[Sis-dtn] [EXT] Re: Positive reception claim vs. Negative reception claim in LTP Report Segment preparation and processing
구철회
chkoo at kari.re.kr
Mon Apr 4 23:58:56 UTC 2022
I think Keith thought it as if the last CP was missing.
Immediately NACK RS can save time as amount of the difference between current time and the last CP’s arrival time. I think the effect can be negligible when bandwidth is very high and a session block length is relatively small, so saving time is order of ms. Of course this effect signifies as big as an RTT when the last CP from a sender is lost during transmission.
But I do like the way of “immediately RS”. However the immediately discretionary RS NACK can quickly burn out the return link bandwidth when continuous segment losses are happening while for independent segment loss it will be reasonable. There should be some optimization and I think this concept make LTP be expandable in various space environment.
Cheol
From: sburleig.sb at gmail.com <sburleig.sb at gmail.com>
Sent: Tuesday, April 5, 2022 4:10 AM
To: Dr. Keith L Scott <kscott at mitre.org>; Carlo Caini <carlo.caini at unibo.it>; tomaso.decola at dlr.de; 구철회 <chkoo at kari.re.kr>; dstanton at keltik.co.uk
Cc: sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org
Subject: RE: [Sis-dtn] [EXT] Re: Positive reception claim vs. Negative reception claim in LTP Report Segment preparation and processing
Keith, I think this isn’t quite right.
Suppose we’re sending a block that is 1 Megabyte in size, split into 10,000 segments of 100 bytes each. Suppose the OWLT is 240 seconds and the transmission rate is 800 kbps (so 100,000 bytes per second).
Suppose the 3rd segment is lost. The receiver will detect this loss when the 4th segment is received. That segment will have left the antenna .04 seconds after transmission began, and it will arrive at the receiver 240 seconds later. The receiver will transmit a report segment immediately; let’s ignore the processing and radiation time for issuing the report and say that the report is received at the sender 240 seconds after the arrival of the 4th segment – so 480.04 seconds after transmission began. That’s the time at which retransmission can be initiated, right?
Now suppose there is no further data loss. The EOB CP leaves the antenna 10 seconds after transmission began and arrives at the receiver 240 seconds later. The earlier report is still en route to the sender, so the lost segment has not yet been retransmitted. The receiver transmits the CP-triggered report immediately, at 250 seconds after transmission began. That report is received at the sender 240 seconds after arrival of the last segment, so 490 seconds after transmission began; that’s the earliest time at which retransmission can be initiated.
So it seems to me that the gap-triggered RS has reduced closure latency by 9.96 seconds, not by 1 RTT. What have I got wrong?
Scott
From: Dr. Keith L Scott <kscott at mitre.org<mailto:kscott at mitre.org>>
Sent: Monday, April 4, 2022 11:50 AM
To: Carlo Caini <carlo.caini at unibo.it<mailto:carlo.caini at unibo.it>>; tomaso.decola at dlr.de<mailto:tomaso.decola at dlr.de>; sburleig.sb at gmail.com<mailto:sburleig.sb at gmail.com>; chkoo at kari.re.kr<mailto:chkoo at kari.re.kr>; dstanton at keltik.co.uk<mailto:dstanton at keltik.co.uk>
Cc: sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org<mailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org>
Subject: Re: [Sis-dtn] [EXT] Re: Positive reception claim vs. Negative reception claim in LTP Report Segment preparation and processing
I think the 'win' would be (comparing a system that generated proactive NACKs vs. a system that generated a CP only at the end of the block):
If there are 10,000 LTP segments and the 3rd segment is lost:
* The NACK system will nack it “immediately” and elicit a retransmission. Increased latency: about 1 segment.
* The non-NACK (call it CP-only) system will send the whole block and then a CP, which will elicit a RS and cause the hole to be filled. Adds 1 RTT (and 1 retransmitted segment) to the block.
So the NACK system can save an RTT. If the loss rate is small (say, the probability of filling all holes in one CP/RS/ReTX event is high) then that’s really all it saves, regardless of the number of losses in the block. If the loss rate is high enough that the expected number of CP/RS/ReTX cycles is higher, the benefit is greater).
