RFC:  817
 
 
 
          MODULARITY AND EFFICIENCY IN PROTOCOL IMPLEMENTATION
 
                             David D. Clark
                  MIT Laboratory for Computer Science
               Computer Systems and Communications Group
                               July, 1982
 
 
     1.  Introduction
 
 
     Many  protocol implementers have made the unpleasant discovery that
 
their packages do not run quite as fast as they had hoped.    The  blame
 
for  this  widely  observed  problem has been attributed to a variety of
 
causes, ranging from details in  the  design  of  the  protocol  to  the
 
underlying  structure  of  the  host  operating  system.   This RFC will
 
discuss  some  of  the  commonly  encountered   reasons   why   protocol
 
implementations seem to run slowly.
 
 
     Experience  suggests  that  one  of  the  most important factors in
 
determining the performance of an implementation is the manner in  which
 
that   implementation  is  modularized  and  integrated  into  the  host
 
operating system.  For this reason, it is useful to discuss the question
 
of how an implementation is structured at the same time that we consider
 
how it will perform.  In fact, this RFC will argue  that  modularity  is
 
one  of  the chief villains in attempting to obtain good performance, so
 
that the designer is faced  with  a  delicate  and  inevitable  tradeoff
 
between good structure and good performance.  Further, the single factor
 
which most strongly determines how well this conflict can be resolved is
 
not the protocol but the operating system.

                                   2
 
 
     2.  Efficiency Considerations
 
 
     There  are  many aspects to efficiency.  One aspect is sending data
 
at minimum transmission cost, which  is  a  critical  aspect  of  common
 
carrier  communications,  if  not  in local area network communications.
 
Another aspect is sending data at a high rate, which may not be possible
 
at all if the net is very slow, but which may be the one central  design
 
constraint when taking advantage of a local net with high raw bandwidth.
 
The  final  consideration is doing the above with minimum expenditure of
 
computer resources.  This last may be necessary to achieve  high  speed,
 
but  in  the  case  of  the  slow  net may be important only in that the
 
resources used up, for example  cpu  cycles,  are  costly  or  otherwise
 
needed.    It  is  worth  pointing  out that these different goals often
 
conflict; for example it is often possible to trade off efficient use of
 
the computer against efficient use of the network.  Thus, there  may  be
 
no such thing as a successful general purpose protocol implementation.
 
 
     The simplest measure of performance is throughput, measured in bits
 
per second.  It is worth doing a few simple computations in order to get
 
a  feeling for the magnitude of the problems involved.  Assume that data
 
is being sent from one machine to another in packets of 576  bytes,  the
 
maximum  generally acceptable internet packet size.  Allowing for header
 
overhead, this packet size permits 4288 bits  in  each  packet.    If  a
 
useful  throughput  of  10,000  bits  per second is desired, then a data
 
bearing packet must leave the sending host about every 430 milliseconds,
 
a little over two per second.  This is clearly not difficult to achieve.
 
However, if one wishes to achieve 100 kilobits  per  second  throughput,

                                   3
 
 
the packet must leave the host every 43 milliseconds, and to achieve one
 
megabit  per  second,  which  is not at all unreasonable on a high-speed
 
local net, the packets must be spaced no more than 4.3 milliseconds.
 
 
     These latter numbers are a slightly more alarming goal for which to
 
set one's sights.  Many operating systems take a substantial fraction of
 
a millisecond just to service an interrupt.  If the  protocol  has  been
 
structured  as  a  process,  it  is  necessary  to  go through a process
 
scheduling before the protocol code can even begin to run.  If any piece
 
of a protocol package or its data must be fetched from disk,  real  time
 
delays  of  between  30  to  100  milliseconds  can be expected.  If the
 
protocol must compete for cpu resources  with  other  processes  of  the
 
system,  it  may  be  necessary  to wait a scheduling quantum before the
 
protocol can run.   Many  systems  have  a  scheduling  quantum  of  100
 
milliseconds  or  more.   Considering these sorts of numbers, it becomes
 
immediately clear that the protocol must be fitted  into  the  operating
 
system  in  a  thorough  and  effective  manner  if  any like reasonable
 
throughput is to be achieved.
 
 
     There is one obvious conclusion immediately suggested by even  this
 
simple  analysis.    Except  in  very  special  circumstances, when many
 
packets are being processed at once, the cost of processing a packet  is
 
dominated  by  factors, such as cpu scheduling, which are independent of
 
the  packet  size.    This  suggests  two  general   rules   which   any
 
implementation  ought  to  obey.    First,  send  data in large packets.
 
Obviously, if processing time per packet is a constant, then  throughput
 
will be directly proportional to the packet size.  Second, never send an

                                   4
 
 
unneeded  packet.    Unneeded packets use up just as many resources as a
 
packet full of data, but perform no useful function.  RFC  813,  "Window
 
and  Acknowledgement  Strategy in TCP", discusses one aspect of reducing
 
the number of packets sent per useful data byte.    This  document  will
 
mention other attacks on the same problem.
 
