The Algorithm-to-Algebra Method Applied to Route Aggregation: A Tale of Roadsigns
Défense de thèse de Seweryn Dynerowicz
Date : 15/06/2015 15:00 - 15/06/2015 17:00
Lieu : I02
Orateur(s) : Seweryn Dynerowicz
Organisateur(s) : Isabelle Daelman
Over the last decades, the Internet evolved in a strongly organic
but loosely-engineered way. The nexuses that formed at its top level
are managed mostly by commercially-driven organizations and are thus
governed by relationships where all information does not flow freely
to the rest of the world for the establishment of the routes
throughout the Internet. This evolution has given rise to a plethora
of protocols which were designed and adapted on an as-needed basis,
resulting in monolithic entities that require highly qualified
administrators for their daily management. Certain specific
configurations, colloquially known as configuration errors, can
result in route oscillations or disruptions on a global scale with a
potential to affect communications globally. Furthermore, an
intimate knowledge of the inner workings of various protocols is not
sufficient to solve the problems that can arise due to the
concomitance of various conditions distributed across several
domains managed by different organisations.
The complexity and problems that arise stir several questions, both
for the understanding of the origin of the problems and for the
design of the protocols that will
supersede them. An important guideline cherished by computing
scientists is modularity of a solution to a complex problem. While
the longing for such modularity has often been voiced by the
networking community as an increasingly pressing necessity, it seems
to be still missing from the vast literature of its research field.
To make things worse, no comprehensive theory of routing and
forwarding exists as of today to synthesize the compiled list of
protocols and their associated problems.
Over the past decades, the problem of identifying the best paths in
a graph has been an object of study from an algebraic perspective.
This approach was always somehow limited to metrics and was never
fully applied to real-world routing protocols to attempt capturing
as many aspects as possible. This changed in the recent years, with
attempts to reduce the distance between the algebraic theory of path
finding and various mecanisms which can be found in protocols in use
nowadays.
Metarouting has emerged as a promising approach embracing Dijkstra’s
separation of concerns by looking at routing protocols from an
algebraic perspective. Instead of adopting the radical viewpoint of
throwing away the entire corpus of routing protocols and starting
from scratch, Griffin and Sobrinho proposed to deconstruct existing
routing protocols and study how their common building blocks fit
together. A guiding principle behind this approach is the
Algorithm-to-Algebra Method, whereby aspects that were thought to be
algorithmic in nature are progressively transferred to an algebraic
dimension of the central problem that routing protocols are solving.
In line with this seminal work, the goal of this thesis is to
transfer two related mecanisms in use on the Internet, Route
Aggregation and Longest Macth Prefix, into an algebraic form.
Contact :
Isabelle Daelman
-
4966
-
isabelle.daelman@unamur.be
Plus d'info :
https://www.unamur.be/info/formulaires/these-dynerowicz
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