round-trip delay metric. We build on
+ that metric by specifying several of the input Parameters to
+ precisely define two metrics for measuring DNS latency and loss.
+
+ All column entries besides the ID, Name, Description, and Output
+ Reference Method categories are the same; thus, this section defines
+ two closely related Registry Entries. As a result, IANA has assigned
+ corresponding URLs to each of the two Named Metrics.
+
+6.1. Summary
+
+ This category includes multiple indexes to the Registry Entries: the
+ element ID and Metric Name.
+
+6.1.1. ID (Identifier)
+
+ IANA has allocated the numeric Identifiers 4 and 5 for the two Named
+ Metric Entries in Section 6. See Section 6.1.2 for mapping to Names.
+
+6.1.2. Name
+
+ 4: RTDNS_Active_IP-UDP-Poisson_RFC8912sec6_Seconds_Raw
+
+ 5: RLDNS_Active_IP-UDP-Poisson_RFC8912sec6_Logical_Raw
+
+6.1.3. URI
+
+ URL: https://www.iana.org/assignments/performance-metrics/
+ RTDNS_Active_IP-UDP-Poisson_RFC8912sec6_Seconds_Raw
+
+ URL: https://www.iana.org/assignments/performance-metrics/
+ RLDNS_Active_IP-UDP-Poisson_RFC8912sec6_Logical_Raw
+
+6.1.4. Description
+
+ This is a metric for DNS Response performance from a network user's
+ perspective, for a specific named resource. The metric can be
+ measured repeatedly using different resource names.
+
+ RTDNS: This metric assesses the response time, the interval from the
+ query transmission to the response.
+
+ RLDNS: This metric indicates that the response was deemed lost. In
+ other words, the response time exceeded the maximum waiting time.
+
+6.1.5. Change Controller
+
+ IETF
+
+6.1.6. Version (of Registry Format)
+
+ 1.0
+
+6.2. Metric Definition
+
+ This category includes columns to prompt the entry of all necessary
+ details related to the metric definition, including the RFC reference
+ and values of input factors, called "Fixed Parameters".
+
+6.2.1. Reference Definition
+
+ For Delay:
+
+ Mockapetris, P., "Domain names - implementation and
+ specification", STD 13, RFC 1035, DOI 10.17487/RFC1035, November
+ 1987, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc1035> (and updates).
+ [RFC1035]
+
+ Almes, G., Kalidindi, S., and M. Zekauskas, "A Round-trip Delay
+ Metric for IPPM", RFC 2681, DOI 10.17487/RFC2681, September 1999,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2681>. [RFC2681]
+
+ Section 2.4 of [RFC2681] provides the reference definition of the
+ singleton (single value) round-trip delay metric. Section 3.4 of
+ [RFC2681] provides the reference definition expanded to cover a
+ multi-singleton sample. Note that terms such as "singleton" and
+ "sample" are defined in Section 11 of [RFC2330].
+
+ For DNS Response Latency, the entities in [RFC1035] must be mapped
+ to [RFC2681]. The Local Host with its User Program and Resolver
+ take the Role of "Src", and the Foreign Name Server takes the Role
+ of "Dst".
+
+ Note that although the definition of round-trip delay between the
+ Source (Src) and the Destination (Dst) at T as provided in
+ Section 2.4 of [RFC2681] is directionally ambiguous in the text,
+ this metric tightens the definition further to recognize that the
+ host in the Src Role will send the first packet to the host in the
+ Dst Role and will ultimately receive the corresponding return
+ packet from the Dst (when neither is lost).
+
+ For Loss:
+
+ Morton, A., "Round-Trip Packet Loss Metrics", RFC 6673, DOI
+ 10.17487/RFC6673, August 2012, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/
+ rfc6673>. [RFC6673]
+
+ For DNS Response Loss, the entities in [RFC1035] must be mapped to
+ [RFC6673]. The Local Host with its User Program and Resolver take
+ the Role of "Src", and the Foreign Name Server takes the Role of
+ "Dst".
+
+ Both response time and Loss metrics employ a maximum waiting time
+ for received responses, so the count of lost packets to total
+ packets sent is the basis for the loss determination as per
+ Section 4.3 of [RFC6673].
+
+6.2.2. Fixed Parameters
+
+ Type-P as defined in Section 13 of [RFC2330]:
+ IPv4 header values:
+ DSCP: Set to 0
+ TTL: Set to 255
+ Protocol: Set to 17 (UDP)
+
+ IPv6 header values:
+ DSCP: Set to 0
+ Hop Count: Set to 255
+ Next Header: Set to 17 (UDP)
+ Flow Label: Set to 0
+ Extension Headers: None
+
+ UDP header values:
+ Source port: 53
+ Destination port: 53
+ Checksum: The checksum MUST be calculated and the non-zero
+ checksum included in the header
+
+ Payload:
+ The payload contains a DNS message as defined in [RFC1035] with
+ the following values:
+
+ The DNS header section contains:
+ Identification (see the Runtime column)
+ QR: Set to 0 (Query)
+ OPCODE: Set to 0 (standard query)
+ AA: Not set
+ TC: Not set
+ RD: Set to 1 (recursion desired)
+ RA: Not set
+ RCODE: Not set
+ QDCOUNT: Set to 1 (only one entry)
+ ANCOUNT: Not set
+ NSCOUNT: Not set
+ ARCOUNT: Not set
+
+ The Question section contains:
+ QNAME: The Fully Qualified Domain Name (FQDN) provided as
+ input for the test; see the Runtime column
+
+ QTYPE: The query type provided as input for the test; see
+ the Runtime column
+
+ QCLASS: Set to 1 for IN
+
+ The other sections do not contain any Resource Records
+ (RRs).
+
+ Other measurement Parameters:
+ Tmax: A loss threshold waiting time (and to help disambiguate
+ queries). The value is 5.0, expressed in units of seconds, as
+ a positive value of type decimal64 with fraction digits = 4
+ (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) and with a resolution of 0.0001
+ seconds (0.1 ms), with lossless conversion to/from the 32-bit
+ NTP timestamp as per Section 6 of [RFC5905].
+
+ Observation: Reply packets will contain a DNS Response and may
+ contain RRs.
+
+6.3. Method of Measurement
+
+ This category includes columns for references to relevant sections of
+ the RFC(s) and any supplemental information needed to ensure an
+ unambiguous method for implementations.
+
+6.3.1. Reference Methods
+
+ The methodology for this metric (equivalent to Type-P-Round-trip-
+ Delay-Poisson-Stream) is defined as in Section 2.6 of [RFC2681] (for
+ singletons) and Section 3.6 of [RFC2681] (for samples) using the
+ Type-P and Timeout defined in the Fixed Parameters column.
+
+ The reference method distinguishes between long-delayed packets and
+ lost packets by implementing a maximum waiting time for packet
+ arrival. Tmax is the waiting time used as the threshold to declare a
+ response packet lost. Lost packets SHALL be designated as having
+ undefined delay and counted for the RLDNS metric.
+
+ The calculations on the delay (RTT) SHALL be performed on the
+ conditional distribution, conditioned on successful packet arrival
+ within Tmax. Also, when all packet delays are stored, the process
+ that calculates the RTT value MUST enforce the Tmax threshold on
+ stored values before calculations. See Section 4.1 of [RFC3393] for
+ details on the conditional distribution to exclude undefined values
+ of delay, and see Section 5 of [RFC6703] for background on this
+ analysis choice.
+
+ The reference method requires some way to distinguish between
+ different packets in a stream to establish correspondence between
+ sending times and receiving times for each successfully arriving
+ reply.
+
+ DNS messages bearing queries provide for random ID Numbers in the
+ Identification header field, so more than one query may be launched
+ while a previous request is outstanding when the ID Number is used.
+ Therefore, the ID Number MUST be retained at the Src and included
+ with each response packet to disambiguate packet reordering if it
+ occurs.
+
+ If a DNS Response does not arrive within Tmax, the response time
+ RTDNS is undefined, and RLDNS = 1. The Message ID SHALL be used to
+ disambiguate the successive queries that are otherwise identical.
+
+ Since the ID Number field is only 16 bits in length, it places a
+ limit on the number of simultaneous outstanding DNS queries during a
+ stress test from a single Src address.
+
+ Refer to Section 4.4 of [RFC6673] for an expanded discussion of the
+ instruction to "send a Type-P packet back to the Src as quickly as
+ possible" in Section 2.6 of [RFC2681]. However, the DNS server is
+ expected to perform all required functions to prepare and send a
+ response, so the response time will include processing time and
+ network delay. Section 8 of [RFC6673] presents additional
+ requirements that SHALL be included in the Method of Measurement for
+ this metric.
+
+ In addition to operations described in [RFC2681], the Src MUST parse
+ the DNS headers of the reply and prepare the query response
+ information for subsequent reporting as a measured result, along with
+ the round-trip delay.
+
+6.3.2. Packet Stream Generation
+
+ This section provides details regarding packet traffic, which is used
+ as the basis for measurement. In IPPM Metrics, this is called the
+ "stream"; this stream can easily be described by providing the list
+ of stream Parameters.
+
+ Section 11.1.3 of [RFC2330] provides three methods to generate
+ Poisson sampling intervals. The reciprocal of lambda is the average
+ packet spacing; thus, the Runtime Parameter is
+ Reciprocal_lambda = 1/lambda, in seconds.
+
+ Method 3 SHALL be used. Where given a start time (Runtime
+ Parameter), the subsequent send times are all computed prior to
+ measurement by computing the pseudorandom distribution of inter-
+ packet send times (truncating the distribution as specified in the
+ Parameter Trunc), and the Src sends each packet at the computed
+ times.
+
+ Note that Trunc is the upper limit on inter-packet times in the
+ Poisson distribution. A random value greater than Trunc is set equal
+ to Trunc instead.
+
+6.3.3. Traffic Filtering (Observation) Details
+
+ N/A
+
+6.3.4. Sampling Distribution
+
+ N/A
+
+6.3.5. Runtime Parameters and Data Format
+
+ Runtime Parameters are input factors that must be determined,
+ configured into the measurement system, and reported with the results
+ for the context to be complete.
+
+ Src: The IP address of the host in the Src Role (format
+ ipv4-address-no-zone value for IPv4 or ipv6-address-no-zone value
+ for IPv6; see Section 4 of [RFC6991]).
+
+ Dst: The IP address of the host in the Dst Role (format
+ ipv4-address-no-zone value for IPv4 or ipv6-address-no-zone value
+ for IPv6; see Section 4 of [RFC6991]).
+
+ T0: A time, the start of a measurement interval (format "date-time"
+ as specified in Section 5.6 of [RFC3339]; see also "date-and-time"
+ in Section 3 of [RFC6991]). The UTC Time Zone is required by
+ Section 6.1 of [RFC2330]. When T0 is "all-zeros", a start time is
+ unspecified and Tf is to be interpreted as the duration of the
+ measurement interval. The start time is controlled through other
+ means.
+
+ Tf: A time, the end of a measurement interval (format "date-time" as
+ specified in Section 5.6 of [RFC3339]; see also "date-and-time" in
+ Section 3 of [RFC6991]). The UTC Time Zone is required by
+ Section 6.1 of [RFC2330]. When T0 is "all-zeros", an ending time
+ and date is ignored and Tf is interpreted as the duration of the
+ measurement interval.
+
+ Reciprocal_lambda: Average packet interval for Poisson streams,
+ expressed in units of seconds, as a positive value of type
+ decimal64 with fraction digits = 4 (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020])
+ with a resolution of 0.0001 seconds (0.1 ms), and with lossless
+ conversion to/from the 32-bit NTP timestamp as per Section 6 of
+ [RFC5905].
+
+ Trunc: Upper limit on Poisson distribution, expressed in units of
+ seconds, as a positive value of type decimal64 with fraction
+ digits = 4 (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) with a resolution of
+ 0.0001 seconds (0.1 ms), and with lossless conversion to/from the
+ 32-bit NTP timestamp as per Section 6 of [RFC5905] (values above
+ this limit will be clipped and set to the limit value).
+
+ ID: The 16-bit Identifier assigned by the program that generates the
+ query. The ID value must vary in successive queries (a list of
+ IDs is needed); see Section 4.1.1 of [RFC1035]. This Identifier
+ is copied into the corresponding reply and can be used by the
+ requester (Src) to match replies with any outstanding queries.
+
+ QNAME: The domain name of the query, formatted as specified in
+ Section 4 of [RFC6991].
+
+ QTYPE: The query type, which will correspond to the IP address
+ family of the query (decimal 1 for IPv4 or 28 for IPv6), formatted
+ as a uint16, as per Section 9.2 of [RFC6020].
+
+6.3.6. Roles
+
+ Src: Launches each packet and waits for return transmissions from
+ the Dst.
+
+ Dst: Waits for each packet from the Src and sends a return packet to
+ the Src.
+
+6.4. Output
+
+ This category specifies all details of the output of measurements
+ using the metric.
+
+6.4.1. Type
+
+ Raw: For each DNS query packet sent, sets of values as defined in the
+ next column, including the status of the response, only assigning
+ delay values to successful query-response pairs.
