So if I understand this correctly, this boils down to the fact that if two protocols are in the candidate set for racing they are also equivalent? Thus we dont have to worry about unequivalent protocols as they are never part of the same candidate set anyway?
Best
Max
Am 23.07.2019 11:59 schrieb Tommy Pauly <tpauly=40apple....@dmarc.ietf.org>:
Hi Joe,Yes, I completely agree. The current text in -arch expresses this as:2. Both stacks MUST offer the same transport services, as required by the application. For example, if an application specifies that it requires reliable transmission of data, then a Protocol Stack using UDP without any reliability layer on top would not be allowed to replace a Protocol Stack using TCP. However, if the application does not require reliability, then a Protocol Stack that adds unnecessary reliability might be allowed as an equivalent Protocol Stack as long as it does not conflict with any other application-requested properties.If you think we can clarify this any further, let me know!Thanks,TommyOn Jul 23, 2019, at 11:55 AM, Joe Touch <touch@strayalpha.com> wrote:_______________________________________________On Jul 23, 2019, at 8:19 AM, Theresa Enghardt <theresa@inet.tu-berlin.de> wrote:Another important difference between TCP and UDP are Message Boundaries.
So in some cases, TCP + Framer may be equivalent to UDP.FWIW, they might provide *similar* capabilities, even only those that the app is concerned about, but there are a LOT of other differences that can’t be glossed over. In some cases, it is TCP that is lacking (as above); in others, UDP).It’s only important whether the user does or doesn’t care about those properties. When they match what they care about, they can be considered equivalent.I.e., there’s not likely going to be a strict and absolute equivalence between transports.Equivalence is TO THE USER, relative to their constraints.Joe
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