 
     The  above  analysis  suggests that there are two main parts to the
 
problem of achieving good protocol performance.  The  first  has  to  do
 
with  how  the  protocol  implementation  is  integrated  into  the host
 
operating system.  The second has to do with how  the  protocol  package
 
itself  is  organized  internally.   This document will consider each of
 
these topics in turn.
 
 
     3.  The Protocol vs. the Operating System
 
 
     There are normally three reasonable ways in which to add a protocol
 
to an operating system.  The protocol  can  be  in  a  process  that  is
 
provided by the operating system, or it can be part of the kernel of the
 
operating  system  itself, or it can be put in a separate communications
 
processor or front end machine.  This decision is strongly influenced by
 
details of hardware architecture and operating system  design;  each  of
 
these three approaches has its own advantages and disadvantages.
 
 
     The  "process"  is the abstraction which most operating systems use
 
to provide the execution environment for user programs.  A  very  simple
 
path  for  implementing  a  protocol  is  to  obtain  a process from the
 
operating  system  and  implement   the   protocol   to   run   in   it.
 
Superficially,  this  approach  has  a  number  of  advantages.    Since

                                   5
 
 
modifications  to  the  kernel  are not required, the job can be done by
 
someone who is not an expert in the kernel structure.  Since it is often
 
impossible to find somebody who is experienced both in the structure  of
 
the  operating system and the structure of the protocol, this path, from
 
a management point of view, is often extremely appealing. Unfortunately,
 
putting a protocol in a process has a number of  disadvantages,  related
 
to  both  structure  and  performance.    First, as was discussed above,
 
process scheduling can be  a  significant  source  of  real-time  delay.
 
There  is  not  only the actual cost of going through the scheduler, but
 
the problem that the operating system may not have  the  right  sort  of
 
priority  tools  to  bring  the  process into execution quickly whenever
 
there is work to be done.
 
 
     Structurally, the difficulty with putting a protocol in  a  process
 
is  that  the protocol may be providing services, for example support of
 
data streams, which are normally obtained by  going  to  special  kernel
 
entry  points.   Depending on the generality of the operating system, it
 
may be impossible to take a  program  which  is  accustomed  to  reading
 
through  a kernel entry point, and redirect it so it is reading the data
 
from a process.  The most extreme example of this  problem  occurs  when
 
implementing  server  telnet.  In almost all systems, the device handler
 
for the locally attached teletypes is located  inside  the  kernel,  and
 
programs  read and write from their teletype by making kernel calls.  If
 
server telnet is implemented in a process, it is then necessary to  take
 
the  data  streams  provided  by server telnet and somehow get them back
 
down inside the kernel so that they  mimic  the  interface  provided  by
 
local   teletypes.     It  is  usually  the  case  that  special  kernel

                                   6
 
 
modification  is  necessary  to  achieve  this structure, which somewhat
 
defeats the benefit of having removed the protocol from  the  kernel  in
 
the first place.
 
 
     Clearly, then, there are advantages to putting the protocol package
 
in  the kernel.  Structurally, it is reasonable to view the network as a
 
device, and device drivers are traditionally contained  in  the  kernel.
 
Presumably,  the  problems  associated  with  process  scheduling can be
 
sidesteped, at least to a certain extent, by placing the code inside the
 
kernel.  And it is obviously easier to make the server  telnet  channels
 
mimic  the local teletype channels if they are both realized in the same
 
level in the kernel.
 
 
     However, implementation of protocols in the kernel has its own  set
 
of  pitfalls.    First, network protocols have a characteristic which is
 
shared by almost no other device:  they require rather  complex  actions
 
to  be  performed  as  a  result  of  a  timeout.  The problem with this
 
requirement is that the kernel often has no facility by which a  program
 
can  be  brought into execution as a result of the timer event.  What is
 
really needed, of course, is  a  special  sort  of  process  inside  the
 
kernel.    Most  systems  lack  this  mechanism.  Failing that, the only
 
execution mechanism available is to run at interrupt time.
 
 
     There are substantial drawbacks to implementing a protocol  to  run
 
at interrupt time.  First, the actions performed may be somewhat complex
 
and  time  consuming,  compared  to  the maximum amount of time that the
 
operating system is prepared to spend servicing an interrupt.   Problems
 
can  arise  if interrupts are masked for too long.  This is particularly

                                   7
 
 
bad  when running as a result of a clock interrupt, which can imply that
 
the clock interrupt is masked.  Second, the environment provided  by  an
 
interrupt  handler  is  usually  extremely  primitive  compared  to  the
 
environment of a process.    There  are  usually  a  variety  of  system
 
facilities  which are unavailable while running in an interrupt handler.
 
The most important of these is the ability to suspend execution  pending
 
the  arrival  of some event or message.  It is a cardinal rule of almost
 
every known operating system that one  must  not  invoke  the  scheduler
 
while  running  in  an  interrupt  handler.  Thus, the programmer who is
 
forced to implement all or part of his protocol package as an  interrupt
 
handler  must  be  the  best  sort  of  expert  in  the operating system
 
involved, and must be prepared  for  development  sessions  filled  with
 
obscure  bugs  which  crash not just the protocol package but the entire
 
operating system.
 
