CSIT560 by M. Hamdi1 Internet Infrastructure: Switches and Routers Mounir Hamdi Head & Chair...

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CSIT560 by M. Hamdi 1 Internet Infrastructure: Internet Infrastructure: Switches and Routers Switches and Routers Mounir Hamdi Mounir Hamdi Head & Chair Professor, Computer Science and Head & Chair Professor, Computer Science and Engineering Engineering Hong Kong University of Science and Technology Hong Kong University of Science and Technology
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Transcript of CSIT560 by M. Hamdi1 Internet Infrastructure: Switches and Routers Mounir Hamdi Head & Chair...

CSIT560 by M. Hamdi 1

Internet Infrastructure: Internet Infrastructure: Switches and RoutersSwitches and Routers

Mounir HamdiMounir HamdiHead & Chair Professor, Computer Science and EngineeringHead & Chair Professor, Computer Science and Engineering

Hong Kong University of Science and TechnologyHong Kong University of Science and Technology

CSIT560 by M. Hamdi 2

Goals of the Course• Understand the architecture, operation, and evolution of the Internet

– IP, Optical, Openflow

• Understand how to design, implement and evaluate Internet routers and switches (Telecom Equipment)

• Understand the implementation of network services (e.g., QoS) on switches and routers

• Introduction to Network-on-Chip (NoC), Communication Performance, Organizational Structure, Interconnection Topologies, Trade-offs in Network Topology, and Routing

• Evaluate various Internet access methods (including wireless)

• Build solid learning skills for investigating a good project– Task selection and aim

– Survey & conclusion & research methodology

– Presentation

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Outline of the Course

• The focus of the course is on the design and analysis of high-performance electronic/optical switches/routers needed to support the development and delivery of advanced network services over high-speed Internet.

• The switches and routers are the KEY building blocks of the Internet, and as a result, the capability of the Internet in all its aspects depends on the capability of its switches and routers (hardware and software)

• Understand the evaluate the evolution of the Internet infrastructure (e.g., NoC, Wireless, etc.)

• The goal of the course is to provide a basis for understanding, appreciating, and performing research/survey and development in networking with a special emphasis on switches and routers.

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Outline of the Course

• IntroductionIntroduction– Evolution of the Internet (Architecture, Protocols and

Applications)

– Evolution of packet switches and routers, basic architectural components, and some example architectures

– Network Processors and Packet Processing (IPv4 and IPv6)

– Architecture and operation of “optical” circuit-switched switches/routers

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Outline of the Course

• High-Performance Packet Switches/RoutersHigh-Performance Packet Switches/Routers– Architectures of packet switches/routers (IQ, OQ, VOQ,

CIOQ, SM, Buffered Crossbars)

– Design and analysis of switch fabrics (Crossbar, Clos, shared memory, etc.)

– Design and analysis of scheduling algorithms (arbitration, shared memory contention, etc.)

– Emulation of output-queueing switches by more practical switches

– State-of-the-art commercial products

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Outline of the Course

• Network-on-chip (NoC) Design and ApplicationsNetwork-on-chip (NoC) Design and Applications– Introduction to NoC

– Communication Performance, Organizational Structure, Interconnection Topologies, Trade-offs in Network Topology, and Routing

– Applications of NoC in network Equipment

– Future trends of this paradigm

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Outline of the Course

• Quality-of-Service Provision in the Internet – Internet Congestion Control

– QoS paradigms (IntServ, DiffServ, Controlled load, etc.)

