Google Looks to Speed Up the Internet
Google technicians want an overhaul of the Web's TCP (Transmission Control Protocol) transport layer and are suggesting ways to reduce latency and make the Web faster.

[ Previously, Google has advocated a cooperative effort to make the Web faster. | Subscribe to InfoWorld's Technology: Networking newsletter for more insights and news on networking. ]
Recommendations include increasing the TCP initial congestion window. "The amount of data sent at the beginning of a TCP connection is currently three packets, implying three round trips to deliver a tiny, 15K-sized content. Our experiments indicate that IW10 [initial congestion window of 10 packets] reduces the network latency of Web transfers by over 10 percent," Cheng said. Google also wants the initial timeout reduced from three seconds to one second. "An RTT [round-trip time] of three seconds was appropriate a couple of decades ago, but today's Internet requires a much smaller timeout."

Google also is encouraging use of the Google-developed TCP Fast Open protocol, which reduces application network latency, and proportional rate reduction (PRR) for TCP. "Packet losses indicate the network is in disorder or is congested. PRR, a new loss recovery algorithm, retransmits smoothly to recover losses during network congestion. The algorithm is faster than the current mechanism by adjusting the transmission rate according to the degree of losses. PRR is now part of the Linux kernel and is in the process of becoming part of the TCP standard," Cheng said.
Also, Google is developing algorithms to recover faster on "noisy" mobile networks, said Cheng.
Google's TCP work is open source and disseminated through the Linux kernel, IETF standards proposals, and research publications to encourage industry involvement, Cheng noted.
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