 
     A final problem with processing  at  interrupt  time  is  that  the
 
system  scheduler has no control over the percentage of system time used
 
by the protocol handler.  If a large number of packets  arrive,  from  a
 
foreign  host that is either malfunctioning or fast, all of the time may
 
be spent in the interrupt handler, effectively killing the system.
 
 
     There are other problems associated with putting protocols into  an
 
operating system kernel.  The simplest problem often encountered is that
 
the  kernel  address space is simply too small to hold the piece of code
 
in question.  This is a rather artificial sort of problem, but it  is  a
 
severe  problem  none  the  less in many machines.  It is an appallingly
 
unpleasant experience to do an implementation with  the  knowledge  that

                                   8
 
 
for  every  byte  of new feature put in one must find some other byte of
 
old feature to throw out.  It is hopeless to  expect  an  effective  and
 
general  implementation  under this kind of constraint.  Another problem
 
is that the protocol package, once it  is  thoroughly  entwined  in  the
 
operating  system, may need to be redone every time the operating system
 
changes.  If the protocol and the operating system are not maintained by
 
the same group,  this  makes  maintenance  of  the  protocol  package  a
 
perpetual headache.
 
 
     The  third  option  for  protocol  implementation  is  to  take the
 
protocol package and move it outside  the  machine  entirely,  on  to  a
 
separate  processor  dedicated  to this kind of task.  Such a machine is
 
often described as a communications processor or a front-end  processor.
 
There  are  several  advantages  to this approach.  First, the operating
 
system on the communications processor can  be  tailored  for  precisely
 
this  kind  of  task.  This makes the job of implementation much easier.
 
Second, one does not need to redo the task for every  machine  to  which
 
the  protocol  is  to  be  added.   It may be possible to reuse the same
 
front-end machine on different host computers.  Since the task need  not
 
be  done as many times, one might hope that more attention could be paid
 
to doing it right.  Given a careful  implementation  in  an  environment
 
which  is  optimized for this kind of task, the resulting package should
 
turn out to be very efficient.  Unfortunately, there are  also  problems
 
with this approach.  There is, of course, a financial problem associated
 
with  buying  an  additional  computer.    In  many cases, this is not a
 
problem at all since  the  cost  is  negligible  compared  to  what  the
 
programmer  would  cost  to  do  the  job in the mainframe itself.  More

                                   9
 
 
fundamentally, the communications processor approach does not completely
 
sidestep  any  of  the  problems  raised  above.  The reason is that the
 
communications processor, since  it  is  a  separate  machine,  must  be
 
attached  to  the mainframe by some mechanism.  Whatever that mechanism,
 
code is required in the mainframe to deal with it.   It  can  be  argued
 
that  the  program  to deal with the communications processor is simpler
 
than the program to implement the entire protocol package.  Even if that
 
is so,  the  communications  processor  interface  package  is  still  a
 
protocol in nature, with all of the same structural problems.  Thus, all
 
of  the  issues  raised above must still be faced.  In addition to those
 
problems, there are some other, more subtle problems associated with  an
 
outboard implementation of a protocol.  We will return to these problems
 
later.
 
 
     There  is  a  way  of  attaching  a  communications  processor to a
 
mainframe host which  sidesteps  all  of  the  mainframe  implementation
 
problems, which is to use some preexisting interface on the host machine
 
as  the  port  by  which  a  communications processor is attached.  This
 
strategy is often used as a last stage of desperation when the  software
 
on  the host computer is so intractable that it cannot be changed in any
 
way.  Unfortunately, it is almost inevitably the case that  all  of  the
 
available  interfaces  are  totally  unsuitable for this purpose, so the
 
result is unsatisfactory at best.  The most common  way  in  which  this
 
form  of attachment occurs is when a network connection is being used to
 
mimic local teletypes.  In this case, the  front-end  processor  can  be
 
attached  to  the mainframe by simply providing a number of wires out of
 
the front-end processor, each corresponding to a connection,  which  are

                                   10
 
 
plugged  into teletype ports on the mainframe computer.  (Because of the
 
appearance  of  the  physical  configuration  which  results  from  this
 
arrangement,  Michael  Padlipsky  has  described  this  as  the "milking
 
machine" approach to computer networking.)   This  strategy  solves  the
 
immediate  problem  of  providing  remote  access  to  a host, but it is
 
extremely inflexible.  The channels  being  provided  to  the  host  are
 
restricted  by  the host software to one purpose only, remote login.  It
 
is impossible to use them for any other purpose, such as  file  transfer
 
or  sending mail, so the host is integrated into the network environment
 
in an extremely limited and inflexible manner.  If this is the best that
 
can be done, then it  should  be  tolerated.    Otherwise,  implementors
 
should be strongly encouraged to take a more flexible approach.
 