So in general if there are N segments and p(segment loss) is p, the number of retransmission rounds should be about -log(N)/log(p) + 1
N = 10,000
P = 0.1
# rounds: 5
N = 10,000
P = 0.01
# rounds: 3
So a proactive-NACK implementation could potentially save about 5 RTTs over a CP-only implementation (sort of a blatent assumption that none of the losses are ‘too close’ to the end, but hey).
v/r,
--keith
On 4/4/22, 1:57 PM, "Carlo Caini" <carlo.caini at unibo.it<mailto:carlo.caini at unibo.it>> wrote:
Dear all,
on terrestrial applications LTP segment may arrive out of order, thus NACK could result in unecessary retranmissions; maybe this is not a problem as it is the same in TCP (fast retransmit cannot tolerate more than a disorder of 3 TCP segments).
In space, maybe we can assume ordered delivery of LTP segment, thus is true that the LTP receiver could immediately send a NACK as soon as a gap is found (i.e. at the first non contigous claim rfeceived), instead of waiting for the CP, thus saving some time; however, the advantage is limited. If we call radiation time the time necessary to tranmit "on air" a block, we could say that the NACK time gain should be on the evarage of about a half of the radiatrion time. This saved time should however be compared with the RTT, wich is the minimum time necessary for loss recovery. RTT in space is usually >> radiation time, thus the advantage would be negligible. Maybe it could be useful on LEO, where the RTT is small, but we should also have large blocks and slow links...
Yours,
Carlo
________________________________________
Da: Tomaso.deCola at dlr.de<mailto:Tomaso.deCola at dlr.de> [Tomaso.deCola at dlr.de]
Inviato: lunedì 4 aprile 2022 17:54
A: kscott at mitre.org<mailto:kscott at mitre.org>; sburleig.sb at gmail.com<mailto:sburleig.sb at gmail.com>; Carlo Caini; chkoo at kari.re.kr<mailto:chkoo at kari.re.kr>; dstanton at keltik.co.uk<mailto:dstanton at keltik.co.uk>
Cc: sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org<mailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org>
Oggetto: RE: [Sis-dtn] [EXT] Re: Positive reception claim vs. Negative reception claim in LTP Report Segment preparation and processing
(I cc again the whole SIS-DTN mailinglist that apparently disappeared from my initial message)
At first glance I don’t see a space network configuration in which the LTP segments belonging to a given LTP block could arrived misordered. Perhaps if LTP is operated over UDP also in space (the current spec does not prohibit it to the best of my memory) this could happen but I’d say it is an unlikely configuration.
Tomaso
From: Dr. Keith L Scott <kscott at mitre.org<mailto:kscott at mitre.org>>
Sent: Montag, 4. April 2022 17:43
To: sburleig.sb at gmail.com<mailto:sburleig.sb at gmail.com>; Cola, Tomaso de <Tomaso.deCola at dlr.de<mailto:Tomaso.deCola at dlr.de>>; carlo.caini at unibo.it<mailto:carlo.caini at unibo.it>; chkoo at kari.re.kr<mailto:chkoo at kari.re.kr>; dstanton at keltik.co.uk<mailto:dstanton at keltik.co.uk>
Subject: Re: [Sis-dtn] [EXT] Re: Positive reception claim vs. Negative reception claim in LTP Report Segment preparation and processing
But for CCSDS applications (and LTPv2 is a CCSDS thing not an IETF thing) maybe we make the assumption that segments are not misordered? Or that the misordering is ‘small’ so that some sort of timer / couter at the receiver could filter out small anomalies? (e.g. hold off sending a NACK for 1,000 segments)?
--keith
From: "sburleig.sb at gmail.com<mailto:sburleig.sb at gmail.com><mailto:sburleig.sb at gmail.com%3cmailto:sburleig.sb at gmail.com%3e>" <sburleig.sb at gmail.com<mailto:sburleig.sb at gmail.com<mailto:sburleig.sb at gmail.com%3cmailto:sburleig.sb at gmail.com>>>
Date: Monday, April 4, 2022 at 11:39 AM
To: Tomaso de Cola <Tomaso.deCola at dlr.de<mailto:Tomaso.deCola at dlr.de<mailto:Tomaso.deCola at dlr.de%3cmailto:Tomaso.deCola at dlr.de>>>, Keith Scott <kscott at mitre.org<mailto:kscott at mitre.org<mailto:kscott at mitre.org%3cmailto:kscott at mitre.org>>>, "carlo.caini at unibo.it<mailto:carlo.caini at unibo.it><mailto:carlo.caini at unibo.it%3cmailto:carlo.caini at unibo.it%3e>" <carlo.caini at unibo.it<mailto:carlo.caini at unibo.it<mailto:carlo.caini at unibo.it%3cmailto:carlo.caini at unibo.it>>>, Cheol Koo <chkoo at kari.re.kr<mailto:chkoo at kari.re.kr<mailto:chkoo at kari.re.kr%3cmailto:chkoo at kari.re.kr>>>, Dai Stanton <dstanton at keltik.co.uk<mailto:dstanton at keltik.co.uk<mailto:dstanton at keltik.co.uk%3cmailto:dstanton at keltik.co.uk>>>
Subject: RE: [Sis-dtn] [EXT] Re: Positive reception claim vs. Negative reception claim in LTP Report Segment preparation and processing
Yes, and for good reason: the design of LTP was originally lifted directly from the CFDP Acknowledged Procedures (and thereupon tweaked a bit). I think the argument against proactively reporting negative DS reception claims was that the missing segments might be already en route but slightly delayed due to transmission over a longer path. In space flight communications this won’t happen because LTP will be running directly over the link; when we test LTP on Earth it is somewhat more likely, as LTP is running directly over UDP/IP and in theory those packets might travel over multiple different routes.
