On the Cost of Supporting Multihoming and Mobility
Data(s) |
20/10/2011
20/10/2011
19/06/2009
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Resumo |
As the Internet has evolved and grown, an increasing number of nodes (hosts or autonomous systems) have become multihomed, i.e., a node is connected to more than one network. Mobility can be viewed as a special case of multihoming—as a node moves, it unsubscribes from one network and subscribes to another, which is akin to one interface becoming inactive and another active. The current Internet architecture has been facing significant challenges in effectively dealing with multihoming (and consequently mobility). The Recursive INternet Architecture (RINA) [1] was recently proposed as a clean-slate solution to the current problems of the Internet. In this paper, we perform an average-case cost analysis to compare the multihoming / mobility support of RINA, against that of other approaches such as LISP and MobileIP. We also validate our analysis using trace-driven simulation. National Science Foundation (CISE/CCF 0820138, CISE/CSR 0720604, CISE/CNS 0524477, CNS/ITR 0205294, CISE/EIA RI 0202067) |
Identificador |
Ishakian, Vatche; Akinwumi, Joseph; Matta, Ibrahim. "On the Cost of Supporting Multihoming and Mobility", Technical Report BUCS-TR-2009-020, Computer Science Department, Boston University, June 19, 2009. [Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/2144/1744] |
Idioma(s) |
en_US |
Publicador |
Boston University Computer Science Department |
Relação |
BUCS Technical Reports;BUCS-TR-2009-020 |
Tipo |
Technical Report |