A comparative study of aggregate TCP retransmission rates
Kostas Pentikousis, Hussein Badr, and Asha Andrade

TL;DR
This study quantifies TCP segment retransmission rates across multiple large network sites, revealing that retransmissions are more common than previously believed, often exceeding 1% in real-world traffic.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of aggregate TCP retransmission rates from diverse network traces, challenging the notion that retransmissions are rare in modern networks.
Findings
Nearly half of the traces had retransmission rates over 1%
About a quarter of the traces exceeded 2% retransmission rate
Retransmission rates of 1% or higher are common even in high-capacity networks
Abstract
Segment retransmissions are an essential tool in assuring reliable end-to-end communication in the Internet. Their crucial role in TCP design and operation has been studied extensively, in particular with respect to identifying non-conformant, buggy, or underperforming behaviour. However, TCP segment retransmissions are often overlooked when examining and analyzing large traffic traces. In fact, some have come to believe that retransmissions are a rare oddity, characteristically associated with faulty network paths, which, typically, tend to disappear as networking technology advances and link capacities grow. We find that this may be far from the reality experienced by TCP flows. We quantify aggregate TCP segment retransmission rates using publicly available network traces from six passive monitoring points attached to the egress gateways at large sites. In virtually half of the traces…
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