Scott
From: Tomaso.deCola at dlr.de<mailto:Tomaso.deCola at dlr.de<mailto:Tomaso.deCola at dlr.de%3cmailto:Tomaso.deCola at dlr.de>> <Tomaso.deCola at dlr.de<mailto:Tomaso.deCola at dlr.de<mailto:Tomaso.deCola at dlr.de%3cmailto:Tomaso.deCola at dlr.de>>>
Sent: Monday, April 4, 2022 8:31 AM
To: kscott at mitre.org<mailto:kscott at mitre.org<mailto:kscott at mitre.org%3cmailto:kscott at mitre.org>>; sburleig.sb at gmail.com<mailto:sburleig.sb at gmail.com<mailto:sburleig.sb at gmail.com%3cmailto:sburleig.sb at gmail.com>>; carlo.caini at unibo.it<mailto:carlo.caini at unibo.it<mailto:carlo.caini at unibo.it%3cmailto:carlo.caini at unibo.it>>; chkoo at kari.re.kr<mailto:chkoo at kari.re.kr<mailto:chkoo at kari.re.kr%3cmailto:chkoo at kari.re.kr>>; dstanton at keltik.co.uk<mailto:dstanton at keltik.co.uk<mailto:dstanton at keltik.co.uk%3cmailto:dstanton at keltik.co.uk>>
Subject: RE: [Sis-dtn] [EXT] Re: Positive reception claim vs. Negative reception claim in LTP Report Segment preparation and processing
This looks similar to CFDP-class 2 with retransmission happening in asynchronous mode, isn’t it?
Regards,
Tomaso
From: SIS-DTN <sis-dtn-bounces at mailman.ccsds.org<mailto:sis-dtn-bounces at mailman.ccsds.org<mailto:sis-dtn-bounces at mailman.ccsds.org%3cmailto:sis-dtn-bounces at mailman.ccsds.org>>> On Behalf Of Dr. Keith L Scott via SIS-DTN
Sent: Montag, 4. April 2022 17:28
To: sburleig.sb at gmail.com<mailto:sburleig.sb at gmail.com<mailto:sburleig.sb at gmail.com%3cmailto:sburleig.sb at gmail.com>>; 'Carlo Caini' <carlo.caini at unibo.it<mailto:carlo.caini at unibo.it<mailto:carlo.caini at unibo.it%3cmailto:carlo.caini at unibo.it>>>; '"구철회"' <chkoo at kari.re.kr<mailto:chkoo at kari.re.kr<mailto:chkoo at kari.re.kr%3cmailto:chkoo at kari.re.kr>>>; 'Keltik' <dstanton at keltik.co.uk<mailto:dstanton at keltik.co.uk<mailto:dstanton at keltik.co.uk%3cmailto:dstanton at keltik.co.uk>>>
Cc: sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org<mailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org<mailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org%3cmailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org>>
Subject: Re: [Sis-dtn] [EXT] Re: Positive reception claim vs. Negative reception claim in LTP Report Segment preparation and processing
I think maybe a larger opportunity for improvement would be to have a capability for a receiver to proactively NACK segments WITHOUT having to receive a checkpoint first. That would allow autonomously sending NACKs during the block transmission (thereby filling holes quickly as they are detected) and then relying on the CP/RS/RA exchange to close out the session.