+
+6.4.2. Reference Definition
+
+ For all outputs:
+
+ T: The time the DNS query was sent during the measurement interval
+ (format "date-time" as specified in Section 5.6 of [RFC3339]; see
+ also "date-and-time" in Section 3 of [RFC6991]). The UTC Time
+ Zone is required by Section 6.1 of [RFC2330].
+
+ dT: The time value of the round-trip delay to receive the DNS
+ Response, expressed in units of seconds, as a positive value of
+ type decimal64 with fraction digits = 9 (see Section 9.3 of
+ [RFC6020]) with a resolution of 0.000000001 seconds (1.0 ns), and
+ with lossless conversion to/from the 64-bit NTP timestamp as per
+ Section 6 of [RFC5905]. This value is undefined when the response
+ packet is not received at the Src within a waiting time of
+ Tmax seconds.
+
+ RCODE: The value of the RCODE field in the DNS Response header,
+ expressed as a uint64 as specified in Section 9.2 of [RFC6020].
+ Non-zero values convey errors in the response, and such replies
+ must be analyzed separately from successful requests.
+
+ Logical: The numeric value of the result is expressed as a Logical
+ value, where 1 = Lost and 0 = Received, as a positive value of
+ type uint8 (represents integer values between 0 and 255,
+ inclusively (see Section 9.2 of [RFC6020]). Note that for queries
+ with outcome 1 = Lost, dT and RCODE will be set to the maximum for
+ decimal64 and uint64, respectively.
+
+6.4.3. Metric Units
+
+ RTDNS: Round-trip delay, dT, is expressed in seconds.
+
+ RLDNS: The Logical value, where 1 = Lost and 0 = Received.
+
+6.4.4. Calibration
+
+ Section 3.7.3 of [RFC7679] provides a means to quantify the
+ systematic and random errors of a time measurement. Calibration in-
+ situ could be enabled with an internal loopback at the Source host
+ that includes as much of the measurement system as possible, performs
+ address and payload manipulation as needed, and provides some form of
+ isolation (e.g., deterministic delay) to avoid send-receive interface
+ contention. Some portion of the random and systematic error can be
+ characterized in this way.
+
+ When a measurement controller requests a calibration measurement, the
+ loopback is applied and the result is output in the same format as a
+ normal measurement, with an additional indication that it is a
+ calibration result.
+
+ Both internal loopback calibration and clock synchronization can be
+ used to estimate the available accuracy of the Output Metric Units.
+ For example, repeated loopback delay measurements will reveal the
+ portion of the output result resolution that is the result of system
+ noise and is thus inaccurate.
+
+6.5. Administrative Items
+
+6.5.1. Status
+
+ Current
+
+6.5.2. Requester
+
+ RFC 8912
+
+6.5.3. Revision
+
+ 1.0
+
+6.5.4. Revision Date
+
+ 2021-11-17
+
+6.6. Comments and Remarks
+
+ None
+
+7. UDP Poisson One-Way Delay and Loss Registry Entries
+
+ This section specifies five initial Registry Entries for UDP Poisson
+ One-Way Delay and one entry for UDP Poisson One-Way Loss.
+
+ All column entries besides the ID, Name, Description, and Output
+ Reference Method categories are the same; thus, this section defines
+ six closely related Registry Entries. As a result, IANA has assigned
+ corresponding URLs to each of the Named Metrics.
+
+7.1. Summary
+
+ This category includes multiple indexes to the Registry Entries: the
+ element ID and Metric Name.
+
+7.1.1. ID (Identifier)
+
+ IANA has allocated the numeric Identifiers 6-11 for the six Named
+ Metric Entries in Section 7. See Section 7.1.2 for mapping to Names.
+
+7.1.2. Name
+
+ 6:
+ OWDelay_Active_IP-UDP-Poisson-
+ Payload250B_RFC8912sec7_Seconds_95Percentile
+
+ 7: OWDelay_Active_IP-UDP-Poisson-
+ Payload250B_RFC8912sec7_Seconds_Mean
+
+ 8: OWDelay_Active_IP-UDP-Poisson-
+ Payload250B_RFC8912sec7_Seconds_Min
+
+ 9: OWDelay_Active_IP-UDP-Poisson-
+ Payload250B_RFC8912sec7_Seconds_Max
+
+ 10:
+ OWDelay_Active_IP-UDP-Poisson-
+ Payload250B_RFC8912sec7_Seconds_StdDev
+
+ 11:
+ OWLoss_Active_IP-UDP-Poisson-
+ Payload250B_RFC8912sec7_Percent_LossRatio
+
+7.1.3. URI
+
+ URL: https://www.iana.org/assignments/performance-metrics/
+ OWDelay_Active_IP-UDP-Poisson-
+ Payload250B_RFC8912sec7_Seconds_95Percentile
+
+ URL: https://www.iana.org/assignments/performance-metrics/
+ OWDelay_Active_IP-UDP-Poisson-Payload250B_RFC8912sec7_Seconds_Mean
+
+ URL: https://www.iana.org/assignments/performance-metrics/
+ OWDelay_Active_IP-UDP-Poisson-Payload250B_RFC8912sec7_Seconds_Min
+
+ URL: https://www.iana.org/assignments/performance-metrics/
+ OWDelay_Active_IP-UDP-Poisson-Payload250B_RFC8912sec7_Seconds_Max
+
+ URL: https://www.iana.org/assignments/performance-metrics/
+ OWDelay_Active_IP-UDP-Poisson-Payload250B_RFC8912sec7_Seconds_StdDev
+
+ URL: https://www.iana.org/assignments/performance-metrics/
+ OWLoss_Active_IP-UDP-Poisson-
+ Payload250B_RFC8912sec7_Percent_LossRatio
+
+7.1.4. Description
+
+ OWDelay: This metric assesses the delay of a stream of packets
+ exchanged between two hosts (or measurement points) and reports
+ the <statistic> of one-way delay for all successfully exchanged
+ packets based on their conditional delay distribution.
+
+ where <statistic> is one of:
+
+ * 95Percentile
+
+ * Mean
+
+ * Min
+
+ * Max
+
+ * StdDev
+
+ OWLoss: This metric assesses the loss ratio of a stream of packets
+ exchanged between two hosts (which are the two measurement
+ points). The output is the one-way loss ratio for all transmitted
+ packets expressed as a percentage.
+
+7.1.5. Change Controller
+
+ IETF
+
+7.1.6. Version (of Registry Format)
+
+ 1.0
+
+7.2. Metric Definition
+
+ This category includes columns to prompt the entry of all necessary
+ details related to the metric definition, including the RFC reference
+ and values of input factors, called "Fixed Parameters".
+
+7.2.1. Reference Definition
+
+ For delay:
+
+ Almes, G., Kalidindi, S., Zekauskas, M., and A. Morton, Ed., "A
+ One-Way Delay Metric for IP Performance Metrics (IPPM)", STD 81,
+ RFC 7679, DOI 10.17487/RFC7679, January 2016, <https://www.rfc-
+ editor.org/info/rfc7679>. [RFC7679]
+
+ Morton, A. and E. Stephan, "Spatial Composition of Metrics", RFC
+ 6049, DOI 10.17487/RFC6049, January 2011, <https://www.rfc-
+ editor.org/info/rfc6049>. [RFC6049]
+
+ Section 3.4 of [RFC7679] provides the reference definition of the
+ singleton (single value) one-way delay metric. Section 4.4 of
+ [RFC7679] provides the reference definition expanded to cover a
+ multi-value sample. Note that terms such as "singleton" and
+ "sample" are defined in Section 11 of [RFC2330].
+
+ Only successful packet transfers with finite delay are included in
+ the sample, as prescribed in Section 4.1.2 of [RFC6049].
+
+ For loss:
+
+ Almes, G., Kalidindi, S., Zekauskas, M., and A. Morton, Ed., "A
+ One-Way Loss Metric for IP Performance Metrics (IPPM)", STD 82,
+ RFC 7680, DOI 10.17487/RFC7680, January 2016, <https://www.rfc-
+ editor.org/info/rfc7680>. [RFC7680]
+
+ Section 2.4 of [RFC7680] provides the reference definition of the
+ singleton (single value) one-way Loss metric. Section 3.4 of
+ [RFC7680] provides the reference definition expanded to cover a
+ multi-singleton sample. Note that terms such as "singleton" and
+ "sample" are defined in Section 11 of [RFC2330].
+
+7.2.2. Fixed Parameters
+
+ Type-P:
+ IPv4 header values:
+ DSCP: Set to 0
+ TTL: Set to 255
+ Protocol: Set to 17 (UDP)
+
+ IPv6 header values:
+ DSCP: Set to 0
+ Hop Count: Set to 255
+ Next Header: Set to 17 (UDP)
+ Flow Label: Set to 0
+ Extension Headers: None
+
+ UDP header values:
+ Checksum: The checksum MUST be calculated and the non-zero
+ checksum included in the header
+
+ UDP Payload: TWAMP-Test packet formats (Section 4.1.2 of
+ [RFC5357])
+
+ Security features in use influence the number of Padding
+ octets
+
+ 250 octets total, including the TWAMP format type, which
+ MUST be reported
+
+ Other measurement Parameters:
+ Tmax: A loss threshold waiting time with value 3.0, expressed in
+ units of seconds, as a positive value of type decimal64 with
+ fraction digits = 4 (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) and with a
+ resolution of 0.0001 seconds (0.1 ms), with lossless conversion
+ to/from the 32-bit NTP timestamp as per Section 6 of [RFC5905].
+
+ See the Packet Stream Generation section for two additional Fixed
+ Parameters.
+
+7.3. Method of Measurement
+
+ This category includes columns for references to relevant sections of
+ the RFC(s) and any supplemental information needed to ensure an
+ unambiguous method for implementations.
+
+7.3.1. Reference Methods
+
+ The methodology for this metric (equivalent to Type-P-One-way-Delay-
+ Poisson-Stream) is defined as in Section 3.6 of [RFC7679] (for
+ singletons) and Section 4.6 of [RFC7679] (for samples) using the
+ Type-P and Tmax defined in the Fixed Parameters column.
+
+ The reference method distinguishes between long-delayed packets and
+ lost packets by implementing a maximum waiting time for packet
+ arrival. Tmax is the waiting time used as the threshold to declare a
+ packet lost. Lost packets SHALL be designated as having undefined
+ delay and counted for the OWLoss metric.
+
+ The calculations on the one-way delay SHALL be performed on the
+ conditional distribution, conditioned on successful packet arrival
+ within Tmax. Also, when all packet delays are stored, the process
+ that calculates the one-way delay value MUST enforce the Tmax
+ threshold on stored values before calculations. See Section 4.1 of
+ [RFC3393] for details on the conditional distribution to exclude
+ undefined values of delay, and see Section 5 of [RFC6703] for
+ background on this analysis choice.
+
+ The reference method requires some way to distinguish between
+ different packets in a stream to establish correspondence between
+ sending times and receiving times for each successfully arriving
+ packet.
+
+ Since a standard measurement protocol is employed [RFC5357], the
+ measurement process will determine the sequence numbers or timestamps
+ applied to test packets after the Fixed and Runtime Parameters are
+ passed to that process. The measurement protocol dictates the format
+ of sequence numbers and timestamps conveyed in the TWAMP-Test packet
+ payload.
+
+7.3.2. Packet Stream Generation
+
+ This section provides details regarding packet traffic, which is used
+ as the basis for measurement. In IPPM Metrics, this is called the
+ "stream"; this stream can easily be described by providing the list
+ of stream Parameters.
+
+ Section 11.1.3 of [RFC2330] provides three methods to generate
+ Poisson sampling intervals. The reciprocal of lambda is the average
+ packet spacing; thus, the Runtime Parameter is
+ Reciprocal_lambda = 1/lambda, in seconds.
+
+ Method 3 SHALL be used. Where given a start time (Runtime
+ Parameter), the subsequent send times are all computed prior to
+ measurement by computing the pseudorandom distribution of inter-
+ packet send times (truncating the distribution as specified in the
+ Parameter Trunc), and the Src sends each packet at the computed
+ times.
+
+ Note that Trunc is the upper limit on inter-packet times in the
+ Poisson distribution. A random value greater than Trunc is set equal
+ to Trunc instead.
+
+ Reciprocal_lambda: Average packet interval for Poisson streams,
+ expressed in units of seconds, as a positive value of type
+ decimal64 with fraction digits = 4 (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020])
+ with a resolution of 0.0001 seconds (0.1 ms), and with lossless
+ conversion to/from the 32-bit NTP timestamp as per Section 6 of
+ [RFC5905]. Reciprocal_lambda = 1 second.
+
+ Trunc: Upper limit on Poisson distribution, expressed in units of
+ seconds, as a positive value of type decimal64 with fraction
+ digits = 4 (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) with a resolution of
+ 0.0001 seconds (0.1 ms), and with lossless conversion to/from the
+ 32-bit NTP timestamp as per Section 6 of [RFC5905] (values above
+ this limit will be clipped and set to the limit value).
+ Trunc = 30.0000 seconds.
+
+7.3.3. Traffic Filtering (Observation) Details
+
+ N/A
+
+7.3.4. Sampling Distribution
+
+ N/A
+
+7.3.5. Runtime Parameters and Data Format
+
+ Runtime Parameters are input factors that must be determined,
+ configured into the measurement system, and reported with the results
+ for the context to be complete.