 
     4.  Protocol Layering
 
 
     The  previous  discussion suggested that there was a decision to be
 
made as to where a protocol ought to  be  implemented.    In  fact,  the
 
decision  is  much  more  complicated  than that, for the goal is not to
 
implement a single protocol, but to implement a whole family of protocol
 
layers, starting with a device driver or local  network  driver  at  the
 
bottom,  then  IP  and  TCP,  and  eventually  reaching  the application
 
specific protocol, such as Telnet, FTP and SMTP on the  top.    Clearly,
 
the bottommost of these layers is somewhere within the kernel, since the
 
physical  device  driver for the net is almost inevitably located there.
 
Equally clearly, the top layers of this package, which provide the  user
 
his  ability  to  perform the remote login function or to send mail, are
 
not entirely contained within the kernel.  Thus,  the  question  is  not

                                   11
 
 
whether  the  protocol family shall be inside or outside the kernel, but
 
how it shall be sliced in two between that part  inside  and  that  part
 
outside.
 
 
     Since  protocols  come  nicely layered, an obvious proposal is that
 
one of the layer interfaces should be the point at which the inside  and
 
outside components are sliced apart.  Most systems have been implemented
 
in  this  way,  and  many have been made to work quite effectively.  One
 
obvious place to slice is at the upper interface  of  TCP.    Since  TCP
 
provides  a  bidirectional byte stream, which is somewhat similar to the
 
I/O facility provided by most operating systems, it is possible to  make
 
the  interface  to  TCP  almost  mimic  the  interface to other existing
 
devices.  Except in the matter of opening a connection, and dealing with
 
peculiar failures, the software using TCP need not know  that  it  is  a
 
network connection, rather than a local I/O stream that is providing the
 
communications  function.  This approach does put TCP inside the kernel,
 
which raises all the problems addressed  above.    It  also  raises  the
 
problem that the interface to the IP layer can, if the programmer is not
 
careful,  become  excessively  buried  inside  the  kernel.   It must be
 
remembered that things other than TCP are expected to run on top of  IP.
 
The  IP interface must be made accessible, even if TCP sits on top of it
 
inside the kernel.
 
 
     Another obvious place to slice is above Telnet.  The  advantage  of
 
slicing  above  Telnet  is  that  it solves the problem of having remote
 
login channels emulate local teletype channels.    The  disadvantage  of
 
putting  Telnet into the kernel is that the amount of code which has now

                                   12
 
 
been  included  there  is  getting  remarkably  large.    In  some early
 
implementations, the size of the  network  package,  when  one  includes
 
protocols  at  the  level  of Telnet, rivals the size of the rest of the
 
supervisor.  This leads to vague feelings that all is not right.
 
 
     Any attempt to slice through a lower layer  boundary,  for  example
 
between  internet  and  TCP,  reveals  one fundamental problem.  The TCP
 
layer, as well as the IP layer, performs a  demultiplexing  function  on
 
incoming  datagrams.   Until the TCP header has been examined, it is not
 
possible to know for which  user  the  packet  is  ultimately  destined.
 
Therefore,  if  TCP,  as  a  whole,  is  moved outside the kernel, it is
 
necessary to create one separate process called the TCP  process,  which
 
performs  the TCP multiplexing function, and probably all of the rest of
 
TCP processing as well.  This means that incoming data  destined  for  a
 
user  process  involves  not  just a scheduling of the user process, but
 
scheduling the TCP process first.
 
 
     This suggests an  alternative  structuring  strategy  which  slices
 
through  the  protocols,  not  along  an established layer boundary, but
 
along a functional boundary having to do with demultiplexing.   In  this
 
approach, certain parts of IP and certain parts of TCP are placed in the
 
kernel.    The amount of code placed there is sufficient so that when an
 
incoming datagram arrives, it is possible to know for which process that
 
datagram is ultimately destined.  The datagram is then  routed  directly
 
to  the  final  process,  where  additional  IP  and  TCP  processing is
 
performed on it.  This removes from the kernel any requirement for timer
 
based actions, since they can be done by the  process  provided  by  the

                                   13
 
 
user.    This  structure  has  the  additional advantage of reducing the
 
amount of code required in the  kernel,  so  that  it  is  suitable  for
 
systems where kernel space is at a premium.  The RFC 814, titled "Names,
 
Addresses,  Ports, and Routes," discusses this rather orthogonal slicing
 
strategy in more detail.
 
 
     A related discussion of protocol layering and multiplexing  can  be
 
found in Cohen and Postel [1].
 
 
     5.  Breaking Down the Barriers
 
 
     In  fact, the implementor should be sensitive to the possibility of
 
even more  peculiar  slicing  strategies  in  dividing  up  the  various
 
protocol  layers  between the kernel and the one or more user processes.
 
The result of the strategy proposed above was that part  of  TCP  should
 
execute  in  the process of the user.  In other words, instead of having
 
one TCP process for the system, there is one TCP process per connection.
 
