Declarative Transport: No More Transport Protocols to Design, Only Policies to Specify


Autoria(s): Mattar, Karim; Matta, Ibrahim; Day, John; Ishakian, Vatche; Gursun, Gonca
Data(s)

20/10/2011

20/10/2011

12/07/2008

Resumo

Transport protocols are an integral part of the inter-process communication (IPC) service used by application processes to communicate over the network infrastructure. With almost 30 years of research on transport, one would have hoped that we have a good handle on the problem. Unfortunately, that is not true. As the Internet continues to grow, new network technologies and new applications continue to emerge putting transport protocols in a never-ending flux as they are continuously adapted for these new environments. In this work, we propose a clean-slate transport architecture that renders all possible transport solutions as simply combinations of policies instantiated on a single common structure. We identify a minimal set of mechanisms that once instantiated with the appropriate policies allows any transport solution to be realized. Given our proposed architecture, we contend that there are no more transport protocols to design—only policies to specify. We implement our transport architecture in a declarative language, Network Datalog (NDlog), making the specification of different transport policies easy, compact, reusable, dynamically configurable and potentially verifiable. In NDlog, transport state is represented as database relations, state is updated/queried using database operations, and transport policies are specified using declarative rules. We identify limitations with NDlog that could potentially threaten the correctness of our specification. We propose several language extensions to NDlog that would significantly improve the programmability of transport policies.

NSF (CISE/CNF 0820138, CISE/CNS 070604, CISE/CNS 0524477, CNS/ITR 0205294, CISE/EIA RI 0202067)

Identificador

Mattar, Karim; Matta, Ibrahim; Day, John; Ishakian, Vatche; Gursun, Gonca. "Declarative Transport: No more transport protocols to design, only policies to specify", Technical Report BUCS-TR-2008-014, Computer Science Department, Boston University, July 12, 2008. [Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/2144/1707]

http://hdl.handle.net/2144/1707

Idioma(s)

en_US

Publicador

Boston University Computer Science Department

Relação

BUCS Technical Reports;BUCS-TR-2008-014

Tipo

Technical Report