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End-to-End Arguments in System Design

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End-to-End Arguments in System Design J.H. Salter, D.P. Reed, and D.D. Clark MIT-LCS Motivation1 Choosing the proper boundaries between functions is perhaps the ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: End-to-End Arguments in System Design


1
End-to-End Arguments in System Design
  • J.H. Salter, D.P. Reed, and D.D. Clark
  • MIT-LCS

2
Motivation1
  • Choosing the proper boundaries between functions
    is perhaps the primary activity of the computer
    system designer.
  • Design principles that provide guidance in this
    choice of function placement are among the most
    important tools of a system designer

3
What is this paper about?
  • discusses one class of function placement that
    has been used for many years with neither
    explicit recognition nor much conviction
  • Comment to some extend still true today

4
Example A system includes communication
  • Usually we draw a modular boundary around the
    communication subsystem and the rest of the
    system.
  • There is a list of functions to be implemented in
    any of several ways
  • by the communication subsystem?
  • by its client?
  • as a joint venture?
  • both doing it, redundantly?

5
Function example File Transfer
6
Threats to the careful FT transaction
  1. Disk faults
  2. Software faults file system, file transfer,
    communication software (buffering, copying
    mistakes)
  3. Processor, memory transient errors.
  4. Packet dropping, mutation
  5. Crash in the middle of transaction

7
How to cope with the threat?
  • Reinforce each step along the way using duplicate
    copies, time-out and retry, carefully located
    redundancy for error detection, crash recovery,
    tetc.
  • Reduce the probability of each of the individual
    threats to an acceptable small value.

8
Yet, other observations
  • Countering threat (2) requires writing correct
    programs, which is quite difficult. Few
    nontrivial large programs can claim correctness.
  • Doing everything many times, also appear
    uneconomical (especially in real-time systems,
    and resource constrained systems).

9
Alternate approach
  • End-to-end check and retry.

10
How will a reliable communication subsystem help?
  • Does it reduce the frequency of retries of the
    file transfer system? (thus improves performance)
  • YES!
  • Does it effect the correctness of the outcome?
  • NO!

11
End-to-End Argument
  • The function in question can completely and
    correctly be implemented only with the knowledge
    of the application standing at the endpoints of
    the communication system. Therefore, providing
    that questioned function as a feature of the
    communication system itself is not possible.

12
A Too-Real Example
  • Place MIT local network
  • What Over a period of time many of the files
    were repeatedly transferred through a defective
    gateway. The owners were forced to do the
    ultimate end-to-end error check manual
    comparison with old files.
  • Why the application programmer believed
    (assumed) the network was providing reliable
    transmission.

13
Performance Aspect
  • Some low level effort does have significant
    effect on application performance
  • BUT the key idea is the lower level need not to
    (overly spent effort to) provide perfect
    reliability.
  • The amount of effort to put into reliability
    measures within the data communication system is
    seen to be an engineering tradeoff rather a
    requirement for correctness.

14
Example2 Delivery guarantee
  • The ack message in ARPANET was never found to be
    helpful to applications using ARPANET, why?
  • Because knowing for sure that message was
    delivered to the target host is not very
    important.
  • What the application wants to know is whether or
    not the target host has acted on the message!

15
Continue
  • All manner of disaster might have struck after
    message delivery but before completion of the
    action requested by the message.
  • The acknowledgement that is really desired is an
    end-to-end one, which can obly by the target
    applicationI did it, or I didnt.

16
Eample3 Secure Transmission of Data
  • Use a secure subsystem
  • If the data transmission system perform
    encryption and decryption, it must be trusted to
    securely manage the required encryption keys
  • The data will be in the clear and thus vulnerable
    to attacks as they pass into the subsystem and
    are fan out to the target application.
  • The authenticity of the message must still be
    checked by the application.

17
Alternative
  • The application itself performs end-to-end
    encryption
  • Has its own authentication check
  • Manages the key itself
  • The data is never exposed to outside!
  • So to satisfy the application of the application,
    there is no need for communication subsystem to
    provide for automatic encryption of all traffic.

18
Other examples
  • Duplicate message suppression
  • Guaranteeing FIFI message delivery.
  • Transaction Management
  • They applied end-to-end argument to the
    construction of the SWALLOW distributed data
    storage system, where it leads to significant
    reduction in overhead.

19
Identifying the ends
  • Using the e2e arguments sometimes requires
    subtlety of analysis of application requirements.
  • Example if low levels of a telephone system try
    to accomplish bit-perfect communication, they
    will probably introduce uncontrolled delays in
    packet delivery. Such delays are disruptive to
    voice apps. It is better off to accept the
    damaged data and the participant to say excuse
    me?.

20
  • But, this strong version of e2e argument is a
    property of the specific applicationtwo people
    in real-time conversation.
  • In a speech message system, the argument suddenly
    changes its nature.

21
Conclusion
  • The e2e argument is a guideline that helps in
    application and protocol design analysis.
  • One must use some care to identify the end points
    to which the argument should be applied.
  • It is not an absolute rule, but a kind of
    Occams razor.
  • In designing a subsystem, dont overly anticipate
    to help users by taking on more functions than
    necessary.
  • Tradeoffs of function placement shall be
    carefully analyzed in system design.

22
of app needs
effort
Reliability
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