Given this architecture, it is not longer necessary to imagine that  all
 
of  the  TCPs  are  identical.    One  TCP  could  be optimized for high
 
throughput applications, such as file transfer.  Another  TCP  could  be
 
optimized  for small low delay applications such as Telnet.  In fact, it
 
would be possible to produce a TCP which was  somewhat  integrated  with
 
the  Telnet  or  FTP  on  top  of  it.  Such an integration is extremely
 
important,  for  it  can  lead  to  a  kind  of  efficiency  which  more
 
traditional  structures are incapable of producing.  Earlier, this paper
 
pointed out that one of the important rules to achieving efficiency  was
 
to  send  the minimum number of packets for a given amount of data.  The
 
idea of protocol layering interacts very strongly (and poorly) with this

                                   14
 
 
goal,  because  independent  layers  have  independent  ideas about when
 
packets should be sent, and unless these layers can somehow  be  brought
 
into  cooperation,  additional  packets  will flow.  The best example of
 
this is the operation of server telnet in a character at a  time  remote
 
echo  mode  on top of TCP.  When a packet containing a character arrives
 
at a server host, each layer has a different response  to  that  packet.
 
TCP  has  an obligation to acknowledge the packet.  Either server telnet
 
or the application layer above has an obligation to echo  the  character
 
received  in the packet.  If the character is a Telnet control sequence,
 
then Telnet has additional actions which it must perform in response  to
 
the  packet.    The  result  of  this,  in most implementations, is that
 
several packets are sent back in response to the  one  arriving  packet.
 
Combining  all of these return messages into one packet is important for
 
several reasons.  First, of course, it reduces  the  number  of  packets
 
being sent over the net, which directly reduces the charges incurred for
 
many common carrier tariff structures.  Second, it reduces the number of
 
scheduling  actions  which  will  occur inside both hosts, which, as was
 
discussed above, is extremely important in improving throughput.
 
 
     The way to achieve this goal of packet sharing is to break down the
 
barrier between the layers of the protocols, in a  very  restrained  and
 
careful  manner, so that a limited amount of information can leak across
 
the barrier to enable one layer to optimize its behavior with respect to
 
the desires of the layers above and below it.   For  example,  it  would
 
represent  an  improvement  if TCP, when it received a packet, could ask
 
the layer above whether or not it would  be  worth  pausing  for  a  few
 
milliseconds  before  sending  an acknowledgement in order to see if the

                                   15
 
 
upper  layer  would  have  any  outgoing  data to send.  Dallying before
 
sending  the  acknowledgement  produces  precisely  the  right  sort  of
 
optimization  if  the client of TCP is server Telnet.  However, dallying
 
before sending an acknowledgement is absolutely unacceptable if  TCP  is
 
being used for file transfer, for in file transfer there is almost never
 
data  flowing  in  the  reverse  direction, and the delay in sending the
 
acknowledgement probably translates directly into a delay  in  obtaining
 
the  next  packets.  Thus, TCP must know a little about the layers above
 
it to adjust its performance as needed.
 
 
     It would be possible to imagine a general  purpose  TCP  which  was
 
equipped  with  all  sorts of special mechanisms by which it would query
 
the layer above and modify its behavior accordingly.  In the  structures
 
suggested above, in which there is not one but several TCPs, the TCP can
 
simply  be modified so that it produces the correct behavior as a matter
 
of course.  This structure has  the  disadvantage  that  there  will  be
 
several  implementations  of TCP existing on a single machine, which can
 
mean more maintenance headaches if a problem is found where TCP needs to
 
be changed.  However, it is probably the case that each of the TCPs will
 
be substantially simpler  than  the  general  purpose  TCP  which  would
 
otherwise  have  been  built.    There  are  some  experimental projects
 
currently under way which suggest that this approach may make  designing
 
of  a  TCP, or almost any other layer, substantially easier, so that the
 
total effort involved in bringing up a complete package is actually less
 
if this approach is followed.  This approach is by  no  means  generally
 
accepted, but deserves some consideration.

                                   16
 
 
     The  general conclusion to be drawn from this sort of consideration
 
is that a layer boundary has both a benefit and a penalty.    A  visible
 
layer  boundary,  with  a  well  specified interface, provides a form of
 
isolation between two layers which allows one to  be  changed  with  the
 
confidence  that  the  other  one  will  not  stop  working as a result.
 
However, a firm layer boundary almost inevitably  leads  to  inefficient
 
operation.    This  can  easily be seen by analogy with other aspects of
 
operating systems.  Consider, for example,  file  systems.    A  typical
 
operating  system  provides  a file system, which is a highly abstracted
 
representation of a disk.   The  interface  is  highly  formalized,  and
 
presumed  to  be highly stable.  This makes it very easy for naive users
 
to have access to  disks  without  having  to  write  a  great  deal  of
 
software.  The existence of a file system is clearly beneficial.  On the
 
other  hand,  it is clear that the restricted interface to a file system
 
almost inevitably leads to inefficiency.  If the interface is  organized
 
as  a  sequential read and write of bytes, then there will be people who
 
wish to do high throughput transfers who cannot achieve their goal.   If
 
the  interface  is  a  virtual  memory  interface, then other users will
 
regret the necessity of building a byte stream interface on top  of  the
 
memory  mapped file.  The most objectionable inefficiency results when a
 
highly sophisticated package, such as a data  base  management  package,
 
must  be  built  on  top  of  an  existing  operating  system.    Almost
 
inevitably, the implementors of the database system  attempt  to  reject
 
the  file  system  and  obtain  direct  access  to the disks.  They have
 
sacrificed modularity for efficiency.
 
