summaryrefslogtreecommitdiffstats
path: root/doc/sphinx/arm/congestion-handling.rst
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
Diffstat (limited to 'doc/sphinx/arm/congestion-handling.rst')
-rw-r--r--doc/sphinx/arm/congestion-handling.rst131
1 files changed, 131 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/doc/sphinx/arm/congestion-handling.rst b/doc/sphinx/arm/congestion-handling.rst
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..c8c9671
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/sphinx/arm/congestion-handling.rst
@@ -0,0 +1,131 @@
+.. _congestion-handling:
+
+*******************
+Congestion Handling
+*******************
+
+.. _congestion-handling-background:
+
+What is Congestion?
+===================
+
+Congestion occurs when servers are subjected to client queries faster
+than those queries can be processed. As a result, the servers begin accumulating
+a backlog of pending queries. The longer the high rate of traffic
+continues, the farther behind the servers fall. Depending on the client
+implementations, those that fail to get leases either give up or simply
+continue to retry forever. In the former case, the server may eventually
+recover, but the latter case is a vicious cycle from which the server is
+unable to escape.
+
+Congestion typically occurs when there is a network event that causes overly large
+numbers of clients to simultaneously need leases, such as recovery after
+a network outage. In a well-planned deployment, the number and capacity of servers is
+matched to the maximum expected client load. If the load is routinely too
+heavy, then the deployment needs to be re-evaluated.
+
+The goal of congestion handling is to help servers mitigate the peak in
+traffic by fulfilling as many of the most relevant requests as possible
+until the congestion subsides.
+
+.. _congestion-handling-solution:
+
+Configuring Congestion Handling
+===============================
+
+Congestion handling
+offers the ability to configure the server to use a separate thread to
+read packets from the interface socket buffers. As the thread reads
+packets from the buffers, they are added to an internal packet queue,
+and the server's main application thread processes packets from this
+queue rather than from the socket buffers. By structuring it this way, a
+configurable layer has been introduced which can make decisions on which
+packets to process, how to store them, and the order in which they are
+processed by the server.
+
+The default packet queue implementation for both ``kea-dhcp4`` and ``kea-dhcp6``
+is a simple ring buffer. Once it reaches capacity, new packets get added
+to the back of the queue by discarding packets from the front of the
+queue. Rather than always discarding the newest packets, Kea now always
+discards the oldest packets. The capacity of the buffer, i.e. the maximum
+number of packets the buffer can contain, is configurable. A reasonable
+starting point is to match the capacity to the number of leases
+per second a specific installation of Kea can handle. This
+figure varies widely depending on the specifics of an individual deployment.
+
+As there is no one algorithm that can best handle the dynamics of all
+sites, and because over time new approaches will evolve, the packet
+queue is implemented as a plug-in, which can be replaced by a custom queue
+implementation via a hook library. This should make it straightforward
+for interested parties to experiment with their own solutions.
+(Developers can refer to ``isc::dhcp::PacketQueue`` and
+``isc::dhcp::PacketQueueMgr``, described in the
+`Kea Developer's Guide <https://reports.kea.isc.org/dev_guide/index.html>`__.)
+
+Packet queue behavior is configured in both ``kea-dhcp4`` and ``kea-dhcp6``
+servers through an optional, top-level, configuration element,
+``dhcp-queue-control``. Omitting this element disables packet queueing:
+
+::
+
+ "dhcp-queue-control": {
+ "enable-queue": true|false,
+ "queue-type": "queue type",
+ "capacity" : n
+ }
+
+where:
+
+- ``enable-queue`` - enables or disables packet queueing.
+ When ``true``, the server processes packets from the packet queue, which
+ is filled by a separate thread. When ``false``, the server processes
+ packets directly from the socket buffers in the main thread. It is
+ disabled (``false``) by default.
+
+- ``queue-type`` - the name of the queue implementation to use. This value
+ exists so that custom implementations can be registered (via a hook
+ library) and then selected. There is a default packet queue
+ implementation that is pre-registered during server start up:
+ "kea-ring4" for ``kea-dhcp4`` and "kea-ring6" for ``kea-dhcp6``.
+
+- ``capacity`` - this is the maximum number of packets the
+ queue can hold before packets are discarded. The optimal value for
+ this is extremely site-dependent. The default value is 64 for both
+ "kea-ring4" and "kea-ring6".
+
+The following example enables the default packet queue for ``kea-dhcp4``,
+with a queue capacity of 250 packets:
+
+::
+
+ "Dhcp4":
+ {
+ ...
+ "dhcp-queue-control": {
+ "enable-queue": true,
+ "queue-type": "kea-ring4",
+ "capacity" : 250
+ },
+ ...
+ }
+
+The following example enables the default packet queue for ``kea-dhcp6``,
+with a queue capacity of 300 packets:
+
+::
+
+ "Dhcp6":
+ {
+ ...
+ "dhcp-queue-control": {
+ "enable-queue": true,
+ "queue-type": "kea-ring6",
+ "capacity" : 300
+ },
+ ...
+ }
+
+.. note:
+
+ Congestion handling is currently incompatible with multi-threading;
+ when both are enabled, congestion handling is silently disabled.