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NAME

       mod_cc, DECLARE_CC_MODULE, CCV — Modular Congestion Control

SYNOPSIS

       #include <netinet/tcp.h>
       #include <netinet/cc/cc.h>
       #include <netinet/cc/cc_module.h>

       DECLARE_CC_MODULE(ccname, ccalgo);

       CCV(ccv, what);

DESCRIPTION

       The  mod_cc  framework  allows  congestion  control  algorithms to be implemented as dynamically loadable
       kernel modules via the kld(4) facility.  Transport protocols  can  select  from  the  list  of  available
       algorithms  on  a  connection-by-connection  basis,  or  use  the  system default (see mod_cc(4) for more
       details).

       mod_cc modules are identified by an ascii(7) name and set of hook  functions  encapsulated  in  a  struct
       cc_algo, which has the following members:

             struct cc_algo {
                     char    name[TCP_CA_NAME_MAX];
                     int     (*mod_init) (void);
                     int     (*mod_destroy) (void);
                     int     (*cb_init) (struct cc_var *ccv);
                     void    (*cb_destroy) (struct cc_var *ccv);
                     void    (*conn_init) (struct cc_var *ccv);
                     void    (*ack_received) (struct cc_var *ccv, uint16_t type);
                     void    (*cong_signal) (struct cc_var *ccv, uint32_t type);
                     void    (*post_recovery) (struct cc_var *ccv);
                     void    (*after_idle) (struct cc_var *ccv);
                     int     (*ctl_output)(struct cc_var *, struct sockopt *, void *);
             };

       The   name   field  identifies  the  unique  name  of  the  algorithm,  and  should  be  no  longer  than
       TCP_CA_NAME_MAX-1  characters  in  length  (the  TCP_CA_NAME_MAX  define  lives  in  <netinet/tcp.h>  for
       compatibility reasons).

       The  mod_init  function is called when a new module is loaded into the system but before the registration
       process is complete.  It should be implemented if a module needs to set up some  global  state  prior  to
       being  available  for  use  by  new connections.  Returning a non-zero value from mod_init will cause the
       loading of the module to fail.

       The mod_destroy function is called prior to unloading an existing module from the kernel.  It  should  be
       implemented  if  a  module  needs to clean up any global state before being removed from the kernel.  The
       return value is currently ignored.

       The cb_init function is called when  a  TCP  control  block  struct  tcpcb  is  created.   It  should  be
       implemented  if  a module needs to allocate memory for storing private per-connection state.  Returning a
       non-zero value from cb_init will cause the connection set up to be aborted, terminating the connection as
       a result.

       The cb_destroy function is called when a TCP control block struct  tcpcb  is  destroyed.   It  should  be
       implemented if a module needs to free memory allocated in cb_init.

       The  conn_init  function  is  called  when  a new connection has been established and variables are being
       initialised.  It should be implemented to initialise congestion control algorithm variables for the newly
       established connection.

       The ack_received function is called when a TCP acknowledgement (ACK) packet is received.  Modules use the
       type argument as an input to their congestion management algorithms.  The ACK types currently reported by
       the stack  are  CC_ACK  and  CC_DUPACK.   CC_ACK  indicates  the  received  ACK  acknowledges  previously
       unacknowledged  data.  CC_DUPACK indicates the received ACK acknowledges data we have already received an
       ACK for.

       The cong_signal function is called when a congestion event is detected by the TCP stack.  Modules use the
       type argument as an input  to  their  congestion  management  algorithms.   The  congestion  event  types
       currently  reported  by the stack are CC_ECN, CC_RTO, CC_RTO_ERR and CC_NDUPACK.  CC_ECN is reported when
       the TCP stack receives an explicit congestion  notification  (RFC3168).   CC_RTO  is  reported  when  the
       retransmission  time  out timer fires.  CC_RTO_ERR is reported if the retransmission time out timer fired
       in error.  CC_NDUPACK is reported if N duplicate ACKs have been received back-to-back,  where  N  is  the
       fast retransmit duplicate ack threshold (N=3 currently as per RFC5681).

       The  post_recovery function is called after the TCP connection has recovered from a congestion event.  It
       should be implemented to adjust state as required.

       The after_idle function is called when data  transfer  resumes  after  an  idle  period.   It  should  be
       implemented to adjust state as required.

       The  ctl_output  function is called when getsockopt(2) or setsockopt(2) is called on a tcp(4) socket with
       the struct sockopt pointer forwarded unmodified from the TCP control, and a void * pointer  to  algorithm
       specific argument.

