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Impact of Hot-Potato Routing Changes in IP Networks
"... Abstract — Despite the architectural separation between intradomain and interdomain routing in the Internet, intradomain protocols do influence the path-selection process in the Border Gateway Protocol (BGP). When choosing between multiple equally-good BGP routes, a router selects the one with the c ..."
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Cited by 5 (0 self)
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with the closest egress point, based on the intradomain path cost. Under such hot-potato routing, an intradomain event can trigger BGP routing changes. To characterize the influence of hot-potato routing, we propose a technique for associating BGP routing changes with events visible in the intradomain protocol
Dynamics of Hot-Potato Routing in IP Networks
, 2004
"... Despite the architectural separation between intradomain and interdomain routing in the Internet, intradomain protocols do influence the path-selection process in the Border Gateway Protocol (BGP). When choosing between multiple equally-good BGP routes, a router selects the one with the closest egr ..."
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Cited by 65 (7 self)
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egress point, based on the intradomain path cost. Under such hot-potato routing, an intradomain event can trigger BGP routing changes. To characterize the influence of hot-potato routing, we conduct controlled experiments with a commercial router. Then, we propose a technique for associating BGP routing
Network sensitivity to hot-potato disruptions
- In Proceedings of ACM SIGCOMM ’04
, 2004
"... Hot-potato routing is a mechanism employed when there are multiple (equally good) interdomain routes available for a given destination. In this scenario, the Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) selects the interdomain route associated with the closest egress point based upon intradomain path costs. Conseq ..."
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Cited by 55 (7 self)
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. Consequently, intradomain routing changes can impact interdomain routing and cause abrupt swings of external routes, which we call hot-potato disruptions. Recent work has shown that hot-potato disruptions can have a substantial impact on large ISP backbones and thereby jeopardize the network robustness. As a
ABSTRACT Network Sensitivity to Hot-Potato Disruptions
"... Hot-potato routing is a mechanism employed when there are multiple (equally good) interdomain routes available for a given destination. In this scenario, the Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) selects the interdomain route associated with the closest egress point based upon intradomain path costs. Conseq ..."
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. Consequently, intradomain routing changes can impact interdomain routing and cause abrupt swings of external routes, which we call hot-potato disruptions. Recent work has shown that hot-potato disruptions can have a substantial impact on large ISP backbones and thereby jeopardize the network robustness. As a
GPSR: Greedy perimeter stateless routing for wireless networks
- MOBICOM
, 2000
"... We present Greedy Perimeter Stateless Routing (GPSR), a novel routing protocol for wireless datagram networks that uses the positions of touters and a packer's destination to make packet forwarding decisions. GPSR makes greedy forwarding decisions using only information about a router's i ..."
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Cited by 2290 (8 self)
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-hoc routing protocols as the number of network destinations increases. Under mobility's frequent topology changes, GPSR can use local topology information to find correct new routes quickly. We describe the GPSR protocol, and use extensive simulation of mobile wireless networks to compare its performance
Dynamic source routing in ad hoc wireless networks
- Mobile Computing
, 1996
"... An ad hoc network is a collection of wireless mobile hosts forming a temporary network without the aid of any established infrastructure or centralized administration. In such an environment, it may be necessary for one mobile host to enlist the aid of other hosts in forwarding a packet to its desti ..."
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Cited by 3108 (31 self)
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destination, due to the limited range of each mobile host’s wireless transmissions. This paper presents a protocol for routing in ad hoc networks that uses dynamic source routing. The protocol adapts quickly to routing changes when host movement is frequent, yet requires little or no overhead during periods
Scheduled Hot-Potato Routing
- Journal of Graph Algorithms and Applications
, 1998
"... This paper is concerned with fast, hot-potato routing, performed according to a predetermined schedule. At each time period each node selects an outgoing link, through which an incoming packet is sent. No buffers are used. We investigate first the problem of how to route a network-wide demand of pac ..."
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Cited by 3 (0 self)
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This paper is concerned with fast, hot-potato routing, performed according to a predetermined schedule. At each time period each node selects an outgoing link, through which an incoming packet is sent. No buffers are used. We investigate first the problem of how to route a network-wide demand
Location-aided routing (LAR) in mobile ad hoc networks, in:
- Proc. of MOBICOM
, 1998
"... A mobile ad hoc network consists of wireless hosts that may move often. Movement of hosts results in a change in routes, requiring some mechanism for determining new routes. Several routing protocols have already been proposed for ad hoc networks. This paper suggests an approach to utilize location ..."
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Cited by 901 (10 self)
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A mobile ad hoc network consists of wireless hosts that may move often. Movement of hosts results in a change in routes, requiring some mechanism for determining new routes. Several routing protocols have already been proposed for ad hoc networks. This paper suggests an approach to utilize
A Review of Current Routing Protocols for Ad-Hoc Mobile Wireless Networks
"... An ad-hoc mobile network is a collection of mobile nodes that are dynamically and arbitrarily located in such a manner that the interconnections between nodes are capable of changing on a continual basis. In order to facilitate communication within the network, a routing protocol is used to discove ..."
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Cited by 1311 (3 self)
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An ad-hoc mobile network is a collection of mobile nodes that are dynamically and arbitrarily located in such a manner that the interconnections between nodes are capable of changing on a continual basis. In order to facilitate communication within the network, a routing protocol is used
A Highly Adaptive Distributed Routing Algorithm for Mobile Wireless Networks
, 1997
"... We present a new distributed routing protocol for mobile, multihop, wireless networks. The protocol is one of a family of protocols which we term "link reversal" algorithms. The protocol's reaction is structured as a temporally-ordered sequence of diffusing computations; each computat ..."
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Cited by 1100 (6 self)
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;temporal order" of topological change events which is used to structure (or order) the algorithm's reaction to topological changes. We refer to the protocol as the Temporally-Ordered Routing Algorithm (TORA).
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