+
+ Src: The IP address of the host in the Src Role (format
+ ipv4-address-no-zone value for IPv4 or ipv6-address-no-zone value
+ for IPv6; see Section 4 of [RFC6991]).
+
+ Dst: The IP address of the host in the Dst Role (format
+ ipv4-address-no-zone value for IPv4 or ipv6-address-no-zone value
+ for IPv6; see Section 4 of [RFC6991]).
+
+ T0: A time, the start of a measurement interval (format "date-time"
+ as specified in Section 5.6 of [RFC3339]; see also "date-and-time"
+ in Section 3 of [RFC6991]). The UTC Time Zone is required by
+ Section 6.1 of [RFC2330]. When T0 is "all-zeros", a start time is
+ unspecified and Tf is to be interpreted as the duration of the
+ measurement interval. The start time is controlled through other
+ means.
+
+ Tf: A time, the end of a measurement interval (format "date-time" as
+ specified in Section 5.6 of [RFC3339]; see also "date-and-time" in
+ Section 3 of [RFC6991]). The UTC Time Zone is required by
+ Section 6.1 of [RFC2330]. When T0 is "all-zeros", an ending time
+ and date is ignored and Tf is interpreted as the duration of the
+ measurement interval.
+
+7.3.6. Roles
+
+ Src: Launches each packet and waits for return transmissions from
+ the Dst. An example is the TWAMP Session-Sender.
+
+ Dst: Waits for each packet from the Src and sends a return packet to
+ the Src. An example is the TWAMP Session-Reflector.
+
+7.4. Output
+
+ This category specifies all details of the output of measurements
+ using the metric.
+
+7.4.1. Type
+
+ Types are discussed in the subsections below.
+
+7.4.2. Reference Definition
+
+ For all output types:
+
+ T0: The start of a measurement interval (format "date-time" as
+ specified in Section 5.6 of [RFC3339]; see also "date-and-time" in
+ Section 3 of [RFC6991]). The UTC Time Zone is required by
+ Section 6.1 of [RFC2330].
+
+ Tf: The end of a measurement interval (format "date-time" as
+ specified in Section 5.6 of [RFC3339]; see also "date-and-time" in
+ Section 3 of [RFC6991]). The UTC Time Zone is required by
+ Section 6.1 of [RFC2330].
+
+ For LossRatio, the count of lost packets to total packets sent is the
+ basis for the loss ratio calculation as per Section 4.1 of [RFC7680].
+
+ For each <statistic> or Percent_LossRatio, one of the following
+ subsections applies.
+
+7.4.2.1. Percentile95
+
+ The 95th percentile SHALL be calculated using the conditional
+ distribution of all packets with a finite value of one-way delay
+ (undefined delays are excluded) -- a single value, as follows:
+
+ See Section 4.1 of [RFC3393] for details on the conditional
+ distribution to exclude undefined values of delay, and see Section 5
+ of [RFC6703] for background on this analysis choice.
+
+ See Section 4.3 of [RFC3393] for details on the percentile statistic
+ (where round-trip delay should be substituted for "ipdv").
+
+ The percentile = 95, meaning that the reported delay, "95Percentile",
+ is the smallest value of one-way delay for which the Empirical
+ Distribution Function, EDF(95Percentile), is greater than or equal to
+ 95% of the singleton one-way delay values in the conditional
+ distribution. See Section 11.3 of [RFC2330] for the definition of
+ the percentile statistic using the EDF.
+
+ 95Percentile: The time value of the result is expressed in units of
+ seconds, as a positive value of type decimal64 with fraction
+ digits = 9 (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) with a resolution of
+ 0.000000001 seconds (1.0 ns), and with lossless conversion to/from
+ the 64-bit NTP timestamp as per Section 6 of [RFC5905].
+
+7.4.2.2. Mean
+
+ The mean SHALL be calculated using the conditional distribution of
+ all packets with a finite value of one-way delay (undefined delays
+ are excluded) -- a single value, as follows:
+
+ See Section 4.1 of [RFC3393] for details on the conditional
+ distribution to exclude undefined values of delay, and see Section 5
+ of [RFC6703] for background on this analysis choice.
+
+ See Section 4.2.2 of [RFC6049] for details on calculating this
+ statistic; see also Section 4.2.3 of [RFC6049].
+
+ Mean: The time value of the result is expressed in units of seconds,
+ as a positive value of type decimal64 with fraction digits = 9
+ (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) with a resolution of
+ 0.000000001 seconds (1.0 ns), and with lossless conversion to/from
+ the 64-bit NTP timestamp as per Section 6 of [RFC5905].
+
+7.4.2.3. Min
+
+ The minimum SHALL be calculated using the conditional distribution of
+ all packets with a finite value of one-way delay (undefined delays
+ are excluded) -- a single value, as follows:
+
+ See Section 4.1 of [RFC3393] for details on the conditional
+ distribution to exclude undefined values of delay, and see Section 5
+ of [RFC6703] for background on this analysis choice.
+
+ See Section 4.3.2 of [RFC6049] for details on calculating this
+ statistic; see also Section 4.3.3 of [RFC6049].
+
+ Min: The time value of the result is expressed in units of seconds,
+ as a positive value of type decimal64 with fraction digits = 9
+ (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) with a resolution of
+ 0.000000001 seconds (1.0 ns), and with lossless conversion to/from
+ the 64-bit NTP timestamp as per Section 6 of [RFC5905].
+
+7.4.2.4. Max
+
+ The maximum SHALL be calculated using the conditional distribution of
+ all packets with a finite value of one-way delay (undefined delays
+ are excluded) -- a single value, as follows:
+
+ See Section 4.1 of [RFC3393] for details on the conditional
+ distribution to exclude undefined values of delay, and see Section 5
+ of [RFC6703] for background on this analysis choice.
+
+ See Section 4.3.2 of [RFC6049] for a closely related method for
+ calculating this statistic; see also Section 4.3.3 of [RFC6049]. The
+ formula is as follows:
+
+ Max = (FiniteDelay[j])
+
+ such that for some index, j, where 1 <= j <= N
+ FiniteDelay[j] >= FiniteDelay[n] for all n
+
+ Max: The time value of the result is expressed in units of seconds,
+ as a positive value of type decimal64 with fraction digits = 9
+ (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) with a resolution of
+ 0.000000001 seconds (1.0 ns), and with lossless conversion to/from
+ the 64-bit NTP timestamp as per Section 6 of [RFC5905].
+
+7.4.2.5. Std_Dev
+
+ The standard deviation (Std_Dev) SHALL be calculated using the
+ conditional distribution of all packets with a finite value of
+ one-way delay (undefined delays are excluded) -- a single value, as
+ follows:
+
+ See Section 4.1 of [RFC3393] for details on the conditional
+ distribution to exclude undefined values of delay, and see Section 5
+ of [RFC6703] for background on this analysis choice.
+
+ See Section 6.1.4 of [RFC6049] for a closely related method for
+ calculating this statistic. The formula is the classic calculation
+ for the standard deviation of a population.
+
+ Define Population Std_Dev_Delay as follows:
+
+ _ _
+ | N |
+ | --- |
+ | 1 \ 2 |
+ Std_Dev = SQRT | ------- > (Delay[n] - MeanDelay) |
+ | (N) / |
+ | --- |
+ | n = 1 |
+ |_ _|
+
+ where all packets n = 1 through N have a value for Delay[n],
+ MeanDelay is calculated per Section 7.4.2.2, and SQRT[] is the Square
+ Root function:
+
+ Std_Dev: The time value of the result is expressed in units of
+ seconds, as a positive value of type decimal64 with fraction
+ digits = 9 (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) with a resolution of
+ 0.000000001 seconds (1.0 ns), and with lossless conversion to/from
+ the 64-bit NTP timestamp as per Section 6 of [RFC5905].
+
+7.4.2.6. Percent_LossRatio
+
+ Percent_LossRatio: The numeric value of the result is expressed in
+ units of lost packets to total packets times 100%, as a positive
+ value of type decimal64 with fraction digits = 9 (see Section 9.3
+ of [RFC6020]) with a resolution of 0.0000000001.
+
+7.4.3. Metric Units
+
+ The <statistic> of one-way delay is expressed in seconds, where
+ <statistic> is one of:
+
+ * 95Percentile
+
+ * Mean
+
+ * Min
+
+ * Max
+
+ * StdDev
+
+ The one-way loss ratio is expressed as a percentage of lost packets
+ to total packets sent.
+
+7.4.4. Calibration
+
+ Section 3.7.3 of [RFC7679] provides a means to quantify the
+ systematic and random errors of a time measurement. Calibration in-
+ situ could be enabled with an internal loopback that includes as much
+ of the measurement system as possible, performs address manipulation
+ as needed, and provides some form of isolation (e.g., deterministic
+ delay) to avoid send-receive interface contention. Some portion of
+ the random and systematic error can be characterized in this way.
+
+ For one-way delay measurements, the error calibration must include an
+ assessment of the internal clock synchronization with its external
+ reference (this internal clock is supplying timestamps for
+ measurement). In practice, the time offsets [RFC5905] of clocks at
+ both the Source and Destination are needed to estimate the systematic
+ error due to imperfect clock synchronization (the time offsets
+ [RFC5905] are smoothed; thus, the random variation is not usually
+ represented in the results).
+
+ time_offset: The time value of the result is expressed in units of
+ seconds, as a signed value of type decimal64 with fraction
+ digits = 9 (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) with a resolution of
+ 0.000000001 seconds (1.0 ns), and with lossless conversion to/from
+ the 64-bit NTP timestamp as per Section 6 of [RFC5905].
+
+ When a measurement controller requests a calibration measurement, the
+ loopback is applied and the result is output in the same format as a
+ normal measurement, with an additional indication that it is a
+ calibration result. In any measurement, the measurement function
+ SHOULD report its current estimate of the time offset [RFC5905] as an
+ indicator of the degree of synchronization.
+
+ Both internal loopback calibration and clock synchronization can be
+ used to estimate the available accuracy of the Output Metric Units.
+ For example, repeated loopback delay measurements will reveal the
+ portion of the output result resolution that is the result of system
+ noise and is thus inaccurate.
+
+7.5. Administrative Items
+
+7.5.1. Status
+
+ Current
+
+7.5.2. Requester
+
+ RFC 8912
+
+7.5.3. Revision
+
+ 1.0
+
+7.5.4. Revision Date
+
+ 2021-11-17
+
+7.6. Comments and Remarks
+
+ None
+
+8. UDP Periodic One-Way Delay and Loss Registry Entries
+
+ This section specifies five initial Registry Entries for UDP Periodic
+ One-Way Delay and one entry for UDP Periodic One-Way Loss.
+
+ All column entries besides the ID, Name, Description, and Output
+ Reference Method categories are the same; thus, this section defines
+ six closely related Registry Entries. As a result, IANA has assigned
+ corresponding URLs to each of the six Named Metrics.
+
+8.1. Summary
+
+ This category includes multiple indexes to the Registry Entries: the
+ element ID and Metric Name.
+
+8.1.1. ID (Identifier)
+
+ IANA has allocated the numeric Identifiers 12-17 for the six Named
+ Metric Entries in Section 8. See Section 8.1.2 for mapping to Names.
+
+8.1.2. Name
+
+ 12:
+ OWDelay_Active_IP-UDP-Periodic20m-
+ Payload142B_RFC8912sec8_Seconds_95Percentile
+
+ 13:
+ OWDelay_Active_IP-UDP-Periodic20m-
+ Payload142B_RFC8912sec8_Seconds_Mean
+
+ 14:
+ OWDelay_Active_IP-UDP-Periodic20m-
+ Payload142B_RFC8912sec8_Seconds_Min
+
+ 15:
+ OWDelay_Active_IP-UDP-Periodic20m-
+ Payload142B_RFC8912sec8_Seconds_Max
+
+ 16:
+ OWDelay_Active_IP-UDP-Periodic20m-
+ Payload142B_RFC8912sec8_Seconds_StdDev
+
+ 17:
+ OWLoss_Active_IP-UDP-Periodic20m-
+ Payload142B_RFC8912sec8_Percent_LossRatio
+
+8.1.3. URI
+
+ URL: https://www.iana.org/assignments/performance-metrics/
+ OWDelay_Active_IP-UDP-Periodic20m-
+ Payload142B_RFC8912sec8_Seconds_95Percentile
+
+ URL: https://www.iana.org/assignments/performance-metrics/
+ OWDelay_Active_IP-UDP-Periodic20m-
+ Payload142B_RFC8912sec8_Seconds_Mean
+
+ URL: https://www.iana.org/assignments/performance-metrics/
+ OWDelay_Active_IP-UDP-Periodic20m-Payload142B_RFC8912sec8_Seconds_Min
+
+ URL: https://www.iana.org/assignments/performance-metrics/
+ OWDelay_Active_IP-UDP-Periodic20m-Payload142B_RFC8912sec8_Seconds_Max
+
+ URL: https://www.iana.org/assignments/performance-metrics/
+ OWDelay_Active_IP-UDP-Periodic20m-
+ Payload142B_RFC8912sec8_Seconds_StdDev
+
+ URL: https://www.iana.org/assignments/performance-metrics/
+ OWLoss_Active_IP-UDP-Periodic20m-
+ Payload142B_RFC8912sec8_Percent_LossRatio
+
+8.1.4. Description
+
+ OWDelay: This metric assesses the delay of a stream of packets
+ exchanged between two hosts (or measurement points) and reports
+ the <statistic> of one-way delay for all successfully exchanged
+ packets based on their conditional delay distribution.
