============
Datagram Congestion Control Protocol (DCCP) is an unreliable, connection
-based protocol designed to solve issues present in UDP and TCP particularly
-for real time and multimedia traffic.
+oriented protocol designed to solve issues present in UDP and TCP, particularly
+for real-time and multimedia (streaming) traffic.
+It divides into a base protocol (RFC 4340) and plugable congestion control
+modules called CCIDs. Like plugable TCP congestion control, at least one CCID
+needs to be enabled in order for the protocol to function properly. In the Linux
+implementation, this is the TCP-like CCID2 (RFC 4341). Additional CCIDs, such as
+the TCP-friendly CCID3 (RFC 4342), are optional.
+For a brief introduction to CCIDs and suggestions for choosing a CCID to match
+given applications, see section 10 of RFC 4340.
It has a base protocol and pluggable congestion control IDs (CCIDs).
menuconfig IP_DCCP
tristate "The DCCP Protocol (EXPERIMENTAL)"
depends on INET && EXPERIMENTAL
+ select IP_DCCP_CCID2
---help---
Datagram Congestion Control Protocol (RFC 4340)
to the user. For example, a hypothetical application that
transferred files over DCCP, using application-level retransmissions
for lost packets, would prefer CCID 2 to CCID 3. On-line games may
- also prefer CCID 2.
+ also prefer CCID 2. See RFC 4341 for further details.
- CCID 2 is further described in RFC 4341,
- http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc4341.txt
-
- This text was extracted from RFC 4340 (sec. 10.1),
- http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc4340.txt
-
- To compile this CCID as a module, choose M here: the module will be
- called dccp_ccid2.
-
- If in doubt, say M.
+ CCID2 is the default CCID used by DCCP.
config IP_DCCP_CCID2_DEBUG
bool "CCID2 debugging messages"