From 6ab1985d6fb7a8fcb68d823e36e839ed431bd663 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Dimitri Staessens Date: Sat, 13 Feb 2021 11:48:24 +0100 Subject: content: Remove why is this better post --- content/en/blog/news/20201024-why-better.md | 119 ---------------------------- 1 file changed, 119 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 content/en/blog/news/20201024-why-better.md (limited to 'content/en/blog') diff --git a/content/en/blog/news/20201024-why-better.md b/content/en/blog/news/20201024-why-better.md deleted file mode 100644 index 5f9c173..0000000 --- a/content/en/blog/news/20201024-why-better.md +++ /dev/null @@ -1,119 +0,0 @@ ---- -date: 2020-10-24 -title: "Why is this better than IP?" -linkTitle: "Why is this better than IP?" -description: "The problem with the Internet isn't that it's -wrong, it's that it's almost right. -- John Day" -author: Dimitri Staessens ---- - -With the COVID-19 pandemic raging on at its current peak all over the -world, it has been a weird couple of months for most of us. In the -last few weeks I did a first implementation of the missing part of the -FRCP protocol (retransmission and flow control, fragmentation is still -needed), and I hope to get congestion control done by the end of the -year, which is very needed because with the retransmission the -prototype experiences congestion collapse on a bottleneck caused by -the bandwidth of the shared memory allocator we implemented. Then I -can finally get rid of the many annoying bugs, stabilize the -prototype, and then implement a better allocator. But this is not the -main thing I wanted to adress. - -I've also been pondering the question I always get from network -engineers. It's the one that annoys me the most, because it seems that -first this question needs to be answered for the questioner to even -consider taking any attempt or spending any effort in trying to -understand the body of work presented. This question is, of course, -*Why is this better than IP?* - -Now,there are two things we did when building Ouroboros. The most -visible is the prototype implementation, but behind it is a network -model. This network model is not some arbitrary engineering excercise, -we tried to find the minimum *required and sufficient conditions* for -networking, mathematically. In this sense -- under the precondition -that the model is correct[^2] -- every working network has to fulfill -the model, like it or not. It's not a choice one can take or -leave. I'll try to find more time (and to be perfectly honest: the -motivation) in the next couple of weeks to get this aspect across with -more clarity and precision than with which it is currently presented -in the [paper](https://arxiv.org/pdf/2001.09707.pdf). - -Now, I would argue that the current Internet with all its technologies -(TCP/IP, VPNs, MPLS, QUIC, ...) is closer to the model we derived than -it is to the 7-layer-model. NASA's -[DTNs](https://www.nasa.gov/content/dtn) don't violate the -model[^1]. RINA is of course very close to the model, as it also -predicts the recursive nature of networks. The prototype is an -implementation of the model (and thus in some way, close to a minimal -network). - -While the model predicts recursive layering, it doesn't forbid -engineers to use different APIs for each layer, mix and combine layers -into logical constructs, expose layer internals, rewrite packet -headers, and do whatever they please. It may have economical benefits -for an engineer to put a solution in whatever logical part of the -network, hack in an API to expose what the solution needs and then -sell it. But this engineering comes at the cost of adding complexity -without functionality. - -I'll use an analogy from programming: a simple C for loop uses an -index variable, typically named "i". It is generally seen as bad -practice to modify this index variable inside the loop, something like -this. - -```C -for (int i = 1; i <= 10; ++i) { - if(i == 2) - i = 4; - /* Do some work */ -} -``` - -But is such code "worse" than another solution to skip 2 and 3, such -as this? - -```C -for (int i = 1; i <= 10; ++i) { - if(i == 2 || i == 3) - continue; - /* Do some work */ -} -``` - -The reason it is considered bad practice, is based on years of -programming experience: thousands of programmers noticing that such -constructs often lead to bugs and lower maintainability[^3]. I would -argue that the Internet is full of this kind of bad practices -- it -doesn't take a huge stretch of the imagination to take the example -above as an analogy for Network Address Translation (NAT). Of course, -NAT is probably the only way to stretch the IPv4 address space beyond -its natural limits. But in an ideal networking world (which is our -objective), one shouldn't break end-to-end and consider addresses -immutable. - -And that's why I think Ouroboros is a "good" network model. If the -minimal necessary and sufficient conditions for networking are -understood as a consistent model for networks, we can better assess -where engineering decisions have been made that add complexity without -objectively adding functionality to the whole. Unfortunately, there -aren't many scientists that design networking solutions from the -ground up, so there isn't much experience to go around. - -So then, is Ouroboros better than IP? From an engineering perspective, -maybe not, or not by much. But I'm fine with that, it's not my objective. - -Keep safe social distancing, take care and stay curious. - -Dimitri - -P.S. Of course, I was curious about what the GCC -[compiler](https://godbolt.org) does with the source code examples -above. It does seems like the "better" solution also optimizing a bit -better: - - - - -[^1]: I came across this when thinking about the limits for the timers for retransmission. A DTN is basically two layers, one without retransmission on top of one with retransmission at very long timeouts. -[^2]: Of all the comments from peer review, not a single one has addressed any technical issues -- let alone correctness -- of the model. Most are that I fail to justify why the reviewer should bother to read the article or make an effort to try to understand it as it doesn't fit current engineering workflows and thus has little chance of short-term deployment. Sorry, but I don't care. -[^3]: With modern programming languages leaning more and more towards discouraging mutables alltogether. -- cgit v1.2.3