+
+ where <statistic> is one of:
+
+ * 95Percentile
+
+ * Mean
+
+ * Min
+
+ * Max
+
+ * StdDev
+
+ OWLoss: This metric assesses the loss ratio of a stream of packets
+ exchanged between two hosts (which are the two measurement
+ points). The output is the one-way loss ratio for all transmitted
+ packets expressed as a percentage.
+
+8.1.5. Change Controller
+
+ IETF
+
+8.1.6. Version (of Registry Format)
+
+ 1.0
+
+8.2. Metric Definition
+
+ This category includes columns to prompt the entry of all necessary
+ details related to the metric definition, including the RFC reference
+ and values of input factors, called "Fixed Parameters".
+
+8.2.1. Reference Definition
+
+ For delay:
+
+ Almes, G., Kalidindi, S., Zekauskas, M., and A. Morton, Ed., "A
+ One-Way Delay Metric for IP Performance Metrics (IPPM)", STD 81,
+ RFC 7679, DOI 10.17487/RFC7679, January 2016, <https://www.rfc-
+ editor.org/info/rfc7679>. [RFC7679]
+
+ Morton, A. and E. Stephan, "Spatial Composition of Metrics", RFC
+ 6049, DOI 10.17487/RFC6049, January 2011, <https://www.rfc-
+ editor.org/info/rfc6049>. [RFC6049]
+
+ Section 3.4 of [RFC7679] provides the reference definition of the
+ singleton (single value) one-way delay metric. Section 4.4 of
+ [RFC7679] provides the reference definition expanded to cover a
+ multi-value sample. Note that terms such as "singleton" and
+ "sample" are defined in Section 11 of [RFC2330].
+
+ Only successful packet transfers with finite delay are included in
+ the sample, as prescribed in Section 4.1.2 of [RFC6049].
+
+ For loss:
+
+ Almes, G., Kalidindi, S., Zekauskas, M., and A. Morton, Ed., "A
+ One-Way Loss Metric for IP Performance Metrics (IPPM)", STD 82,
+ RFC 7680, DOI 10.17487/RFC7680, January 2016, <https://www.rfc-
+ editor.org/info/rfc7680>. [RFC7680]
+
+ Section 2.4 of [RFC7680] provides the reference definition of the
+ singleton (single value) one-way Loss metric. Section 3.4 of
+ [RFC7680] provides the reference definition expanded to cover a
+ multi-singleton sample. Note that terms such as "singleton" and
+ "sample" are defined in Section 11 of [RFC2330].
+
+8.2.2. Fixed Parameters
+
+ Type-P:
+ IPv4 header values:
+ DSCP: Set to 0
+ TTL: Set to 255
+ Protocol: Set to 17 (UDP)
+
+ IPv6 header values:
+ DSCP: Set to 0
+ Hop Count: Set to 255
+ Next Header: Set to 17 (UDP)
+ Flow Label: Set to 0
+ Extension Headers: None
+
+ UDP header values:
+ Checksum: The checksum MUST be calculated and the non-zero
+ checksum included in the header
+
+ UDP Payload: TWAMP-Test packet formats (Section 4.1.2 of
+ [RFC5357])
+
+ Security features in use influence the number of Padding
+ octets
+
+ 142 octets total, including the TWAMP format (and format
+ type MUST be reported, if used)
+
+ Other measurement Parameters:
+ Tmax: A loss threshold waiting time with value 3.0, expressed in
+ units of seconds, as a positive value of type decimal64 with
+ fraction digits = 4 (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) and with a
+ resolution of 0.0001 seconds (0.1 ms), with lossless conversion
+ to/from the 32-bit NTP timestamp as per Section 6 of [RFC5905].
+
+ See the Packet Stream Generation section for three additional Fixed
+ Parameters.
+
+8.3. Method of Measurement
+
+ This category includes columns for references to relevant sections of
+ the RFC(s) and any supplemental information needed to ensure an
+ unambiguous method for implementations.
+
+8.3.1. Reference Methods
+
+ The methodology for this metric (equivalent to Type-P-One-way-Delay-
+ Poisson-Stream) is defined as in Section 3.6 of [RFC7679] (for
+ singletons) and Section 4.6 of [RFC7679] (for samples) using the
+ Type-P and Tmax defined in the Fixed Parameters column. However, a
+ Periodic stream is used, as defined in [RFC3432].
+
+ The reference method distinguishes between long-delayed packets and
+ lost packets by implementing a maximum waiting time for packet
+ arrival. Tmax is the waiting time used as the threshold to declare a
+ packet lost. Lost packets SHALL be designated as having undefined
+ delay and counted for the OWLoss metric.
+
+ The calculations on the one-way delay SHALL be performed on the
+ conditional distribution, conditioned on successful packet arrival
+ within Tmax. Also, when all packet delays are stored, the process
+ that calculates the one-way delay value MUST enforce the Tmax
+ threshold on stored values before calculations. See Section 4.1 of
+ [RFC3393] for details on the conditional distribution to exclude
+ undefined values of delay, and see Section 5 of [RFC6703] for
+ background on this analysis choice.
+
+ The reference method requires some way to distinguish between
+ different packets in a stream to establish correspondence between
+ sending times and receiving times for each successfully arriving
+ packet.
+
+ Since a standard measurement protocol is employed [RFC5357], the
+ measurement process will determine the sequence numbers or timestamps
+ applied to test packets after the Fixed and Runtime Parameters are
+ passed to that process. The measurement protocol dictates the format
+ of sequence numbers and timestamps conveyed in the TWAMP-Test packet
+ payload.
+
+8.3.2. Packet Stream Generation
+
+ This section provides details regarding packet traffic, which is used
+ as the basis for measurement. In IPPM Metrics, this is called the
+ "stream"; this stream can easily be described by providing the list
+ of stream Parameters.
+
+ Section 3 of [RFC3432] prescribes the method for generating Periodic
+ streams using associated Parameters.
+
+ incT: The nominal duration of the inter-packet interval, first bit
+ to first bit, with value 0.0200, expressed in units of seconds, as
+ a positive value of type decimal64 with fraction digits = 4 (see
+ Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) and with a resolution of 0.0001 seconds
+ (0.1 ms), with lossless conversion to/from the 32-bit NTP
+ timestamp as per Section 6 of [RFC5905].
+
+ dT: The duration of the interval for allowed sample start times,
+ with value 1.0000, expressed in units of seconds, as a positive
+ value of type decimal64 with fraction digits = 4 (see Section 9.3
+ of [RFC6020]) and with a resolution of 0.0001 seconds (0.1 ms),
+ with lossless conversion to/from the 32-bit NTP timestamp as per
+ Section 6 of [RFC5905].
+
+ T0: The actual start time of the periodic stream, determined from T0
+ and dT.
+
+ Note: An initiation process with a number of control exchanges
+ resulting in unpredictable start times (within a time interval)
+ may be sufficient to avoid synchronization of periodic streams and
+ is a valid replacement for selecting a start time at random from a
+ fixed interval.
+
+ These stream Parameters will be specified as Runtime Parameters.
+
+8.3.3. Traffic Filtering (Observation) Details
+
+ N/A
+
+8.3.4. Sampling Distribution
+
+ N/A
+
+8.3.5. Runtime Parameters and Data Format
+
+ Runtime Parameters are input factors that must be determined,
+ configured into the measurement system, and reported with the results
+ for the context to be complete.
+
+ Src: The IP address of the host in the Src Role (format
+ ipv4-address-no-zone value for IPv4 or ipv6-address-no-zone value
+ for IPv6; see Section 4 of [RFC6991]).
+
+ Dst: The IP address of the host in the Dst Role (format
+ ipv4-address-no-zone value for IPv4 or ipv6-address-no-zone value
+ for IPv6; see Section 4 of [RFC6991]).
+
+ T0: A time, the start of a measurement interval (format "date-time"
+ as specified in Section 5.6 of [RFC3339]; see also "date-and-time"
+ in Section 3 of [RFC6991]). The UTC Time Zone is required by
+ Section 6.1 of [RFC2330]. When T0 is "all-zeros", a start time is
+ unspecified and Tf is to be interpreted as the duration of the
+ measurement interval. The start time is controlled through other
+ means.
+
+ Tf: A time, the end of a measurement interval (format "date-time" as
+ specified in Section 5.6 of [RFC3339]; see also "date-and-time" in
+ Section 3 of [RFC6991]). The UTC Time Zone is required by
+ Section 6.1 of [RFC2330]. When T0 is "all-zeros", an ending time
+ and date is ignored and Tf is interpreted as the duration of the
+ measurement interval.
+
+8.3.6. Roles
+
+ Src: Launches each packet and waits for return transmissions from
+ the Dst. An example is the TWAMP Session-Sender.
+
+ Dst: Waits for each packet from the Src and sends a return packet to
+ the Src. An example is the TWAMP Session-Reflector.
+
+8.4. Output
+
+ This category specifies all details of the output of measurements
+ using the metric.
+
+8.4.1. Type
+
+ Latency and Loss Types are discussed in the subsections below.
+
+8.4.2. Reference Definition
+
+ For all output types:
+
+ T0: The start of a measurement interval (format "date-time" as
+ specified in Section 5.6 of [RFC3339]; see also "date-and-time" in
+ Section 3 of [RFC6991]). The UTC Time Zone is required by
+ Section 6.1 of [RFC2330].
+
+ Tf: The end of a measurement interval (format "date-time" as
+ specified in Section 5.6 of [RFC3339]; see also "date-and-time" in
+ Section 3 of [RFC6991]). The UTC Time Zone is required by
+ Section 6.1 of [RFC2330].
+
+ For LossRatio, the count of lost packets to total packets sent is the
+ basis for the loss ratio calculation as per Section 4.1 of [RFC7680].
+
+ For each <statistic> or Percent_LossRatio, one of the following
+ subsections applies.
+
+8.4.2.1. Percentile95
+
+ The 95th percentile SHALL be calculated using the conditional
+ distribution of all packets with a finite value of one-way delay
+ (undefined delays are excluded) -- a single value, as follows:
+
+ See Section 4.1 of [RFC3393] for details on the conditional
+ distribution to exclude undefined values of delay, and see Section 5
+ of [RFC6703] for background on this analysis choice.
+
+ See Section 4.3 of [RFC3393] for details on the percentile statistic
+ (where round-trip delay should be substituted for "ipdv").
+
+ The percentile = 95, meaning that the reported delay, "95Percentile",
+ is the smallest value of one-way delay for which the Empirical
+ Distribution Function, EDF(95Percentile), is greater than or equal to
+ 95% of the singleton one-way delay values in the conditional
+ distribution. See Section 11.3 of [RFC2330] for the definition of
+ the percentile statistic using the EDF.
+
+ 95Percentile: The time value of the result is expressed in units of
+ seconds, as a positive value of type decimal64 with fraction
+ digits = 9 (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) with a resolution of
+ 0.000000001 seconds (1.0 ns), and with lossless conversion to/from
+ the 64-bit NTP timestamp as per Section 6 of [RFC5905].
+
+8.4.2.2. Mean
+
+ The mean SHALL be calculated using the conditional distribution of
+ all packets with a finite value of one-way delay (undefined delays
+ are excluded) -- a single value, as follows:
+
+ See Section 4.1 of [RFC3393] for details on the conditional
+ distribution to exclude undefined values of delay, and see Section 5
+ of [RFC6703] for background on this analysis choice.
+
+ See Section 4.2.2 of [RFC6049] for details on calculating this
+ statistic; see also Section 4.2.3 of [RFC6049].
+
+ Mean: The time value of the result is expressed in units of seconds,
+ as a positive value of type decimal64 with fraction digits = 9
+ (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) with a resolution of
+ 0.000000001 seconds (1.0 ns), and with lossless conversion to/from
+ the 64-bit NTP timestamp as per Section 6 of [RFC5905].
+
+8.4.2.3. Min
+
+ The minimum SHALL be calculated using the conditional distribution of
+ all packets with a finite value of one-way delay (undefined delays
+ are excluded) -- a single value, as follows:
+
+ See Section 4.1 of [RFC3393] for details on the conditional
+ distribution to exclude undefined values of delay, and see Section 5
+ of [RFC6703] for background on this analysis choice.
+
+ See Section 4.3.2 of [RFC6049] for details on calculating this
+ statistic; see also Section 4.3.3 of [RFC6049].
+
+ Min: The time value of the result is expressed in units of seconds,
+ as a positive value of type decimal64 with fraction digits = 9
+ (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) with a resolution of
+ 0.000000001 seconds (1.0 ns), and with lossless conversion to/from
+ the 64-bit NTP timestamp as per Section 6 of [RFC5905].
+
+8.4.2.4. Max
+
+ The maximum SHALL be calculated using the conditional distribution of
+ all packets with a finite value of one-way delay (undefined delays
+ are excluded) -- a single value, as follows:
+
+ See Section 4.1 of [RFC3393] for details on the conditional
+ distribution to exclude undefined values of delay, and see Section 5
+ of [RFC6703] for background on this analysis choice.