       The  DECLARE_CC_MODULE()  macro  provides a convenient wrapper around the DECLARE_MODULE(9) macro, and is
       used to register a mod_cc module with the mod_cc framework.  The ccname argument specifies  the  module's
       name.  The ccalgo argument points to the module's struct cc_algo.

       mod_cc  modules  must  instantiate  a  struct  cc_algo,  but are only required to set the name field, and
       optionally any of the function pointers.  The stack will skip calling any function pointer which is NULL,
       so there is no requirement to  implement  any  of  the  function  pointers.   Using  the  C99  designated
       initialiser feature to set fields is encouraged.

       Each  function  pointer which deals with congestion control state is passed a pointer to a struct cc_var,
       which has the following members:

             struct cc_var {
                     void            *cc_data;
                     int             bytes_this_ack;
                     tcp_seq         curack;
                     uint32_t        flags;
                     int             type;
                     union ccv_container {
                             struct tcpcb            *tcp;
                             struct sctp_nets        *sctp;
                     } ccvc;
             };

       struct cc_var groups congestion control related variables into a single, embeddable structure and adds  a
       layer  of  indirection  to  accessing transport protocol control blocks.  The eventual goal is to allow a
       single set of mod_cc modules to be shared  between  all  congestion  aware  transport  protocols,  though
       currently only tcp(4) is supported.

       To  aid  the eventual transition towards this goal, direct use of variables from the transport protocol's
       data structures is strongly discouraged.  However, it is inevitable at the current time to require access
       to some of these variables, and so the CCV() macro exists as a convenience accessor.   The  ccv  argument
       points  to  the  struct  cc_var  passed  into  the  function  by the mod_cc framework.  The what argument
       specifies the name of the variable to access.

       Apart from the type and ccv_container fields, the remaining fields in struct cc_var are for use by mod_cc
       modules.

       The cc_data field is available for algorithms requiring  additional  per-connection  state  to  attach  a
       dynamic  memory  pointer  to.   The  memory should be allocated and attached in the module's cb_init hook
       function.

       The bytes_this_ack field specifies the number of new bytes acknowledged by the most recently received ACK
       packet.  It is only valid in the ack_received hook function.

       The curack field specifies the sequence number of the most recently received  ACK  packet.   It  is  only
       valid in the ack_received, cong_signal and post_recovery hook functions.

       The  flags  field  is  used  to  pass  useful  information  from  the  stack  to  a  mod_cc  module.  The
       CCF_ABC_SENTAWND flag is relevant in ack_received and is set when appropriate byte counting (RFC3465) has
       counted a window's worth of bytes has been sent.  It is the module's responsibility  to  clear  the  flag
       after it has processed the signal.  The CCF_CWND_LIMITED flag is relevant in ack_received and is set when
       the  connection's  ability  to  send data is currently constrained by the value of the congestion window.
       Algorithms should use the absence of this flag being set to avoid accumulating a large difference between
       the congestion window and send window.

SEE ALSO

       cc_cdg(4), cc_chd(4), cc_cubic(4), cc_hd(4), cc_htcp(4), cc_newreno(4), cc_vegas(4), mod_cc(4), tcp(4)

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

       Development and testing of this software were made possible in part by grants from the FreeBSD Foundation
       and Cisco University Research Program Fund at Community Foundation Silicon Valley.

FUTURE WORK

       Integrate with sctp(4).

HISTORY

       The modular Congestion Control (CC) framework first appeared in FreeBSD 9.0.

       The framework was first released in 2007 by James Healy and Lawrence Stewart whilst working on the NewTCP
       research project at Swinburne University of Technology's  Centre  for  Advanced  Internet  Architectures,
       Melbourne,  Australia,  which  was  made  possible  in part by a grant from the Cisco University Research
       Program Fund at Community Foundation Silicon Valley.  More details are available at:

       http://caia.swin.edu.au/urp/newtcp/

AUTHORS

       The  mod_cc  framework  was   written   by   Lawrence   Stewart   <lstewart@FreeBSD.org>,   James   Healy
       <jimmy@deefa.com> and David Hayes <david.hayes@ieee.org>.

       This   manual   page   was   written   by   David   Hayes  <david.hayes@ieee.org>  and  Lawrence  Stewart
       <lstewart@FreeBSD.org>.

Debian                                          January 21, 2016                                       MOD_CC(9)