 
     The same conflict appears in networking, in a rather extreme  form.

                                   17
 
 
The concept of a protocol is still unknown and frightening to most naive
 
programmers.   The idea that they might have to implement a protocol, or
 
even part of a protocol, as part  of  some  application  package,  is  a
 
dreadful thought.  And thus there is great pressure to hide the function
 
of  the  net behind a very hard barrier.  On the other hand, the kind of
 
inefficiency which results from this is a particularly undesirable  sort
 
of  inefficiency, for it shows up, among other things, in increasing the
 
cost of the communications resource used up to achieve  the  application
 
goal.   In cases where one must pay for one's communications costs, they
 
usually turn out to be the dominant cost within the system.  Thus, doing
 
an excessively good job of packaging up the protocols in  an  inflexible
 
manner  has  a  direct  impact  on  increasing  the cost of the critical
 
resource within the system.  This is a dilemma which will probably  only
 
be solved when programmers become somewhat less alarmed about protocols,
 
so that they are willing to weave a certain amount of protocol structure
 
into their application program, much as application programs today weave
 
parts  of  database  management  systems  into  the  structure  of their
 
application program.
 
 
     An extreme example of putting the protocol package  behind  a  firm
 
layer boundary occurs when the protocol package is relegated to a front-
 
end processor.  In this case the interface to the protocol is some other
 
protocol.    It  is  difficult to imagine how to build close cooperation
 
between layers when they are that far separated.  Realistically, one  of
 
the prices which must be associated with an implementation so physically
 
modularized is that the performance will suffer as a result.  Of course,
 
a separate processor for protocols could be very closely integrated into

                                   18
 
 
the  mainframe  architecture, with interprocessor co-ordination signals,
 
shared memory, and similar features.  Such a physical  modularity  might
 
work  very  well,  but  there  is little documented experience with this
 
closely coupled architecture for protocol support.
 
 
     6.  Efficiency of Protocol Processing
 
 
     To this point, this document has considered how a protocol  package
 
should  be  broken  into  modules,  and  how  those  modules  should  be
 
distributed between free standing machines, the operating system kernel,
 
and one or more user processes.  It is now time to  consider  the  other
 
half  of the efficiency question, which is what can be done to speed the
 
execution of those programs that actually implement the protocols.    We
 
will make some specific observations about TCP and IP, and then conclude
 
with a few generalities.
 
 
     IP  is a simple protocol, especially with respect to the processing
 
of  normal  packets,  so  it  should  be  easy  to  get  it  to  perform
 
efficiently.    The only area of any complexity related to actual packet
 
processing has to do with fragmentation and reassembly.  The  reader  is
 
referred  to  RFC  815,  titled "IP Datagram Reassembly Algorithms", for
 
specific consideration of this point.
 
 
     Most costs in the IP layer come from table look  up  functions,  as
 
opposed to packet processing functions.  An outgoing packet requires two
 
translation  functions  to  be  performed.  The internet address must be
 
translated to a target gateway, and a gateway address must be translated
 
to a local network number (if the host is  attached  to  more  than  one

                                   19
 
 
network).    It  is easy to build a simple implementation of these table
 
look up functions that in fact performs very  poorly.    The  programmer
 
should  keep  in  mind  that  there may be as many as a thousand network
 
numbers in a typical configuration.   Linear  searching  of  a  thousand
 
entry table on every packet is extremely unsuitable.  In fact, it may be
 
worth  asking  TCP  to  cache  a  hint for each connection, which can be
 
handed down to IP each time a packet  is  sent,  to  try  to  avoid  the
 
overhead of a table look up.
 
 
     TCP   is   a   more   complex  protocol,  and  presents  many  more
 
opportunities for getting things wrong.  There  is  one  area  which  is
 
generally  accepted  as  causing  noticeable and substantial overhead as
 
part of TCP processing.  This is computation of the checksum.  It  would
 
be  nice  if this cost could be avoided somehow, but the idea of an end-
 
to-end checksum is absolutely central to the functioning  of  TCP.    No
 
host  implementor  should think of omitting the validation of a checksum
 
on incoming data.
 