+
+ See Section 4.3.2 of [RFC6049] for a closely related method for
+ calculating this statistic; see also Section 4.3.3 of [RFC6049]. The
+ formula is as follows:
+
+ Max = (FiniteDelay[j])
+
+ such that for some index, j, where 1 <= j <= N
+ FiniteDelay[j] >= FiniteDelay[n] for all n
+
+ Max: The time value of the result is expressed in units of seconds,
+ as a positive value of type decimal64 with fraction digits = 9
+ (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) with a resolution of
+ 0.000000001 seconds (1.0 ns), and with lossless conversion to/from
+ the 64-bit NTP timestamp as per Section 6 of [RFC5905].
+
+8.4.2.5. Std_Dev
+
+ Std_Dev SHALL be calculated using the conditional distribution of all
+ packets with a finite value of one-way delay (undefined delays are
+ excluded) -- a single value, as follows:
+
+ See Section 4.1 of [RFC3393] for details on the conditional
+ distribution to exclude undefined values of delay, and see Section 5
+ of [RFC6703] for background on this analysis choice.
+
+ See Section 6.1.4 of [RFC6049] for a closely related method for
+ calculating this statistic. The formula is the classic calculation
+ for the standard deviation of a population.
+
+ Define Population Std_Dev_Delay as follows:
+
+ _ _
+ | N |
+ | --- |
+ | 1 \ 2 |
+ Std_Dev = SQRT | ------- > (Delay[n] - MeanDelay) |
+ | (N) / |
+ | --- |
+ | n = 1 |
+ |_ _|
+
+ where all packets n = 1 through N have a value for Delay[n],
+ MeanDelay is calculated per Section 8.4.2.2, and SQRT[] is the Square
+ Root function:
+
+ Std_Dev: The time value of the result is expressed in units of
+ seconds, as a positive value of type decimal64 with fraction
+ digits = 9 (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) with a resolution of
+ 0.000000001 seconds (1.0 ns), and with lossless conversion to/from
+ the 64-bit NTP timestamp as per Section 6 of [RFC5905].
+
+8.4.2.6. Percent_LossRatio
+
+ Percent_LossRatio: The numeric value of the result is expressed in
+ units of lost packets to total packets times 100%, as a positive
+ value of type decimal64 with fraction digits = 9 (see Section 9.3
+ of [RFC6020] with a resolution of 0.0000000001.
+
+8.4.3. Metric Units
+
+ The <statistic> of one-way delay is expressed in seconds, where
+ <statistic> is one of:
+
+ * 95Percentile
+
+ * Mean
+
+ * Min
+
+ * Max
+
+ * StdDev
+
+ The one-way loss ratio is expressed as a percentage of lost packets
+ to total packets sent.
+
+8.4.4. Calibration
+
+ Section 3.7.3 of [RFC7679] provides a means to quantify the
+ systematic and random errors of a time measurement. Calibration in-
+ situ could be enabled with an internal loopback that includes as much
+ of the measurement system as possible, performs address manipulation
+ as needed, and provides some form of isolation (e.g., deterministic
+ delay) to avoid send-receive interface contention. Some portion of
+ the random and systematic error can be characterized in this way.
+
+ For one-way delay measurements, the error calibration must include an
+ assessment of the internal clock synchronization with its external
+ reference (this internal clock is supplying timestamps for
+ measurement). In practice, the time offsets [RFC5905] of clocks at
+ both the Source and Destination are needed to estimate the systematic
+ error due to imperfect clock synchronization (the time offsets
+ [RFC5905] are smoothed; thus, the random variation is not usually
+ represented in the results).
+
+ time_offset: The time value of the result is expressed in units of
+ seconds, as a signed value of type decimal64 with fraction
+ digits = 9 (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) with a resolution of
+ 0.000000001 seconds (1.0 ns), and with lossless conversion to/from
+ the 64-bit NTP timestamp as per Section 6 of [RFC5905].
+
+ When a measurement controller requests a calibration measurement, the
+ loopback is applied and the result is output in the same format as a
+ normal measurement, with an additional indication that it is a
+ calibration result. In any measurement, the measurement function
+ SHOULD report its current estimate of the time offset [RFC5905] as an
+ indicator of the degree of synchronization.
+
+ Both internal loopback calibration and clock synchronization can be
+ used to estimate the available accuracy of the Output Metric Units.
+ For example, repeated loopback delay measurements will reveal the
+ portion of the output result resolution that is the result of system
+ noise and is thus inaccurate.
+
+8.5. Administrative Items
+
+8.5.1. Status
+
+ Current
+
+8.5.2. Requester
+
+ RFC 8912
+
+8.5.3. Revision
+
+ 1.0
+
+8.5.4. Revision Date
+
+ 2021-11-17
+
+8.6. Comments and Remarks
+
+ None
+
+9. ICMP Round-Trip Latency and Loss Registry Entries
+
+ This section specifies three initial Registry Entries for ICMP
+ Round-Trip Latency and another entry for the ICMP Round-Trip Loss
+ Ratio.
+
+ All column entries besides the ID, Name, Description, and Output
+ Reference Method categories are the same; thus, this section defines
+ four closely related Registry Entries. As a result, IANA has
+ assigned corresponding URLs to each of the four Named Metrics.
+
+9.1. Summary
+
+ This category includes multiple indexes to the Registry Entries: the
+ element ID and Metric Name.
+
+9.1.1. ID (Identifier)
+
+ IANA has allocated the numeric Identifiers 18-21 for the four Named
+ Metric Entries in Section 9. See Section 9.1.2 for mapping to Names.
+
+9.1.2. Name
+
+ 18: RTDelay_Active_IP-ICMP-SendOnRcv_RFC8912sec9_Seconds_Mean
+
+ 19: RTDelay_Active_IP-ICMP-SendOnRcv_RFC8912sec9_Seconds_Min
+
+ 20: RTDelay_Active_IP-ICMP-SendOnRcv_RFC8912sec9_Seconds_Max
+
+ 21: RTLoss_Active_IP-ICMP-SendOnRcv_RFC8912sec9_Percent_LossRatio
+
+9.1.3. URI
+
+ URL: https://www.iana.org/assignments/performance-metrics/
+ RTDelay_Active_IP-ICMP-SendOnRcv_RFC8912sec9_Seconds_Mean
+
+ URL: https://www.iana.org/assignments/performance-metrics/
+ RTDelay_Active_IP-ICMP-SendOnRcv_RFC8912sec9_Seconds_Min
+
+ URL: https://www.iana.org/assignments/performance-metrics/
+ RTDelay_Active_IP-ICMP-SendOnRcv_RFC8912sec9_Seconds_Max
+
+ URL: https://www.iana.org/assignments/performance-metrics/
+ RTLoss_Active_IP-ICMP-SendOnRcv_RFC8912sec9_Percent_LossRatio
+
+9.1.4. Description
+
+ RTDelay: This metric assesses the delay of a stream of ICMP packets
+ exchanged between two hosts (which are the two measurement
+ points). The output is the round-trip delay for all successfully
+ exchanged packets expressed as the <statistic> of their
+ conditional delay distribution, where <statistic> is one of:
+
+ * Mean
+
+ * Min
+
+ * Max
+
+ RTLoss: This metric assesses the loss ratio of a stream of ICMP
+ packets exchanged between two hosts (which are the two measurement
+ points). The output is the round-trip loss ratio for all
+ transmitted packets expressed as a percentage.
+
+9.1.5. Change Controller
+
+ IETF
+
+9.1.6. Version (of Registry Format)
+
+ 1.0
+
+9.2. Metric Definition
+
+ This category includes columns to prompt the entry of all necessary
+ details related to the metric definition, including the RFC reference
+ and values of input factors, called "Fixed Parameters".
+
+9.2.1. Reference Definition
+
+ For delay:
+
+ Almes, G., Kalidindi, S., and M. Zekauskas, "A Round-trip Delay
+ Metric for IPPM", RFC 2681, DOI 10.17487/RFC2681, September 1999,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2681>. [RFC2681]
+
+ Section 2.4 of [RFC2681] provides the reference definition of the
+ singleton (single value) round-trip delay metric. Section 3.4 of
+ [RFC2681] provides the reference definition expanded to cover a
+ multi-singleton sample. Note that terms such as "singleton" and
+ "sample" are defined in Section 11 of [RFC2330].
+
+ Note that although the definition of round-trip delay between the
+ Source (Src) and the Destination (Dst) as provided in Section 2.4
+ of [RFC2681] is directionally ambiguous in the text, this metric
+ tightens the definition further to recognize that the host in the
+ Src Role will send the first packet to the host in the Dst Role
+ and will ultimately receive the corresponding return packet from
+ the Dst (when neither is lost).
+
+ Finally, note that the variable "dT" is used in [RFC2681] to refer
+ to the value of round-trip delay in metric definitions and
+ methods. The variable "dT" has been reused in other IPPM
+ literature to refer to different quantities and cannot be used as
+ a global variable name.
+
+ For loss:
+
+ Morton, A., "Round-Trip Packet Loss Metrics", RFC 6673, DOI
+ 10.17487/RFC6673, August 2012, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/
+ rfc6673>. [RFC6673]
+
+ Both Delay and Loss metrics employ a maximum waiting time for
+ received packets, so the count of lost packets to total packets sent
+ is the basis for the loss ratio calculation as per Section 6.1 of
+ [RFC6673].
+
+9.2.2. Fixed Parameters
+
+ Type-P as defined in Section 13 of [RFC2330]:
+ IPv4 header values:
+ DSCP: Set to 0
+ TTL: Set to 255
+ Protocol: Set to 01 (ICMP)
+
+ IPv6 header values:
+ DSCP: Set to 0
+ Hop Count: Set to 255
+ Next Header: Set to 128 decimal (ICMP)
+ Flow Label: Set to 0
+ Extension Headers: None
+
+ ICMP header values:
+ Type: 8 (Echo Request)
+ Code: 0
+ Checksum: The checksum MUST be calculated and the non-zero
+ checksum included in the header
+ (Identifier and sequence number set at runtime)
+
+ ICMP Payload:
+ Total of 32 bytes of random information, constant per test
+
+ Other measurement Parameters:
+ Tmax: A loss threshold waiting time with value 3.0, expressed in
+ units of seconds, as a positive value of type decimal64 with
+ fraction digits = 4 (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) and with a
+ resolution of 0.0001 seconds (0.1 ms), with lossless conversion
+ to/from the 32-bit NTP timestamp as per Section 6 of [RFC5905].
+
+9.3. Method of Measurement
+
+ This category includes columns for references to relevant sections of
+ the RFC(s) and any supplemental information needed to ensure an
+ unambiguous method for implementations.
+
+9.3.1. Reference Methods
+
+ The methodology for this metric (equivalent to Type-P-Round-trip-
+ Delay-Poisson-Stream) is defined as in Section 2.6 of [RFC2681] (for
+ singletons) and Section 3.6 of [RFC2681] (for samples) using the
+ Type-P and Tmax defined in the Fixed Parameters column.
+
+ The reference method distinguishes between long-delayed packets and
+ lost packets by implementing a maximum waiting time for packet
+ arrival. Tmax is the waiting time used as the threshold to declare a
+ packet lost. Lost packets SHALL be designated as having undefined
+ delay and counted for the RTLoss metric.
+
+ The calculations on the delay (RTD) SHALL be performed on the
+ conditional distribution, conditioned on successful packet arrival
+ within Tmax. Also, when all packet delays are stored, the process
+ that calculates the RTD value MUST enforce the Tmax threshold on
+ stored values before calculations. See Section 4.1 of [RFC3393] for
+ details on the conditional distribution to exclude undefined values
+ of delay, and see Section 5 of [RFC6703] for background on this
+ analysis choice.
+
+ The reference method requires some way to distinguish between
+ different packets in a stream to establish correspondence between
+ sending times and receiving times for each successfully arriving
+ packet. Sequence numbers or other send-order identification MUST be
+ retained at the Src or included with each packet to disambiguate
+ packet reordering if it occurs.
+
+ The measurement process will determine the sequence numbers applied
+ to test packets after the Fixed and Runtime Parameters are passed to
+ that process. The ICMP measurement process and protocol will dictate
+ the format of sequence numbers and other Identifiers.
+
+ Refer to Section 4.4 of [RFC6673] for an expanded discussion of the
+ instruction to "send a Type-P packet back to the Src as quickly as
+ possible" in Section 2.6 of [RFC2681]. Section 8 of [RFC6673]
+ presents additional requirements that MUST be included in the Method
+ of Measurement for this metric.
+
+9.3.2. Packet Stream Generation
+
+ This section provides details regarding packet traffic, which is used
+ as the basis for measurement. In IPPM Metrics, this is called the
+ "stream"; this stream can easily be described by providing the list
+ of stream Parameters.
+
+ The ICMP metrics use a sending discipline called "SendOnRcv" or Send
+ On Receive. This is a modification of Section 3 of [RFC3432], which
+ prescribes the method for generating Periodic streams using
+ associated Parameters as defined below for this description:
+
+ incT: The nominal duration of the inter-packet interval, first bit
+ to first bit.
+
+ dT: The duration of the interval for allowed sample start times.
+
+ The incT stream Parameter will be specified as a Runtime Parameter,
+ and dT is not used in SendOnRcv.