--keith
From: "sis-dtn-bounces at mailman.ccsds.org<mailto:sis-dtn-bounces at mailman.ccsds.org><mailto:sis-dtn-bounces at mailman.ccsds.org%3cmailto:sis-dtn-bounces at mailman.ccsds.org%3e>" <sis-dtn-bounces at mailman.ccsds.org<mailto:sis-dtn-bounces at mailman.ccsds.org<mailto:sis-dtn-bounces at mailman.ccsds.org%3cmailto:sis-dtn-bounces at mailman.ccsds.org>>> on behalf of "sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org<mailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org><mailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org%3cmailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org%3e>" <sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org<mailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org<mailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org%3cmailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org>>>
Reply-To: "sburleig.sb at gmail.com<mailto:sburleig.sb at gmail.com><mailto:sburleig.sb at gmail.com%3cmailto:sburleig.sb at gmail.com%3e>" <sburleig.sb at gmail.com<mailto:sburleig.sb at gmail.com<mailto:sburleig.sb at gmail.com%3cmailto:sburleig.sb at gmail.com>>>
Date: Monday, April 4, 2022 at 11:21 AM
To: 'Carlo Caini' <carlo.caini at unibo.it<mailto:carlo.caini at unibo.it<mailto:carlo.caini at unibo.it%3cmailto:carlo.caini at unibo.it>>>, Cheol Koo <chkoo at kari.re.kr<mailto:chkoo at kari.re.kr<mailto:chkoo at kari.re.kr%3cmailto:chkoo at kari.re.kr>>>, Dai Stanton <dstanton at keltik.co.uk<mailto:dstanton at keltik.co.uk<mailto:dstanton at keltik.co.uk%3cmailto:dstanton at keltik.co.uk>>>
Cc: "sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org<mailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org><mailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org%3cmailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org%3e>" <sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org<mailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org<mailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org%3cmailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org>>>
Subject: [EXT] Re: [Sis-dtn] Positive reception claim vs. Negative reception claim in LTP Report Segment preparation and processing
Hi, guys. I believe we are actually talking about two distinct things here.
It is true that positive ACKs are required. Positive acknowledgments turn off the retransmission timers for checkpoints, report segments, and cancellation segments.
Separately, the individual "claims" within a report segment might be either positive or negative. I agree with Carlo, but think Cheol is correct that negative claims can yield a small overhead advantage. For any LTP transmission whose scope is from block offset P to Q in which there are N gaps:
• If one of the gaps begins at P and another of the gaps ends at Q, then the report must contain either N negative claims or N - 1 positive claims.
• If no gap begins at P and no gap ends at Q, then the report must contain either N negative claims or N + 1 positive claims.
• If one of the gaps begins at P or one of the gaps ends at Q, but not both, then the report must contain either N negative claims or N positive claims.
I would expect the second of these cases to occur more frequently than the other two, assuming AOS/LOS events don't occur during the transmission.
I don't see how either negative or positive claims processing is simpler or easier, though; the representations are equivalent. Ease of implementation would depend strictly on the manner in which segment information is stored and accessed at the sending and receiving ends of the transmission. I personally found positive claims to be simpler to work with.
Scott
-----Original Message-----
From: SIS-DTN <sis-dtn-bounces at mailman.ccsds.org<mailto:sis-dtn-bounces at mailman.ccsds.org<mailto:sis-dtn-bounces at mailman.ccsds.org%3cmailto:sis-dtn-bounces at mailman.ccsds.org>>> On Behalf Of Carlo Caini via SIS-DTN
Sent: Monday, April 4, 2022 5:47 AM
To: "구철회" <chkoo at kari.re.kr<mailto:chkoo at kari.re.kr<mailto:chkoo at kari.re.kr%3cmailto:chkoo at kari.re.kr>>>; Keltik <dstanton at keltik.co.uk<mailto:dstanton at keltik.co.uk<mailto:dstanton at keltik.co.uk%3cmailto:dstanton at keltik.co.uk>>>
Cc: sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org<mailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org<mailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org%3cmailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org>>
Subject: Re: [Sis-dtn] Positive reception claim vs. Negative reception claim in LTP Report Segment preparation and processing
Dear Cheol,
let me consider an LTP block with for example 20 non contigous losses, i.e. 20 gaps. The corresponding RS would include either 20 positive claims (if you have a gap at the start or at the end of the block) or 21 cl;aims otherwise.
With NAK claim you would need 20 megative claims. Is that so different?
You can say that it is easier to resend what has been explicietely said is missing, true; however, on the rx side it is easier to say what has been received than what is missing; all things considered, I cannot see any signifiocant advantage by excplicietely declaring gaps instead of received chunks.