 
     Various clever tricks have been used to try to minimize the cost of
 
computing the checksum.  If it is possible to add additional  microcoded
 
instructions  to the machine, a checksum instruction is the most obvious
 
candidate.  Since computing the checksum involves picking up every  byte
 
of the segment and examining it, it is possible to combine the operation
 
of computing the checksum with the operation of copying the segment from
 
one  location  to  another.   Since a number of data copies are probably
 
already required as part of  the  processing  structure,  this  kind  of
 
sharing might conceivably pay off if it didn't cause too much trouble to

                                   20
 
 
the  modularity  of  the  program.  Finally, computation of the checksum
 
seems to be one place where careful attention  to  the  details  of  the
 
algorithm  used  can  make a drastic difference in the throughput of the
 
program.  The Multics system provides one of the best  case  studies  of
 
this,  since  Multics  is  about  as  poorly  organized  to perform this
 
function as any machine implementing TCP.   Multics  is  a  36-bit  word
 
machine,  with  four 9-bit bytes per word.  The eight-bit bytes of a TCP
 
segment are laid down packed in memory, ignoring word boundaries.   This
 
means  that  when it is necessary to pick up the data as a set of 16-bit
 
units for the purpose of adding  them  to  compute  checksums,  horrible
 
masking  and  shifting  is  required  for  each  16-bit value.  An early
 
version of a program using this  strategy  required  6  milliseconds  to
 
checksum  a  576-byte  segment.    Obviously,  at  this  point, checksum
 
computation was becoming the central bottleneck to throughput.   A  more
 
careful  recoding of this algorithm reduced the checksum processing time
 
to less than one millisecond.  The strategy used  was  extremely  dirty.
 
It  involved adding up carefully selected words of the area in which the
 
data lay, knowing that for those particular  words,  the  16-bit  values
 
were  properly  aligned  inside  the words.  Only after the addition had
 
been done were the various sums shifted, and finally  added  to  produce
 
the  eventual  checksum.  This kind of highly specialized programming is
 
probably not acceptable if used everywhere within an  operating  system.
 
It is clearly appropriate for one highly localized function which can be
 
clearly identified as an extreme performance bottleneck.
 
 
     Another area of TCP processing which may cause performance problems
 
is the overhead of examining all of the possible flags and options which

                                   21
 
 
occur in each incoming packet.  One paper, by Bunch and Day [2], asserts
 
that  the  overhead of packet header processing is actually an important
 
limiting  factor  in  throughput  computation.    Not  all   measurement
 
experiments  have  tended to support this result.  To whatever extent it
 
is true, however, there is an obvious  strategy  which  the  implementor
 
ought  to  use in designing his program.  He should build his program to
 
optimize the expected case.  It is easy, especially when first designing
 
a program, to pay equal attention to all of  the  possible  outcomes  of
 
every test.  In practice, however, few of these will ever happen.  A TCP
 
should  be  built  on the assumption that the next packet to arrive will
 
have absolutely nothing special about it,  and  will  be  the  next  one
 
expected  in  the  sequence  space.   One or two tests are sufficient to
 
determine that the expected set of control flags are on.  (The ACK  flag
 
should be on; the Push flag may or may not be on.  No other flags should
 
be on.)  One test is sufficient to determine that the sequence number of
 
the  incoming  packet  is  one  greater  than  the  last sequence number
 
received.  In almost every case, that will be the actual result.  Again,
 
using the Multics system as an example, failure to optimize the case  of
 
receiving  the  expected  sequence number had a detectable effect on the
 
performance of the system.  The particular problem arose when  a  number
 
of  packets  arrived  at  once.    TCP attempted to process all of these
 
packets before awaking the user.  As a result,  by  the  time  the  last
 
packet  arrived,  there was a threaded list of packets which had several
 
items on it.  When a new packet arrived, the list was searched  to  find
 
the  location  into which the packet should be inserted.  Obviously, the
 
list should be searched from highest sequence number to lowest  sequence

                                   22
 
 
number,  because  one is expecting to receive a packet which comes after
 
those already received.  By mistake, the list was searched from front to
 
back, starting with the packets with the lowest sequence  number.    The
 
amount of time spent searching this list backwards was easily detectable
 
in the metering measurements.
 
 
     Other data structures can be organized to optimize the action which
 
is  normally  taken  on  them.  For example, the retransmission queue is
 
very seldom actually used  for  retransmission,  so  it  should  not  be
 
organized  to  optimize that action.  In fact, it should be organized to
 
optimized the discarding of things  from  it  when  the  acknowledgement
 
arrives.    In many cases, the easiest way to do this is not to save the
 
packet  at  all,  but  to  reconstruct  it  only  if  it  needs  to   be
 
retransmitted,  starting  from the data as it was originally buffered by
 
the user.
 
 
     There is another generality, at least as  important  as  optimizing
 
the  common  case,  which  is  to avoid copying data any more times than
 
necessary.  One more result from the Multics TCP may prove  enlightening
 
here.    Multics takes between two and three milliseconds within the TCP
 
layer to process an incoming packet, depending on its size.  For a  576-
 
byte packet, the three milliseconds is used up approximately as follows.
 
One   millisecond   is   used  computing  the  checksum.    Six  hundred
 
microseconds is spent copying the data.  (The data is copied  twice,  at
 
.3  milliseconds  a copy.)  One of those copy operations could correctly
 
be included as part of the checksum cost, since it is done  to  get  the
 
data  on  a  known  word  boundary  to  optimize the checksum algorithm.