+
+ A SendOnRcv sender behaves exactly like a Periodic stream generator
+ while all reply packets arrive with RTD < incT, and the inter-packet
+ interval will be constant.
+
+ If a reply packet arrives with RTD >= incT, then the inter-packet
+ interval for the next sending time is nominally RTD.
+
+ If a reply packet fails to arrive within Tmax, then the inter-packet
+ interval for the next sending time is nominally Tmax.
+
+ If an immediate Send On Reply arrival is desired, then set incT = 0.
+
+9.3.3. Traffic Filtering (Observation) Details
+
+ N/A
+
+9.3.4. Sampling Distribution
+
+ N/A
+
+9.3.5. Runtime Parameters and Data Format
+
+ Runtime Parameters are input factors that must be determined,
+ configured into the measurement system, and reported with the results
+ for the context to be complete.
+
+ Src: The IP address of the host in the Src Role (format
+ ipv4-address-no-zone value for IPv4 or ipv6-address-no-zone value
+ for IPv6; see Section 4 of [RFC6991]).
+
+ Dst: The IP address of the host in the Dst Role (format
+ ipv4-address-no-zone value for IPv4 or ipv6-address-no-zone value
+ for IPv6; see Section 4 of [RFC6991]).
+
+ incT: The nominal duration of the inter-packet interval, first bit
+ to first bit, expressed in units of seconds, as a positive value
+ of type decimal64 with fraction digits = 4 (see Section 9.3 of
+ [RFC6020]) and with a resolution of 0.0001 seconds (0.1 ms).
+
+ T0: A time, the start of a measurement interval (format "date-time"
+ as specified in Section 5.6 of [RFC3339]; see also "date-and-time"
+ in Section 3 of [RFC6991]). The UTC Time Zone is required by
+ Section 6.1 of [RFC2330]. When T0 is "all-zeros", a start time is
+ unspecified and Tf is to be interpreted as the duration of the
+ measurement interval. The start time is controlled through other
+ means.
+
+ Count: The total count of ICMP Echo Requests to send, formatted as a
+ uint16, as per Section 9.2 of [RFC6020].
+
+ See the Packet Stream Generation section for additional Runtime
+ Parameters.
+
+9.3.6. Roles
+
+ Src: Launches each packet and waits for return transmissions from
+ the Dst.
+
+ Dst: Waits for each packet from the Src and sends a return packet to
+ the Src (ICMP Echo Reply, Type 0).
+
+9.4. Output
+
+ This category specifies all details of the output of measurements
+ using the metric.
+
+9.4.1. Type
+
+ Latency and Loss Types are discussed in the subsections below.
+
+9.4.2. Reference Definition
+
+ For all output types:
+
+ T0: The start of a measurement interval (format "date-time" as
+ specified in Section 5.6 of [RFC3339]; see also "date-and-time" in
+ Section 3 of [RFC6991]). The UTC Time Zone is required by
+ Section 6.1 of [RFC2330].
+
+ Tf: The end of a measurement interval (format "date-time" as
+ specified in Section 5.6 of [RFC3339]; see also "date-and-time" in
+ Section 3 of [RFC6991]). The UTC Time Zone is required by
+ Section 6.1 of [RFC2330].
+
+ TotalCount: The count of packets actually sent by the Src to the Dst
+ during the measurement interval.
+
+ For each <statistic> or Percent_LossRatio, one of the following
+ subsections applies.
+
+9.4.2.1. Mean
+
+ The mean SHALL be calculated using the conditional distribution of
+ all packets with a finite value of round-trip delay (undefined delays
+ are excluded) -- a single value, as follows:
+
+ See Section 4.1 of [RFC3393] for details on the conditional
+ distribution to exclude undefined values of delay, and see Section 5
+ of [RFC6703] for background on this analysis choice.
+
+ See Section 4.2.2 of [RFC6049] for details on calculating this
+ statistic; see also Section 4.2.3 of [RFC6049].
+
+ Mean: The time value of the result is expressed in units of seconds,
+ as a positive value of type decimal64 with fraction digits = 9
+ (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) with a resolution of
+ 0.000000001 seconds (1.0 ns), and with lossless conversion to/from
+ the 64-bit NTP timestamp as per Section 6 of [RFC5905].
+
+9.4.2.2. Min
+
+ The minimum SHALL be calculated using the conditional distribution of
+ all packets with a finite value of round-trip delay (undefined delays
+ are excluded) -- a single value, as follows:
+
+ See Section 4.1 of [RFC3393] for details on the conditional
+ distribution to exclude undefined values of delay, and see Section 5
+ of [RFC6703] for background on this analysis choice.
+
+ See Section 4.3.2 of [RFC6049] for details on calculating this
+ statistic; see also Section 4.3.3 of [RFC6049].
+
+ Min: The time value of the result is expressed in units of seconds,
+ as a positive value of type decimal64 with fraction digits = 9
+ (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) with a resolution of
+ 0.000000001 seconds (1.0 ns), and with lossless conversion to/from
+ the 64-bit NTP timestamp as per Section 6 of [RFC5905].
+
+9.4.2.3. Max
+
+ The maximum SHALL be calculated using the conditional distribution of
+ all packets with a finite value of round-trip delay (undefined delays
+ are excluded) -- a single value, as follows:
+
+ See Section 4.1 of [RFC3393] for details on the conditional
+ distribution to exclude undefined values of delay, and see Section 5
+ of [RFC6703] for background on this analysis choice.
+
+ See Section 4.3.2 of [RFC6049] for a closely related method for
+ calculating this statistic; see also Section 4.3.3 of [RFC6049]. The
+ formula is as follows:
+
+ Max = (FiniteDelay[j])
+
+ such that for some index, j, where 1 <= j <= N
+ FiniteDelay[j] >= FiniteDelay[n] for all n
+
+ Max: The time value of the result is expressed in units of seconds,
+ as a positive value of type decimal64 with fraction digits = 9
+ (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) with a resolution of
+ 0.000000001 seconds (1.0 ns), and with lossless conversion to/from
+ the 64-bit NTP timestamp as per Section 6 of [RFC5905].
+
+9.4.2.4. Percent_LossRatio
+
+ For LossRatio, the count of lost packets to total packets sent is the
+ basis for the loss ratio calculation as per Section 4.1 of [RFC7680].
+
+ Percent_LossRatio: The numeric value of the result is expressed in
+ units of lost packets to total packets times 100%, as a positive
+ value of type decimal64 with fraction digits = 9 (see Section 9.3
+ of [RFC6020]) with a resolution of 0.0000000001.
+
+9.4.3. Metric Units
+
+ The <statistic> of round-trip delay is expressed in seconds, where
+ <statistic> is one of:
+
+ * Mean
+
+ * Min
+
+ * Max
+
+ The round-trip loss ratio is expressed as a percentage of lost
+ packets to total packets sent.
+
+9.4.4. Calibration
+
+ Section 3.7.3 of [RFC7679] provides a means to quantify the
+ systematic and random errors of a time measurement. Calibration in-
+ situ could be enabled with an internal loopback at the Source host
+ that includes as much of the measurement system as possible, performs
+ address manipulation as needed, and provides some form of isolation
+ (e.g., deterministic delay) to avoid send-receive interface
+ contention. Some portion of the random and systematic error can be
+ characterized in this way.
+
+ When a measurement controller requests a calibration measurement, the
+ loopback is applied and the result is output in the same format as a
+ normal measurement, with an additional indication that it is a
+ calibration result.
+
+ Both internal loopback calibration and clock synchronization can be
+ used to estimate the available accuracy of the Output Metric Units.
+ For example, repeated loopback delay measurements will reveal the
+ portion of the output result resolution that is the result of system
+ noise and is thus inaccurate.
+
+9.5. Administrative Items
+
+9.5.1. Status
+
+ Current
+
+9.5.2. Requester
+
+ RFC 8912
+
+9.5.3. Revision
+
+ 1.0
+
+9.5.4. Revision Date
+
+ 2021-11-17
+
+9.6. Comments and Remarks
+
+ None
+
+10. TCP Round-Trip Delay and Loss Registry Entries
+
+ This section specifies four initial Registry Entries for the Passive
+ assessment of TCP Round-Trip Delay (RTD) and another entry for the
+ TCP Round-Trip Loss Count.
+
+ All column entries besides the ID, Name, Description, and Output
+ Reference Method categories are the same; thus, this section defines
+ four closely related Registry Entries. As a result, IANA has
+ assigned corresponding URLs to each of the four Named Metrics.
+
+10.1. Summary
+
+ This category includes multiple indexes to the Registry Entries: the
+ element ID and Metric Name.
+
+10.1.1. ID (Identifier)
+
+ IANA has allocated the numeric Identifiers 22-26 for the five Named
+ Metric Entries in Section 10. See Section 10.1.2 for mapping to
+ Names.
+
+10.1.2. Name
+
+ 22: RTDelay_Passive_IP-TCP_RFC8912sec10_Seconds_Mean
+
+ 23: RTDelay_Passive_IP-TCP_RFC8912sec10_Seconds_Min
+
+ 24: RTDelay_Passive_IP-TCP_RFC8912sec10_Seconds_Max
+
+ 25: RTDelay_Passive_IP-TCP-HS_RFC8912sec10_Seconds_Singleton
+
+ Note that a midpoint observer only has the opportunity to compose a
+ single RTDelay on the TCP handshake.
+
+ 26: RTLoss_Passive_IP-TCP_RFC8912sec10_Packet_Count
+
+10.1.3. URI
+
+ URL: https://www.iana.org/assignments/performance-metrics/
+ RTDelay_Passive_IP-TCP_RFC8912sec10_Seconds_Mean
+
+ URL: https://www.iana.org/assignments/performance-metrics/
+ RTDelay_Passive_IP-TCP_RFC8912sec10_Seconds_Min
+
+ URL: https://www.iana.org/assignments/performance-metrics/
+ RTDelay_Passive_IP-TCP_RFC8912sec10_Seconds_Max
+
+ URL: https://www.iana.org/assignments/performance-metrics/
+ RTDelay_Passive_IP-TCP-HS_RFC8912sec10_Seconds_Singleton
+
+ URL: https://www.iana.org/assignments/performance-metrics/
+ RTLoss_Passive_IP-TCP_RFC8912sec10_Packet_Count
+
+10.1.4. Description
+
+ RTDelay: This metric assesses the round-trip delay of TCP packets
+ constituting a single connection, exchanged between two hosts. We
+ consider the measurement of round-trip delay based on a single
+ Observation Point (OP) [RFC7011] somewhere in the network. The
+ output is the round-trip delay for all successfully exchanged
+ packets expressed as the <statistic> of their conditional delay
+ distribution, where <statistic> is one of:
+
+ * Mean
+
+ * Min
+
+ * Max
+
+ RTDelay Singleton: This metric assesses the round-trip delay of TCP
+ packets initiating a single connection (or 3-way handshake),
+ exchanged between two hosts. We consider the measurement of
+ round-trip delay based on a single Observation Point (OP)
+ [RFC7011] somewhere in the network. The output is the single
+ measurement of Round-trip delay, or Singleton.
+
+ RTLoss: This metric assesses the estimated loss count for TCP
+ packets constituting a single connection, exchanged between two
+ hosts. We consider the measurement of round-trip delay based on a
+ single OP [RFC7011] somewhere in the network. The output is the
+ estimated loss count for the measurement interval.
+
+10.1.5. Change Controller
+
+ IETF
+
+10.1.6. Version (of Registry Format)
+
+ 1.0
+
+10.2. Metric Definition
+
+ This category includes columns to prompt the entry of all necessary
+ details related to the metric definition, including the RFC reference
+ and values of input factors, called "Fixed Parameters".
+
+10.2.1. Reference Definition
+
+ Almes, G., Kalidindi, S., and M. Zekauskas, "A Round-trip Delay
+ Metric for IPPM", RFC 2681, DOI 10.17487/RFC2681, September 1999,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2681>. [RFC2681]
+
+ Although there is no RFC that describes Passive Measurement of round-
+ trip delay, the parallel definition for Active Measurement is
+ provided in [RFC2681].
+
+ This metric definition uses the term "wire time" as defined in
+ Section 10.2 of [RFC2330], and the terms "singleton" and "sample" as
+ defined in Section 11 of [RFC2330]. (Section 2.4 of [RFC2681]
+ provides the reference definition of the singleton (single value)
+ round-trip delay metric. Section 3.4 of [RFC2681] provides the
+ reference definition expanded to cover a multi-singleton sample.)
+
+ With the OP [RFC7011] typically located between the hosts
+ participating in the TCP connection, the round-trip delay metric
+ requires two individual measurements between the OP and each host,
+ such that the Spatial Composition [RFC6049] of the measurements
+ yields a round-trip delay singleton (we are extending the composition
+ of one-way subpath delays to subpath round-trip delay).
+
+ Using the direction of TCP SYN transmission to anchor the
+ nomenclature, host A sends the SYN, and host B replies with SYN-ACK
+ during connection establishment. The direction of SYN transfer is
+ considered the Forward direction of transmission, from A through the
+ OP to B (the Reverse direction is B through the OP to A).
+
+ Traffic Filters reduce the packet streams at the OP to a Qualified
+ bidirectional flow of packets.
