3.8 Proceedings Paper

Homa: A Receiver-Driven Low-Latency Transport Protocol Using Network Priorities

Publisher

ASSOC COMPUTING MACHINERY
DOI: 10.1145/3230543.3230564

Keywords

Data centers; low latency; network stacks; transport protocols

Funding

  1. C-FAR (one of six centers of STAR-net, a Semiconductor Research Corporation program)
  2. MARCO
  3. DARPA
  4. Stanford Platform Laboratory

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Homa is a new transport protocol for datacenter networks. It provides exceptionally low latency, especially for workloads with a high volume of very short messages, and it also supports large messages and high network utilization. Homa uses in-network priority queues to ensure low latency for short messages; priority allocation is managed dynamically by each receiver and integrated with a receiver-driven flow control mechanism. Homa also uses controlled overcommitment of receiver downlinks to ensure efficient bandwidth utilization at high load. Our implementation of Homa delivers 99th percentile round-trip times less than 15 mu s for short messages on a 10 Gbps network running at 80% load. These latencies are almost 100x lower than the best published measurements of an implementation. In simulations, Homa's latency is roughly equal to pFabric and significantly better than pHost, PIAS, and NDP for almost all message sizes and workloads. Homa can also sustain higher network loads than pFabric, pHost, or PIAS.

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