Yours,
Carlo
________________________________________
Da: SIS-DTN [sis-dtn-bounces at mailman.ccsds.org] per conto di "구철회" via SIS-DTN [sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org]
Inviato: lunedì 4 aprile 2022 14:20
A: Keltik
Cc: sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org<mailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org<mailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org%3cmailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org>>
Oggetto: Re: [Sis-dtn] Positive reception claim vs. Negative reception claim in LTP Report Segment preparation and processing
I think current LTP spec has positive ACK and negative ACK both. So if it is reversed the result will be the same.
Let me bring below example again. To provide claim inforamtion for retransmission of block 1000-2999,
<<original-positive ACK>>
lower bound = 0
upper bound = 7000
negative reception claim count = 2
offset = 0 <-- Positive ACK
length = 1000 <-- Positive ACK
offset = 3000 <-- Positive ACK
length = 4000 <-- Positive ACK
* Negative ACKs are hidden in separated Positive ACKs.
<<negative ACK>>
lower bound = 0 <-- Positive ACK
upper bound = 7000 <-- Positive ACK
negative reception claim count = 1
offset = 1000 <-- Negative ACK
length = 2000 <-- Negative ACK
I think the latter case can work too! Or am I missing something?
Cheol
--------- 원본 메일 ---------
보낸사람 : Keltik <dstanton at keltik.co.uk<mailto:dstanton at keltik.co.uk<mailto:dstanton at keltik.co.uk%3cmailto:dstanton at keltik.co.uk>>>
받는사람 : Vint Cerf <vint at google.com<mailto:vint at google.com<mailto:vint at google.com%3cmailto:vint at google.com>>>
참조 : <Felix.Flentge at esa.int<mailto:Felix.Flentge at esa.int<mailto:Felix.Flentge at esa.int%3cmailto:Felix.Flentge at esa.int>>>, <sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org<mailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org<mailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org%3cmailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org>>>, "구철회" <chkoo at kari.re.kr<mailto:chkoo at kari.re.kr<mailto:chkoo at kari.re.kr%3cmailto:chkoo at kari.re.kr>>> 받은날짜 : 2022-04-04 (월) 19:53:46 제목 : Re: [Sis-dtn] Positive reception claim vs. Negative reception claim in LTP Report Segment preparation and processing Scott Burleigh and I went through this developing CFDP/LTP three decades ago. Whilst Negative ACKs can be very efficient for bulk data in the delay/disruption environment, protocol directives such as initiation, metadata exchange, end of data, end of transaction, pause, resume etc require positive ACKs. Otherwise the state machines will never close.
Dai
Sent from my iPhone
On 4 Apr 2022, at 11:09, Vint Cerf via SIS-DTN <sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org<mailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org<mailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org%3cmailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org>>> wrote:
a system based solely on negative acks will not work.
v
On Mon, Apr 4, 2022 at 6:08 AM Felix Flentge via SIS-DTN <sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org<mailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org<mailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org%3cmailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org<mailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org%3cmailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org%3cmailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org%3cmailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org>>>> wrote:
Ah, yes, of course you are right.
We will look into the negative ACK as part of our LTPv2 prototyping activity.
Regards,
Felix
From: "구철회" <chkoo at kari.re.kr<mailto:chkoo at kari.re.kr<mailto:chkoo at kari.re.kr%3cmailto:chkoo at kari.re.kr<mailto:chkoo at kari.re.kr%3cmailto:chkoo at kari.re.kr%3cmailto:chkoo at kari.re.kr%3cmailto:chkoo at kari.re.kr>>>>
To: <Felix.Flentge at esa.int<mailto:Felix.Flentge at esa.int<mailto:Felix.Flentge at esa.int%3cmailto:Felix.Flentge at esa.int<mailto:Felix.Flentge at esa.int%3cmailto:Felix.Flentge at esa.int%3cmailto:Felix.Flentge at esa.int%3cmailto:Felix.Flentge at esa.int>>>>
Cc: "sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org<mailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org><mailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org%3cmailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org%3e><mailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org%3cmailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org%3e%3cmailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org%3cmailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org%3e%3e>" <sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org<mailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org<mailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org%3cmailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org<mailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org%3cmailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org%3cmailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org%3cmailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org>>>>
Date: 04/04/2022 11:58
Subject: RE: Re: [Sis-dtn] Positive reception claim vs. Negative reception claim in LTP Report Segment preparation and processing
Sent by: chkoo at kari.re.kr<mailto:chkoo at kari.re.kr<mailto:chkoo at kari.re.kr%3cmailto:chkoo at kari.re.kr<mailto:chkoo at kari.re.kr%3cmailto:chkoo at kari.re.kr%3cmailto:chkoo at kari.re.kr%3cmailto:chkoo at kari.re.kr>>>
________________________________
Hi Felix,
I think current LTP spec quite works well with negative claim also. Consider below reception claim according to the LTP spec but negative claim.
lower bound = 0
upper bound = 7000
negative reception claim count = 1
offset = 1000
length = 2000
it means a receiver is requesting block of segements which starts at 1000 and length is 2000, i.e., 1000 ~ 2999, for retransmission.