                                   23
 
 
However,  the  copy also performs another necessary transfer at the same
 
time.  Header processing and packet resequencing takes .7  milliseconds.
 
The  rest  of  the  time  is  used  in miscellaneous processing, such as
 
removing packets from the retransmission queue which are acknowledged by
 
this packet.  Data copying is the second most expensive single operation
 
after data checksuming.   Some  implementations,  often  because  of  an
 
excessively  layered  modularity, end up copying the data around a great
 
deal.  Other implementations end up copying the data because there is no
 
shared memory between processes, and the data must be moved from process
 
to process via a kernel operation.  Unless the amount of  this  activity
 
is  kept  strictly  under  control,  it  will  quickly  become the major
 
performance bottleneck.
 
 
     7.  Conclusions
 
 
     This document has addressed two aspects  of  obtaining  performance
 
from a protocol implementation, the way in which the protocol is layered
 
and  integrated  into  the  operating  system,  and the way in which the
 
detailed handling of the packet is optimized.  It would be nice  if  one
 
or  the  other  of these costs would completely dominate, so that all of
 
one's attention could be concentrated there.  Regrettably, this  is  not
 
so.    Depending  on  the particular sort of traffic one is getting, for
 
example, whether Telnet one-byte packets or file transfer  maximum  size
 
packets  at  maximum  speed, one can expect to see one or the other cost
 
being the major bottleneck to throughput.  Most  implementors  who  have
 
studied  their  programs  in  an  attempt to find out where the time was
 
going have reached  the  unsatisfactory  conclusion  that  it  is  going

                                   24
 
 
equally  to  all parts of their program.  With the possible exception of
 
checksum  processing,  very  few  people  have  ever  found  that  their
 
performance  problems  were  due  to a single, horrible bottleneck which
 
they could fix by a single stroke of inventive programming.  Rather, the
 
performance was something which was improved by  painstaking  tuning  of
 
the entire program.
 
 
     Most  discussions  of protocols begin by introducing the concept of
 
layering, which tends  to  suggest  that  layering  is  a  fundamentally
 
wonderful  idea  which  should  be  a  part  of  every  consideration of
 
protocols.  In fact, layering is a mixed blessing.    Clearly,  a  layer
 
interface  is  necessary  whenever  more than one client of a particular
 
layer is to be allowed to use  that  same  layer.    But  an  interface,
 
precisely  because  it  is fixed, inevitably leads to a lack of complete
 
understanding as to what one layer wishes to obtain from another.   This
 
has to lead to inefficiency.  Furthermore, layering is a potential snare
 
in  that  one  is  tempted  to think that a layer boundary, which was an
 
artifact of the specification procedure, is in fact the proper  boundary
 
to  use in modularizing the implementation.  Again, in certain cases, an
 
architected layer must correspond to an implemented layer, precisely  so
 
that  several  clients  can  have  access  to that layer in a reasonably
 
straightforward manner.  In other cases, cunning  rearrangement  of  the
 
implemented  module  boundaries to match with various functions, such as
 
the demultiplexing of incoming packets, or the sending  of  asynchronous
 
outgoing  packets,  can  lead  to  unexpected  performance  improvements
 
compared to more traditional implementation strategies.   Finally,  good
 
performance is something which is difficult to retrofit onto an existing

                                   25
 
 
program.   Since performance is influenced, not just by the fine detail,
 
but by the gross structure, it is sometimes the case that  in  order  to
 
obtain  a  substantial  performance  improvement,  it  is  necessary  to
 
completely redo the program from  the  bottom  up.    This  is  a  great
 
disappointment   to  programmers,  especially  those  doing  a  protocol
 
implementation for  the  first  time.    Programmers  who  are  somewhat
 
inexperienced  and  unfamiliar with protocols are sufficiently concerned
 
with getting their program logically correct that they do not  have  the
 
capacity  to  think  at  the  same  time  about  the  performance of the
 
structure they are building.  Only after they have achieved a  logically
 
correct  program  do they discover that they have done so in a way which
 
has precluded real performance.  Clearly, it is more difficult to design
 
a program thinking from the start about  both  logical  correctness  and
 
performance.  With time, as implementors as a group learn more about the
 
appropriate  structures  to  use  for  building  protocols,  it  will be
 
possible  to  proceed  with  an  implementation  project   having   more
 
confidence  that  the structure is rational, that the program will work,
 
and that the program will work well.    Those  of  us  now  implementing
 
protocols  have the privilege of being on the forefront of this learning
 
process.  It should be no surprise that our  programs  sometimes  suffer
 
from the uncertainty we bring to bear on them.

                                   26
 
 
Citations
 
 
     [1]  Cohen  and  Postel,  "On  Protocol  Multiplexing",  Sixth Data
 
Communications Symposium, ACM/IEEE, November 1979.
 
 
     [2] Bunch and Day, "Control Structure Overhead in TCP", Trends  and
 
Applications:  Computer Networking, NBS Symposium, May 1980.