In Toke’s thesis defense, there was an interesting exchange with examination 
committee member Michael (apologies for not catching the last name) regarding 
how the CoDel part of fq_codel helps in the real world:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=upvx6rpSLSw&t=2h16m20s 
<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=upvx6rpSLSw&t=2h16m20s>

My attempt at a transcript is at the end of this message. (I probably won’t 
attempt a full defense transcript, but if someone wants more of a particular 
section I can try. :)

So I just thought to continue the discussion- when does the CoDel part of 
fq_codel actually help in the real world? I’ll speculate with a few 
possibilities:

1) Multiplexed HTTP/2.0 requests containing both a saturating stream and 
interactive traffic. For example, a game that uses HTTP/2.0 to download new map 
data while position updates or chat happen at the same time. Standalone 
programs could use HTTP/2.0 this way, or for web apps, the browser may 
multiplex concurrent uses of XHR over a single TCP connection. I don’t know of 
any examples.

2) SSH with port forwarding while using an interactive terminal together with a 
bulk transfer?

3) Does CoDel help the TCP protocol itself somehow? For example, does it speed 
up the round-trip time when acknowledging data segments, improving behavior on 
lossy links? Similarly, does it speed up the TCP close sequence for saturating 
flows?

Pete

---

M: In fq_codel what is really the point of CoDel?
T: Yeah, uh, a bit better intra-flow latency...
M: Right, who cares about that?
T: Apparently some people do.
M: No I mean specifically, what types of flows care about that?
T: Yeah, so, um, flows that are TCP based or have some kind of- like, elastic 
flows that still want low latency.
M: Elastic flows that are TCP based that want low latency...
T: Things where you want to discover the- like, you want to utilize the full 
link and sort of probe the bandwidth, but you still want low latency.
M: Can you be more concrete what kind of application is that?
T: I, yeah, I…
M: Give me any application example that’s gonna benefit from the CoDel part- 
CoDel bits in fq_codel? Because I have problems with this.
T: I, I do too... So like, you can implement things this way but equivalently 
if you have something like fq_codel you could, like, if you have a video 
streaming application that interleaves control…
M: <inaudible> that runs on UDP often.
T: Yeah, but I, Netflix…
M: Ok that’s a long way… <inaudible>
T: No, I tend to agree with you that, um…
M: Because the biggest issue in my opinion is, is web traffic- for web traffic, 
just giving it a huge queue makes the chance bigger that uh, <inaudible, ed: 
because of the slow start> so you may end up with a (higher) faster completion 
time by buffering a lot. Uh, you’re not benefitting at all by keeping the queue 
very small, you are simply <inaudible> Right, you’re benefitting altogether by 
just <inaudible> which is what the queue does with this nice sparse flow, uh… 
<inaudible>
T: You have the infinite buffers in the <inaudible> for that to work, right. 
One benefit you get from CoDel is that - you screw with things like - you have 
to drop eventually.
M: You should at some point. The chances are bigger that the small flow 
succeeds (if given a huge queue). And, in web surfing, why does that, uh(?)
T: Yeah, mmm...
M: Because that would be an example of something where I care about latency but 
I care about low completion. Other things where I care about latency they often 
don’t send very much. <inaudible...> bursts, you have to accommodate them 
basically. Or you have interactive traffic which is UDP and tries to, often 
react from queueing delay <inaudible>. I’m beginning to suspect that fq minus 
CoDel is really the best <inaudible> out there.
T: But if, yeah, if you have enough buffer.
M: Well, the more the better.
T: Yeah, well.
M: Haha, I got you to say yes. [laughter :] That goes in history. I said the 
more the better and you said yeah.
T: No but like, it goes back to good-queue bad-queue, like, buffering in itself 
has value, you just need to manage it.
M: Ok.
T: Which is also the reason why just having a small queue doesn’t help in 
itself.
M: Right yeah. Uh, I have a silly question about fq_codel, a very silly one and 
there may be something I missed in the papers, probably I did, but I'm I was 
just wondering I mean first of all this is also a bit silly in that <inaudible> 
it’s a security thing, and I think that’s kind of a package by itself silly 
because fq_codel often probably <inaudible> just in principle, is that 
something I could easily attack by creating new flows for every packet?
T: No because, they, you will…
M: With the sparse flows, and it’s gonna…
T: Yeah, but at some point you’re going to go over the threshold, I, you could, 
there there’s this thing where the flow goes in, it’s sparse, it empties out 
and then you put it on the normal round robin implementation before you queue 
<inaudible> And if you don’t do that than you can have, you could time packets 
so that they get priority just at the right time and you could have lockout.
M: Yes.
T: But now you will just fall back to fq.
M: Ok, it was just a curiousity, it’s probably in the paper. <inaudible>
T: I think we added that in the RFC, um, you really need to, like, this part is 
important.

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