A sender can safely remove 2 blocks, i.e., 0 - 999 and 3000 - 7000. I think it is simpler, lower overhead and *importantly* easier to calculate (acutally no painful for localizing the target segment position).
Cheol
--------- 원본 메일 ---------
보낸사람 : <Felix.Flentge at esa.int<mailto:Felix.Flentge at esa.int<mailto:Felix.Flentge at esa.int%3cmailto:Felix.Flentge at esa.int<mailto:Felix.Flentge at esa.int%3cmailto:Felix.Flentge at esa.int%3cmailto:Felix.Flentge at esa.int%3cmailto:Felix.Flentge at esa.int>>>>
받는사람 : "구철회" <chkoo at kari.re.kr<mailto:chkoo at kari.re.kr<mailto:chkoo at kari.re.kr%3cmailto:chkoo at kari.re.kr<mailto:chkoo at kari.re.kr%3cmailto:chkoo at kari.re.kr%3cmailto:chkoo at kari.re.kr%3cmailto:chkoo at kari.re.kr>>>>
참조 : "sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org<mailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org><mailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org%3cmailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org%3e><mailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org%3cmailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org%3e%3cmailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org%3cmailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org%3e%3e>" <sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org<mailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org<mailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org%3cmailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org<mailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org%3cmailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org%3cmailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org%3cmailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org>>>>
받은날짜 : 2022-04-04 (월) 17:40:24
제목 : Re: [Sis-dtn] Positive reception claim vs. Negative reception claim in LTP Report Segment preparation and processing Hi Cheol,
interesting question. One thing I can think of is that the positive claims would allow you to free memory earlier while for negative claims you need to wait until the end of a session.
Regards,
Felix
From: "구철회 via SIS-DTN" <sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org<mailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org<mailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org%3cmailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org<mailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org%3cmailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org%3cmailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org%3cmailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org>>>>
To: "sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org<mailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org><mailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org%3cmailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org%3e><mailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org%3cmailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org%3e%3cmailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org%3cmailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org%3e%3e>" <sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org<mailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org<mailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org%3cmailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org<mailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org%3cmailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org%3cmailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org%3cmailto:sis-dtn at mailman.ccsds.org>>>>
Date: 04/04/2022 10:15
Subject: [Sis-dtn] Positive reception claim vs. Negative reception claim in LTP Report Segment preparation and processing
Sent by: "SIS-DTN" <sis-dtn-bounces at mailman.ccsds.org<mailto:sis-dtn-bounces at mailman.ccsds.org<mailto:sis-dtn-bounces at mailman.ccsds.org%3cmailto:sis-dtn-bounces at mailman.ccsds.org<mailto:sis-dtn-bounces at mailman.ccsds.org%3cmailto:sis-dtn-bounces at mailman.ccsds.org%3cmailto:sis-dtn-bounces at mailman.ccsds.org%3cmailto:sis-dtn-bounces at mailman.ccsds.org>>>>
________________________________
Greetings,
This is Cheol. I am developing an LTP reference implementation. During reading the LTP specification (RFC-5326), the preparation of reception claim in Report Segment makes me confusing about why it is positive claim not negative claim for segments that were not received successfully (i.e., NAK).
For reference, CFDP’s NAK PDU has the negative claim structure when it is requested to report missing PDUs. Does anyone know about the background of choosing the positive claim for NAK operation in LTP?
I think negative claim is simpler and more efficient in terms of overhead for sender and receiver both.
I like to listen experts’ opinion on LTP operation and honestly hope it to be changed in newly coming LTP spec.
