Analysis of Network Public Service Performance

Authors

  • Olimov Olimboy Otabekovich Urgench branch of the Tashkent University of Information Technologies named after Muhammad Al-Khwarizmi

Keywords:

OptQuest, Delay, Queue Sampler, Exit

Abstract

Accurate and thorough analysis of network performance is challenging. Network simulations and emulations can onlycover a subset of the c ontinuously evolving set of workloads networks can experience, leaving room for unexplored corner cases and bugs that can cause sub-optimal performance on live traffic. Techniques from queuing theory and network calculus can provide rigorous bounds on performance metrics, but typically require the behavior of network components and the arrival pattern of traffic to be approximated with concise and well-behaved mathematical functions. As such, they are not immediately applicable to emerging workloads and the new algorithms and protocols developed for handling them. We explore a different approach: using formal methods to analyze network performance. We show that it is possible to accurately model network components and their queues in logic, and use techniques from program synthesis to automatically generate concise interpretable workloads as answers to queries about performance metrics. Our approach offers a new point in the space of existing tools for analyzing network performance: it is more exhaustive than simulation and emulation, and can be readily applied to algorithms and protocols that are expressible in first-order logic. We demonstrate the effectiveness of our approach by analyzing packet scheduling algorithms and a small leaf-spine network and generating concise workloads that can cause throughput, fairness, starvation, and latency problems.

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Published

2024-07-08