Impact of Hot-Potato Routing Changes in IP Networks - Archive ouverte HAL Accéder directement au contenu
Article Dans Une Revue IEEE/ACM Transactions on Networking Année : 2008

Impact of Hot-Potato Routing Changes in IP Networks

Renata Teixeira
Aman Shaikh
  • Fonction : Auteur
Timothy G. Griffin
  • Fonction : Auteur
Jennifer Rexford
  • Fonction : Auteur

Résumé

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 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, and apply our algorithm to a tier-1 ISP backbone network. We show that (i) BGP updates can lag 60 seconds or more behind the intradomain event; (ii) the number of BGP path changes triggered by hot-potato routing has a nearly uniform distribution across destination prefixes; and (iii) the fraction of BGP messages triggered by intradomain changes varies significantly across time and router locations. We show that hot-potato routing changes lead to longer delays in forwarding-plane convergence, shifts in the flow of traffic to neighboring domains, extra externally-visible BGP update messages, and inaccuracies in Internet performance measurements.

Dates et versions

hal-01151776 , version 1 (13-05-2015)

Identifiants

Citer

Renata Teixeira, Aman Shaikh, Timothy G. Griffin, Jennifer Rexford. Impact of Hot-Potato Routing Changes in IP Networks. IEEE/ACM Transactions on Networking, 2008, 16 (6), pp.1295-1307. ⟨10.1109/TNET.2008.919333⟩. ⟨hal-01151776⟩
57 Consultations
0 Téléchargements

Altmetric

Partager

Gmail Facebook X LinkedIn More