Cheol
_______________________________________________
SIS-DTN mailing list
SIS-DTN at mailman.ccsds.org<mailto:SIS-DTN at mailman.ccsds.org<mailto:SIS-DTN at mailman.ccsds.org%3cmailto:SIS-DTN at mailman.ccsds.org<mailto:SIS-DTN at mailman.ccsds.org%3cmailto:SIS-DTN at mailman.ccsds.org%3cmailto:SIS-DTN at mailman.ccsds.org%3cmailto:SIS-DTN at mailman.ccsds.org>>>
https://mailman.ccsds.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sis-dtn<https://protect2.fireeye.com/v1/url?k=933edf14-cca5b51c-933bae9a-ac1f6bdccbcc-93bc8ad36316533d&q=1&e=24a03daf-8e73-4317-a689-3216c529ea83&u=https%3A%2F%2Fmailman.ccsds.org%2Fcgi-bin%2Fmailman%2Flistinfo%2Fsis-dtn<https://mailman.ccsds.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sis-dtn%3chttps:/protect2.fireeye.com/v1/url?k=933edf14-cca5b51c-933bae9a-ac1f6bdccbcc-93bc8ad36316533d&q=1&e=24a03daf-8e73-4317-a689-3216c529ea83&u=https%3A%2F%2Fmailman.ccsds.org%2Fcgi-bin%2Fmailman%2Flistinfo%2Fsis-dtn<https://protect2.fireeye.com/v1/url?k=7094fbf6-2f0f91fe-70918a78-ac1f6bdccbcc-0d3d8ac66f4934b2&q=1&e=42cf6e42-dd3d-47b5-ab7c-ec8488c70286&u=https%3A%2F%2Fmailman.ccsds.org%2Fcgi-bin%2Fmailman%2Flistinfo%2Fsis-dtn%253chttps%3A%2Fprotect2.fireeye.com%2Fv1%2Furl%3Fk%3D933edf14-cca5b51c-933bae9a-ac1f6bdccbcc-93bc8ad36316533d%26q%3D1%26e%3D24a03daf-8e73-4317-a689-3216c529ea83%26u%3Dhttps%253A%252F%252Fmailman.ccsds.org%252Fcgi-bin%252Fmailman%252Flistinfo%252Fsis-dtn%253chttps%3A%2F%2Fmailman.ccsds.org%2Fcgi-bin%2Fmailman%2Flistinfo%2Fsis-dtn%253chttps%3A%2Fprotect2.fireeye.com%2Fv1%2Furl%3Fk%3D933edf14-cca5b51c-933bae9a-ac1f6bdccbcc-93bc8ad36316533d%26q%3D1%26e%3D24a03daf-8e73-4317-a689-3216c529ea83%26u%3Dhttps%253A%252F%252Fmailman.ccsds.org%252Fcgi-bin%252Fmailman%252Flistinfo%252Fsis-dtn>>>
_______________________________________________
SIS-DTN mailing list
SIS-DTN at mailman.ccsds.org<mailto:SIS-DTN at mailman.ccsds.org<mailto:SIS-DTN at mailman.ccsds.org%3cmailto:SIS-DTN at mailman.ccsds.org<mailto:SIS-DTN at mailman.ccsds.org%3cmailto:SIS-DTN at mailman.ccsds.org%3cmailto:SIS-DTN at mailman.ccsds.org%3cmailto:SIS-DTN at mailman.ccsds.org>>>
https://mailman.ccsds.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sis-dtn<https://protect2.fireeye.com/v1/url?k=60e1ef17-3f7a851f-60e49e99-ac1f6bdccbcc-0dfe5136ab6b73dc&q=1&e=cce8b1e1-1ec2-4cdd-855b-994c9a3f58c9&u=https%3A%2F%2Fmailman.ccsds.org%2Fcgi-bin%2Fmailman%2Flistinfo%2Fsis-dtn<https://mailman.ccsds.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sis-dtn%3chttps:/protect2.fireeye.com/v1/url?k=60e1ef17-3f7a851f-60e49e99-ac1f6bdccbcc-0dfe5136ab6b73dc&q=1&e=cce8b1e1-1ec2-4cdd-855b-994c9a3f58c9&u=https%3A%2F%2Fmailman.ccsds.org%2Fcgi-bin%2Fmailman%2Flistinfo%2Fsis-dtn<https://protect2.fireeye.com/v1/url?k=ef21fc5e-b0ba9656-ef248dd0-ac1f6bdccbcc-64b6674f7e819d0e&q=1&e=42cf6e42-dd3d-47b5-ab7c-ec8488c70286&u=https%3A%2F%2Fmailman.ccsds.org%2Fcgi-bin%2Fmailman%2Flistinfo%2Fsis-dtn%253chttps%3A%2Fprotect2.fireeye.com%2Fv1%2Furl