> On 4 May, 2015, at 13:42, Neil Davies <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> Noting that, delay and loss is, of course, a natural consequence of having a 
> shared medium

Not so.  Delay and loss are inherent to link oversubscription, not to 
contention.  Without ECN, delay is traded off against loss by the size of the 
buffer; a higher loss rate keeps the queue shorter and thus the induced delay 
lower.

You can have just as much delay and loss in a single flow on a dedicated, 
point-to-point, full-duplex link (in other words, one that is *not* a shared 
medium) as on the same link with multiple flows contending for it.

Conversely, we can demonstrate almost zero flow-to-flow induced delay and zero 
loss by adding AQM, FQ and ECN, even in a fairly heavy multi-flow, multi-host 
scenario.

AQM with ECN solves the oversubscription problem (send rates will oscillate 
around the true link rate instead of exceeding it), without causing packet loss 
(because ECN can signal congestion instead), and FQ further reduces the most 
easily perceived delay (ie. flow-to-flow induced) as well as improving fairness.

Of course, loss can also be caused by poor link quality, but that’s an entirely 
separate problem.

 - Jonathan Morton

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