+
+ In the definitions below, Corresponding Packets are transferred in
+ different directions and convey a common value in a TCP header field
+ that establishes correspondence (to the extent possible). Examples
+ may be found in the TCP timestamp fields.
+
+ For a real number, RTD_fwd, >> the round-trip delay in the Forward
+ direction from the OP to host B at time T' is RTD_fwd << it is
+ REQUIRED that the OP observed a Qualified Packet to host B at wire
+ time T', that host B received that packet and sent a Corresponding
+ Packet back to host A, and the OP observed the Corresponding Packet
+ at wire time T' + RTD_fwd.
+
+ For a real number, RTD_rev, >> the round-trip delay in the Reverse
+ direction from the OP to host A at time T'' is RTD_rev << it is
+ REQUIRED that the OP observed a Qualified Packet to host A at wire
+ time T'', that host A received that packet and sent a Corresponding
+ Packet back to host B, and that the OP observed the Corresponding
+ Packet at wire time T'' + RTD_rev.
+
+ Ideally, the packet sent from host B to host A in both definitions
+ above SHOULD be the same packet (or, when measuring RTD_rev first,
+ the packet from host A to host B in both definitions should be the
+ same).
+
+ The REQUIRED Composition Function for a singleton of round-trip delay
+ at time T (where T is the earliest of T' and T'' above) is:
+
+ RTDelay = RTD_fwd + RTD_rev
+
+ Note that when the OP is located at host A or host B, one of the
+ terms composing RTDelay will be zero or negligible.
+
+ Using the abbreviation HS to refer to the TCP handshake: when the
+ Qualified and Corresponding Packets are a TCP-SYN and a TCP-SYN-ACK,
+ RTD_fwd == RTD_HS_fwd.
+
+ When the Qualified and Corresponding Packets are a TCP-SYN-ACK and a
+ TCP-ACK, RTD_rev == RTD_HS_rev.
+
+ The REQUIRED Composition Function for a singleton of round-trip delay
+ for the connection handshake is:
+
+ RTDelay_HS = RTD_HS_fwd + RTD_HS_rev
+
+ The definition of round-trip loss count uses the nomenclature
+ developed above, based on observation of the TCP header sequence
+ numbers and storing the sequence number gaps observed. Packet losses
+ can be inferred from:
+
+ Out-of-order segments: TCP segments are transmitted with
+ monotonically increasing sequence numbers, but these segments may
+ be received out of order. Section 3 of [RFC4737] describes the
+ notion of "next expected" sequence numbers, which can be adapted
+ to TCP segments (for the purpose of detecting reordered packets).
+ Observation of out-of-order segments indicates loss on the path
+ prior to the OP and creates a gap.
+
+ Duplicate segments: Section 2 of [RFC5560] defines identical packets
+ and is suitable for evaluation of TCP packets to detect
+ duplication. Observation of a segment duplicates a segment
+ previously observed (and thus no corresponding observed segment
+ gap) indicates loss on the path following the OP (e.g., the
+ segment overlaps part of the octet stream already observed at the
+ OP).
+
+ Each observation of an out-of-order or duplicate segment infers a
+ singleton of loss, but the composition of round-trip loss counts will
+ be conducted over a measurement interval that is synonymous with a
+ single TCP connection.
+
+ With the above observations in the Forward direction over a
+ measurement interval, the count of out-of-order and duplicate
+ segments is defined as RTL_fwd. Comparable observations in the
+ Reverse direction are defined as RTL_rev.
+
+ For a measurement interval (corresponding to a single TCP connection)
+ T0 to Tf, the REQUIRED Composition Function for the two single-
+ direction counts of inferred loss is:
+
+ RTLoss = RTL_fwd + RTL_rev
+
+10.2.2. Fixed Parameters
+
+ Traffic Filters:
+ IPv4 header values:
+ DSCP: Set to 0
+ Protocol: Set to 06 (TCP)
+
+ IPv6 header values:
+ DSCP: Set to 0
+ Hop Count: Set to 255
+ Next Header: Set to 6 (TCP)
+ Flow Label: Set to 0
+ Extension Headers: None
+
+ TCP header values:
+ Flags: ACK, SYN, FIN, set as required
+ Timestamps Option (TSopt): Set. See Section 3.2 of [RFC7323]
+
+10.3. Method of Measurement
+
+ This category includes columns for references to relevant sections of
+ the RFC(s) and any supplemental information needed to ensure an
+ unambiguous method for implementations.
+
+10.3.1. Reference Methods
+
+ The foundational methodology for this metric is defined in Section 4
+ of [RFC7323] using the Timestamps option with modifications that
+ allow application at a mid-path OP [RFC7011]. Further details and
+ applicable heuristics were derived from [Strowes] and [Trammell-14].
+
+ The Traffic Filter at the OP is configured to observe a single TCP
+ connection. When the SYN/SYN-ACK/ACK handshake occurs, it offers the
+ first opportunity to measure both RTD_fwd (on the SYN to SYN-ACK
+ pair) and RTD_rev (on the SYN-ACK to ACK pair). Label this singleton
+ of RTDelay as RTDelay_HS (composed using the Forward and Reverse
+ measurement pair). RTDelay_HS SHALL be treated separately from other
+ RTDelays on data-bearing packets and their ACKs. The RTDelay_HS
+ value MAY be used as a consistency check on the composed values of
+ RTDelay for payload-bearing packets.
+
+ For payload-bearing packets, the OP measures the time interval
+ between observation of a packet with sequence number "s" and the
+ corresponding ACK with the same sequence number. When the payload is
+ transferred from host A to host B, the observed interval is RTD_fwd.
+
+ For payload-bearing packets, each observation of an out-of-order or
+ duplicate segment infers a loss count, but the composition of round-
+ trip loss counts will be conducted over a measurement interval that
+ is synonymous with a single TCP connection.
+
+ Because many data transfers are unidirectional (say, in the Forward
+ direction from host A to host B), it is necessary to use pure ACK
+ packets with Timestamp (TSval) and packets with the Timestamp value
+ echo to perform a RTD_rev measurement. The time interval between
+ observation of the ACK from B to A, and the Corresponding Packet with
+ a Timestamp Echo Reply (TSecr) field [RFC7323], is the RTD_rev.
+
+ Delay Measurement Filtering Heuristics:
+
+ * If data payloads were transferred in both Forward and Reverse
+ directions, then the Round-Trip Time Measurement rule in
+ Section 4.1 of [RFC7323] could be applied. This rule essentially
+ excludes any measurement using a packet unless it makes progress
+ in the transfer (advances the left edge of the send window,
+ consistent with [Strowes]).
+
+ * A different heuristic from [Trammell-14] is to exclude any RTD_rev
+ that is larger than previously observed values. This would tend
+ to exclude Reverse measurements taken when the application has no
+ data ready to send, because considerable time could be added to
+ RTD_rev from this source of error.
+
+ * Note that the above heuristic assumes that host A is sending data.
+ Host A expecting a download would mean that this heuristic should
+ be applied to RTD_fwd.
+
+ * The statistic calculations to summarize the delay (RTDelay) SHALL
+ be performed on the conditional distribution, conditioned on
+ successful Forward and Reverse measurements that follow the
+ heuristics.
+
+ Method for Inferring Loss:
+
+ * The OP tracks sequence numbers and stores gaps for each direction
+ of transmission, as well as the next expected sequence number as
+ discussed in [Trammell-14] and [RFC4737]. Loss is inferred from
+ out-of-order segments and duplicate segments.
+
+ Loss Measurement Filtering Heuristics:
+
+ * [Trammell-14] adds a window of evaluation based on the RTDelay.
+
+ * Distinguish reordered packets from out-of-order segments due to
+ loss, because the sequence number gap is filled during the same
+ RTDelay window. Segments detected as reordered according to
+ [RFC4737] MUST reduce the loss count inferred from out-of-order
+ segments.
+
+ * Spurious (unneeded) retransmissions (observed as duplicates) can
+ also be reduced in this way, as described in [Trammell-14].
+
+ Sources of Error:
+
+ * The principal source of RTDelay error is the host processing time
+ to return a packet that defines the termination of a time
+ interval. The heuristics above intend to mitigate these errors by
+ excluding measurements where host processing time is a significant
+ part of RTD_fwd or RTD_rev.
+
+ * A key source of RTLoss error is observation loss, as described in
+ Section 3 of [Trammell-14].
+
+10.3.2. Packet Stream Generation
+
+ N/A
+
+10.3.3. Traffic Filtering (Observation) Details
+
+ The Fixed Parameters above give a portion of the Traffic Filter.
+ Other aspects will be supplied as Runtime Parameters (below).
+
+10.3.4. Sampling Distribution
+
+ This metric requires a complete sample of all packets that qualify
+ according to the Traffic Filter criteria.
+
+10.3.5. Runtime Parameters and Data Format
+
+ Runtime Parameters are input factors that must be determined,
+ configured into the measurement system, and reported with the results
+ for the context to be complete.
+
+ Src: The IP address of the host in the host A Role (format
+ ipv4-address-no-zone value for IPv4 or ipv6-address-no-zone value
+ for IPv6; see Section 4 of [RFC6991]).
+
+ Dst: The IP address of the host in the host B Role (format
+ ipv4-address-no-zone value for IPv4 or ipv6-address-no-zone value
+ for IPv6; see Section 4 of [RFC6991]).
+
+ T0: A time, the start of a measurement interval (format "date-time"
+ as specified in Section 5.6 of [RFC3339]; see also "date-and-time"
+ in Section 3 of [RFC6991]). The UTC Time Zone is required by
+ Section 6.1 of [RFC2330]. When T0 is "all-zeros", a start time is
+ unspecified and Tf is to be interpreted as the duration of the
+ measurement interval. The start time is controlled through other
+ means.
+
+ Tf: Optionally, the end of a measurement interval (format
+ "date-time" as specified in Section 5.6 of [RFC3339]; see also
+ "date-and-time" in Section 3 of [RFC6991]), or the duration (see
+ T0). The UTC Time Zone is required by Section 6.1 of [RFC2330].
+ Alternatively, the end of the measurement interval MAY be
+ controlled by the measured connection, where the second pair of
+ FIN and ACK packets exchanged between host A and host B
+ effectively ends the interval.
+
+ TTL or Hop Limit: Set at desired value.
+
+10.3.6. Roles
+
+ host A: Launches the SYN packet to open the connection. The Role of
+ "host A" is synonymous with the IP address used at host A.
+
+ host B: Replies with the SYN-ACK packet to open the connection. The
+ Role of "host B" is synonymous with the IP address used at host B.
+
+10.4. Output
+
+ This category specifies all details of the output of measurements
+ using the metric.
+
+10.4.1. Type
+
+ RTDelay Types are discussed in the subsections below.
+
+ For RTLoss: The count of lost packets.
+
+10.4.2. Reference Definition
+
+ For all output types:
+
+ T0: The start of a measurement interval (format "date-time" as
+ specified in Section 5.6 of [RFC3339]; see also "date-and-time" in
+ Section 3 of [RFC6991]). The UTC Time Zone is required by
+ Section 6.1 of [RFC2330].
+
+ Tf: The end of a measurement interval (format "date-time" as
+ specified in Section 5.6 of [RFC3339]; see also "date-and-time" in
+ Section 3 of [RFC6991]). The UTC Time Zone is required by
+ Section 6.1 of [RFC2330]. The end of the measurement interval MAY
+ be controlled by the measured connection, where the second pair of
+ FIN and ACK packets exchanged between host A and host B
+ effectively ends the interval.
+
+ RTDelay_Passive_IP-TCP-HS: The round-trip delay of the handshake is
+ a Singleton.
+
+ RTLoss: The count of lost packets.
+
+ For each <statistic>, Singleton, or Loss Count, one of the following
+ subsections applies.
+
+10.4.2.1. Mean
+
+ The mean SHALL be calculated using the conditional distribution of
+ all packets with a finite value of round-trip delay (undefined delays
+ are excluded) -- a single value, as follows:
+
+ See Section 4.1 of [RFC3393] for details on the conditional
+ distribution to exclude undefined values of delay, and see Section 5
+ of [RFC6703] for background on this analysis choice.
+
+ See Section 4.2.2 of [RFC6049] for details on calculating this
+ statistic; see also Section 4.2.3 of [RFC6049].
+
+ Mean: The time value of the result is expressed in units of seconds,
+ as a positive value of type decimal64 with fraction digits = 9
+ (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) with a resolution of
+ 0.000000001 seconds (1.0 ns), and with lossless conversion to/from
+ the 64-bit NTP timestamp as per Section 6 of [RFC5905].
+
+10.4.2.2. Min
+
+ The minimum SHALL be calculated using the conditional distribution of
+ all packets with a finite value of round-trip delay (undefined delays
+ are excluded) -- a single value, as follows:
+
+ See Section 4.1 of [RFC3393] for details on the conditional
+ distribution to exclude undefined values of delay, and see Section 5
+ of [RFC6703] for background on this analysis choice.
+
+ See Section 4.3.2 of [RFC6049] for details on calculating this
+ statistic; see also Section 4.3.3 of [RFC6049].
+
+ Min: The time value of the result is expressed in units of seconds,
+ as a positive value of type decimal64 with fraction digits = 9
+ (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) with a resolution of
+ 0.000000001 seconds (1.0 ns), and with lossless conversion to/from
+ the 64-bit NTP timestamp as per Section 6 of [RFC5905].
