Abstract

The advent of programmable network switch ASICs and recent developments on other programmable data planes (NPUs, FPGAs) drive the renewed interest in network data plane programmability. The P4 language has emerged as a strong candidate to describe a protocol independent datapath pipeline. With its supported architectures, the P4 language provides an excellent way to define the packet processing and forwarding behavior, while leaving other networking components such as the traffic management engine, to non-programmable fixed function elements, based on the capabilities of most programmable devices. However, network flexibility is essential to meet the Quality of Service (QoS) requirements of traffic flows. Thus, enabling programmable control for fixed-function elements like traffic management is crucial. Towards that end we propose the use of virtual queues in the P4 pipeline, investigate the application of virtual queue-based traffic management, and portability of the approach using different P4 programmable targets. Specifically, we focus on virtual queue based Active Queue Management (AQM) for congestion policing and meeting the latency targets of distinct network slices. The solution is compared to P4 built-in functionality for bandwidth management using meters, proving also that the additional dimensions of control are achieved without compromising the processing complexity of the solution.

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