%3Fk%3D60e1ef17-3f7a851f-60e49e99-ac1f6bdccbcc-0dfe5136ab6b73dc%26q%3D1%26e%3Dcce8b1e1-1ec2-4cdd-855b-994c9a3f58c9%26u%3Dhttps%253A%252F%252Fmailman.ccsds.org%252Fcgi-bin%252Fmailman%252Flistinfo%252Fsis-dtn%253chttps%3A%2F%2Fmailman.ccsds.org%2Fcgi-bin%2Fmailman%2Flistinfo%2Fsis-dtn%253chttps%3A%2Fprotect2.fireeye.com%2Fv1%2Furl%3Fk%3D60e1ef17-3f7a851f-60e49e99-ac1f6bdccbcc-0dfe5136ab6b73dc%26q%3D1%26e%3Dcce8b1e1-1ec2-4cdd-855b-994c9a3f58c9%26u%3Dhttps%253A%252F%252Fmailman.ccsds.org%252Fcgi-bin%252Fmailman%252Flistinfo%252Fsis-dtn>>>
--
Please send any postal/overnight deliveries to:
Vint Cerf
1435 Woodhurst Blvd
McLean, VA 22102
703-448-0965
until further notice
_______________________________________________
SIS-DTN mailing list
SIS-DTN at mailman.ccsds.org<mailto:SIS-DTN at mailman.ccsds.org<mailto:SIS-DTN at mailman.ccsds.org%3cmailto:SIS-DTN at mailman.ccsds.org>>
https://mailman.ccsds.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sis-dtn<https://protect2.fireeye.com/v1/url?k=9ac1f10e-c55a9b06-9ac48080-ac1f6bdccbcc-60db088d278d85f7&q=1&e=cce8b1e1-1ec2-4cdd-855b-994c9a3f58c9&u=https%3A%2F%2Fmailman.ccsds.org%2Fcgi-bin%2Fmailman%2Flistinfo%2Fsis-dtn<https://mailman.ccsds.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sis-dtn%3chttps:/protect2.fireeye.com/v1/url?k=9ac1f10e-c55a9b06-9ac48080-ac1f6bdccbcc-60db088d278d85f7&q=1&e=cce8b1e1-1ec2-4cdd-855b-994c9a3f58c9&u=https%3A%2F%2Fmailman.ccsds.org%2Fcgi-bin%2Fmailman%2Flistinfo%2Fsis-dtn<https://protect2.fireeye.com/v1/url?k=12719fd8-4deaf5d0-1274ee56-ac1f6bdccbcc-05a7930b38352e56&q=1&e=42cf6e42-dd3d-47b5-ab7c-ec8488c70286&u=https%3A%2F%2Fmailman.ccsds.org%2Fcgi-bin%2Fmailman%2Flistinfo%2Fsis-dtn%253chttps%3A%2Fprotect2.fireeye.com%2Fv1%2Furl%3Fk%3D9ac1f10e-c55a9b06-9ac48080-ac1f6bdccbcc-60db088d278d85f7%26q%3D1%26e%3Dcce8b1e1-1ec2-4cdd-855b-994c9a3f58c9%26u%3Dhttps%253A%252F%252Fmailman.ccsds.org%252Fcgi-bin%252Fmailman%252Flistinfo%252Fsis-dtn%253chttps%3A%2F%2Fmailman.ccsds.org%2Fcgi-bin%2Fmailman%2Flistinfo%2Fsis-dtn%253chttps%3A%2Fprotect2.fireeye.com%2Fv1%2Furl%3Fk%3D9ac1f10e-c55a9b06-9ac48080-ac1f6bdccbcc-60db088d278d85f7%26q%3D1%26e%3Dcce8b1e1-1ec2-4cdd-855b-994c9a3f58c9%26u%3Dhttps%253A%252F%252Fmailman.ccsds.org%252Fcgi-bin%252Fmailman%252Flistinfo%252Fsis-dtn>>>
_______________________________________________
SIS-DTN mailing list
SIS-DTN at mailman.ccsds.org<mailto:SIS-DTN at mailman.ccsds.org<mailto:SIS-DTN at mailman.ccsds.org%3cmailto:SIS-DTN at mailman.ccsds.org>>
https://mailman.ccsds.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sis-dtn<https://protect2.fireeye.com/v1/url?k=cad01285-954b788d-cad5630b-ac1f6bdccbcc-4b400b0669265909&q=1&e=42cf6e42-dd3d-47b5-ab7c-ec8488c70286&u=https%3A%2F%2Fmailman.ccsds.org%2Fcgi-bin%2Fmailman%2Flistinfo%2Fsis-dtn>
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://mailman.ccsds.org/pipermail/sis-dtn/attachments/20220404/7f448d84/attachment-0001.htm>
More information about the SIS-DTN
mailing list