+
+10.4.2.3. Max
+
+ The maximum SHALL be calculated using the conditional distribution of
+ all packets with a finite value of round-trip delay (undefined delays
+ are excluded) -- a single value, as follows:
+
+ See Section 4.1 of [RFC3393] for details on the conditional
+ distribution to exclude undefined values of delay, and see Section 5
+ of [RFC6703] for background on this analysis choice.
+
+ See Section 4.3.2 of [RFC6049] for a closely related method for
+ calculating this statistic; see also Section 4.3.3 of [RFC6049]. The
+ formula is as follows:
+
+ Max = (FiniteDelay[j])
+
+ such that for some index, j, where 1 <= j <= N
+ FiniteDelay[j] >= FiniteDelay[n] for all n
+
+ Max: The time value of the result is expressed in units of seconds,
+ as a positive value of type decimal64 with fraction digits = 9
+ (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) with a resolution of
+ 0.000000001 seconds (1.0 ns), and with lossless conversion to/from
+ the 64-bit NTP timestamp as per Section 6 of [RFC5905].
+
+10.4.2.4. Singleton
+
+ The singleton SHALL be calculated using the successful RTD_fwd (on
+ the SYN to SYN-ACK pair) and RTD_rev (on the SYN-ACK to ACK pair),
+ see Section 10.3.1.
+
+ The singleton time value of the result is expressed in units of
+ seconds, as a positive value of type decimal64 with fraction digits =
+ 9 (see Section 9.3 of [RFC6020]) with resolution of 0.000000001
+ seconds (1.0 ns), and with lossless conversion to/from the 64-bit NTP
+ timestamp as per Section 6 of [RFC5905].
+
+10.4.2.5. Loss Counts
+
+ RTLoss_Passive_IP-TCP_RFC8912sec10_Packet_Count: The count of lost
+ packets.
+
+ Observation of an out-of-order segment or duplicate segment infers a
+ loss count, after application of the Definitions of Section 10.2.1
+ and the Loss Measurement Filtering Heuristics of Section 10.3.1. The
+ composition of round-trip loss counts will be conducted over a
+ measurement interval that is synonymous with a single TCP connection.
+
+ For a measurement interval (corresponding to a single TCP connection)
+ T0 to Tf, the REQUIRED Composition Function for the two single-
+ direction counts of inferred loss is:
+
+ RTLoss = RTL_fwd + RTL_rev
+
+ Packet count: The numeric value of the result is expressed in units
+ of lost packets, as a positive value of type uint64 (represents
+ integer values between 0 and 18446744073709551615, inclusively
+ (see Section 9.2 of [RFC6020]).
+
+10.4.3. Metric Units
+
+ The <statistic> of round-trip delay is expressed in seconds, where
+ <statistic> is one of:
+
+ * Mean
+
+ * Min
+
+ * Max
+
+ The round-trip delay of the TCP handshake singleton is expressed in
+ seconds.
+
+ The round-trip loss count is expressed as a number of packets.
+
+10.4.4. Calibration
+
+ Passive Measurements at an OP could be calibrated against an Active
+ Measurement (with loss emulation) at host A or host B, where the
+ Active Measurement represents the ground truth.
+
+10.5. Administrative Items
+
+10.5.1. Status
+
+ Current
+
+10.5.2. Requester
+
+ RFC 8912
+
+10.5.3. Revision
+
+ 1.0
+
+10.5.4. Revision Date
+
+ 2021-11-17
+
+10.6. Comments and Remarks
+
+ None
+
+11. Security Considerations
+
+ These Registry Entries represent no known implications for Internet
+ security. With the exception of [RFC1035], each RFC referenced above
+ contains a Security Considerations section. Further, the Large-scale
+ Measurement of Broadband Performance (LMAP) framework [RFC7594]
+ provides both security and privacy considerations for measurements.
+
+ There are potential privacy considerations for observed traffic,
+ particularly for Passive Metrics as discussed in Section 10. An
+ attacker that knows that its TCP connection is being measured can
+ modify its behavior to skew the measurement results.
+
+12. IANA Considerations
+
+ IANA has populated the Performance Metrics Registry defined in
+ [RFC8911] with the values defined in Sections 4 through 10.
+
+ See the IANA Considerations section of [RFC8911] for additional
+ considerations.
+
+13. References
+
+13.1. Normative References
+
+ [RFC1035] Mockapetris, P., "Domain names - implementation and
+ specification", STD 13, RFC 1035, DOI 10.17487/RFC1035,
+ November 1987, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc1035>.
+
+ [RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
+ Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119,
+ DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, March 1997,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2119>.
+
+ [RFC2330] Paxson, V., Almes, G., Mahdavi, J., and M. Mathis,
+ "Framework for IP Performance Metrics", RFC 2330,
+ DOI 10.17487/RFC2330, May 1998,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2330>.
+
+ [RFC2681] Almes, G., Kalidindi, S., and M. Zekauskas, "A Round-trip
+ Delay Metric for IPPM", RFC 2681, DOI 10.17487/RFC2681,
+ September 1999, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2681>.
+
+ [RFC3339] Klyne, G. and C. Newman, "Date and Time on the Internet:
+ Timestamps", RFC 3339, DOI 10.17487/RFC3339, July 2002,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3339>.
+
+ [RFC3393] Demichelis, C. and P. Chimento, "IP Packet Delay Variation
+ Metric for IP Performance Metrics (IPPM)", RFC 3393,
+ DOI 10.17487/RFC3393, November 2002,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3393>.
+
+ [RFC3432] Raisanen, V., Grotefeld, G., and A. Morton, "Network
+ performance measurement with periodic streams", RFC 3432,
+ DOI 10.17487/RFC3432, November 2002,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3432>.
+
+ [RFC4737] Morton, A., Ciavattone, L., Ramachandran, G., Shalunov,
+ S., and J. Perser, "Packet Reordering Metrics", RFC 4737,
+ DOI 10.17487/RFC4737, November 2006,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4737>.
+
+ [RFC5357] Hedayat, K., Krzanowski, R., Morton, A., Yum, K., and J.
+ Babiarz, "A Two-Way Active Measurement Protocol (TWAMP)",
+ RFC 5357, DOI 10.17487/RFC5357, October 2008,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5357>.
+
+ [RFC5481] Morton, A. and B. Claise, "Packet Delay Variation
+ Applicability Statement", RFC 5481, DOI 10.17487/RFC5481,
+ March 2009, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5481>.
+
+ [RFC5560] Uijterwaal, H., "A One-Way Packet Duplication Metric",
+ RFC 5560, DOI 10.17487/RFC5560, May 2009,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5560>.
+
+ [RFC5905] Mills, D., Martin, J., Ed., Burbank, J., and W. Kasch,
+ "Network Time Protocol Version 4: Protocol and Algorithms
+ Specification", RFC 5905, DOI 10.17487/RFC5905, June 2010,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5905>.
+
+ [RFC6020] Bjorklund, M., Ed., "YANG - A Data Modeling Language for
+ the Network Configuration Protocol (NETCONF)", RFC 6020,
+ DOI 10.17487/RFC6020, October 2010,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6020>.
+
+ [RFC6049] Morton, A. and E. Stephan, "Spatial Composition of
+ Metrics", RFC 6049, DOI 10.17487/RFC6049, January 2011,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6049>.
+
+ [RFC6673] Morton, A., "Round-Trip Packet Loss Metrics", RFC 6673,
+ DOI 10.17487/RFC6673, August 2012,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6673>.
+
+ [RFC6991] Schoenwaelder, J., Ed., "Common YANG Data Types",
+ RFC 6991, DOI 10.17487/RFC6991, July 2013,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6991>.
+
+ [RFC7011] Claise, B., Ed., Trammell, B., Ed., and P. Aitken,
+ "Specification of the IP Flow Information Export (IPFIX)
+ Protocol for the Exchange of Flow Information", STD 77,
+ RFC 7011, DOI 10.17487/RFC7011, September 2013,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7011>.
+
+ [RFC7323] Borman, D., Braden, B., Jacobson, V., and R.
+ Scheffenegger, Ed., "TCP Extensions for High Performance",
+ RFC 7323, DOI 10.17487/RFC7323, September 2014,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7323>.
+
+ [RFC7679] Almes, G., Kalidindi, S., Zekauskas, M., and A. Morton,
+ Ed., "A One-Way Delay Metric for IP Performance Metrics
+ (IPPM)", STD 81, RFC 7679, DOI 10.17487/RFC7679, January
+ 2016, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7679>.
+
+ [RFC7680] Almes, G., Kalidindi, S., Zekauskas, M., and A. Morton,
+ Ed., "A One-Way Loss Metric for IP Performance Metrics
+ (IPPM)", STD 82, RFC 7680, DOI 10.17487/RFC7680, January
+ 2016, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7680>.
+
+ [RFC8174] Leiba, B., "Ambiguity of Uppercase vs Lowercase in RFC
+ 2119 Key Words", BCP 14, RFC 8174, DOI 10.17487/RFC8174,
+ May 2017, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8174>.
+
+ [RFC8911] Bagnulo, M., Claise, B., Eardley, P., Morton, A., and A.
+ Akhter, "Registry for Performance Metrics", RFC 8911,
+ DOI 10.17487/RFC8911, November 2021,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8911>.
+
+ [Strowes] Strowes, S., "Passively Measuring TCP Round-Trip Times",
+ Communications of the ACM, Vol. 56 No. 10, Pages 57-64,
+ DOI 10.1145/2507771.2507781, October 2013,
+ <https://dl.acm.org/doi/10.1145/2507771.2507781>.
+
+ [Trammell-14]
+ Trammell, B., Gugelmann, D., and N. Brownlee, "Inline Data
+ Integrity Signals for Passive Measurement", In: Dainotti
+ A., Mahanti A., Uhlig S. (eds) Traffic Monitoring and
+ Analysis. TMA 2014. Lecture Notes in Computer Science,
+ vol 8406. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg,
+ DOI 10.1007/978-3-642-54999-1_2, March 2014,
+ <https://link.springer.com/
+ chapter/10.1007/978-3-642-54999-1_2>.
+
+13.2. Informative References
+
+ [RFC1242] Bradner, S., "Benchmarking Terminology for Network
+ Interconnection Devices", RFC 1242, DOI 10.17487/RFC1242,
+ July 1991, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc1242>.
+
+ [RFC6390] Clark, A. and B. Claise, "Guidelines for Considering New
+ Performance Metric Development", BCP 170, RFC 6390,
+ DOI 10.17487/RFC6390, October 2011,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6390>.
+
+ [RFC6703] Morton, A., Ramachandran, G., and G. Maguluri, "Reporting
+ IP Network Performance Metrics: Different Points of View",
+ RFC 6703, DOI 10.17487/RFC6703, August 2012,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6703>.
+
+ [RFC7594] Eardley, P., Morton, A., Bagnulo, M., Burbridge, T.,
+ Aitken, P., and A. Akhter, "A Framework for Large-Scale
+ Measurement of Broadband Performance (LMAP)", RFC 7594,
+ DOI 10.17487/RFC7594, September 2015,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7594>.
+
+ [RFC8126] Cotton, M., Leiba, B., and T. Narten, "Guidelines for
+ Writing an IANA Considerations Section in RFCs", BCP 26,
+ RFC 8126, DOI 10.17487/RFC8126, June 2017,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8126>.
+
+Acknowledgments
+
+ The authors thank Brian Trammell for suggesting the term "Runtime
+ Parameters", which led to the distinction between Runtime and Fixed
+ Parameters implemented in this memo, for identifying the IP Flow
+ Information Export (IPFIX) metric with Flow Key as an example, for
+ suggesting the Passive TCP RTD Metric and supporting references, and
+ for many other productive suggestions. Thanks to Peter Koch, who
+ provided several useful suggestions for disambiguating successive DNS
+ queries in the DNS Response time metric.
+
+ The authors also acknowledge the constructive reviews and helpful
+ suggestions from Barbara Stark, Juergen Schoenwaelder, Tim Carey,
+ Yaakov Stein, and participants in the LMAP Working Group. Thanks to
+ Michelle Cotton for her early IANA reviews, and to Amanda Baber for
+ answering questions related to the presentation of the Registry and
+ accessibility of the complete template via URL.
+
+Authors' Addresses
+
+ Al Morton
+ AT&T Labs
+ 200 Laurel Avenue South
+ Middletown, NJ 07748
+ United States of America
+
+ Phone: +1 732 420 1571
+ Email: acmorton@att.com
+
+
+ Marcelo Bagnulo
+ Universidad Carlos III de Madrid
+ Av. Universidad 30
+ 28911 Leganes Madrid
+ Spain
+
+ Phone: 34 91 6249500
+ Email: marcelo@it.uc3m.es
+ URI: http://www.it.uc3m.es
+
+
+ Philip Eardley
+ BT
+ Adastral Park, Martlesham Heath
+ Ipswich
+ United Kingdom
+
+ Email: philip.eardley@bt.com
+
+
+ Kevin D'Souza
+ AT&T Labs
+ 200 Laurel Avenue South
+ Middletown, NJ 07748
+ United States of America
+
+ Phone: +1 732 420 2514
+ Email: kld@att.com