– Flow-based QoS frameworks: Hardware and software solutions

– Stateless QoS frameworks: RED, WRED, congestion control, and Active queue management

– MPLS/GMPLS

– Openflow

– State-of-the-art commercial products

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Outline of the Course• Optical NetworksOptical Networks

– Optical technology used for the design of switches/routers as well as transmission links

– Dense Wavelength Division Multiplexing

– Optical Circuit Switches: Architectural alternatives and performance evaluation

– Optical Burst switches

– Optical Packet Switches

– Design, management, and operation of DWDM networks

– State-of-the-art commercial products

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Outline of the Course

• Internet Wireless AccessInternet Wireless Access– WLANs and 802.11

– WiMAX and 802.16

– Cellular mobile networks

• Performance EvaluationPerformance Evaluation– Simulations

– Modeling

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Grading

• Homework 20%

• Midterm 40%

• Project 40%

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Course project

• Investigate and survey existing advances and/or new ideas and solutions – related to Internet Infrastrcuture - in a small scale project (To be given or chosen on your own)

– Define the problem

– Execute the survey and/or research

– Work with your partner

– Write up and present your finding

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Course Project

• I’ll post on the class web page a list of projects– you can either choose one of these projects or come up with your

own

• Choose your project, partner (s), and submit a one page proposal describing:– The problem you are investigating

– Your plan of project with milestones

• Final project presentation (20-25 minutes)

• Submit project reports

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Independent Projects

• If you want to go deeper in a topic related to Internet Infrastructures (e.g., Wireless, Internet Routers, Data centers, Cloud Computing, Optical, QoS, NoC, Applications, etc.), then you might want to opt for an Independent ProjectIndependent Project– You can come and talk to me

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Homework• Goals:

1. Synthesize main ideas and concepts from very important research or development work

• I will post in the class web page a list of “well-known/seminal” papers to choose from

• Report contains:

1. Description of the paper

2. Goals and problems solved in the paper

3. What did you like/dislike about the paper

4. How the paper affected the advances in networking (if any)

5. Recommendations for improvements or extension of the work

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How to Contact Me

• Instructor: Mounir Hamdi, [email protected]

• TA: Mr. Lin Dong, [email protected]

• Office Hours– You can come any time – just email me ahead of time

– I would like to work closely with each student

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Overview and History of the Internet

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What is a Communication Network?(from an end system point of view)

• A network offers a service: move information

– Messenger, telegraph, telephone, Internet …

– another example, transportation service: move objects

• horse, train, truck, airplane ...

• What distinguishes different types of networks?

– The services they provide

• What distinguish the services?– latency

– bandwidth

– loss rate

– number of end systems

– Reliability, unicast vs. multicast, real-time, message vs. byte ...

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What is a Communication Network?Infrastructure Centric View

• Hardware– Electrons and photons as communication data

– Links: fiber, copper, satellite, WiFI, …

– Switches: mechanical/electronic/optical,

• Software– Protocols: TCP/IP, ATM, MPLS, SONET, Ethernet, PPP,

X.25, Frame Relay, AppleTalk, Openflow, SNA

– Functionalities: routing, error control, congestion control, Quality of Service (QoS), …

– Applications: FTP, WEB, X windows, VOIP, IPTV...

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Types of Networks• Geographical distance

– Body Area Networks (BAN)– Personal Areas Networks (PAN)– Sensor Networks– Local Area Networks (LAN): Ethernet, Token ring, FDDI

– Metropolitan Area Networks (MAN): DQDB, SMDS (Switched Multi-gigabit Data Service)

– Wide Area Networks (WAN): IP, ATM, Frame relay

• Information type– data networks vs. telecommunication networks

• Application type– special purpose networks: airline reservation network, sensor networks,

banking network, credit card network, telephony

– general purpose network: Internet

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Types of Networks• Right to use

– private: enterprise networks

– public: telephony network, Internet

• Ownership of protocols– proprietary: SNA

– open: IP

• Technologies– terrestrial vs. satellite

– wired vs. wireless

• Protocols– IP, AppleTalk, SNA

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The Internet

• Global scale, general purpose, heterogeneous-technologies, public, computer network

• Internet Protocol– Open standard: Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) as

standard body

– Technical basis for other types of networks

• Intranet: enterprise IP network

• Developed by the research community

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Internet History

• 1961: Kleinrock - queueing theory shows effectiveness

of packet-switching

• 1964: Baran – Introduced first Distributed packet-switching Communication networks

• 1967: ARPAnet conceived and sponsored by Advanced Research Projects Agency – Larry Roberts

• 1969: first ARPAnet node operational at UCLA. Then Stanford, Utah, and UCSB

• 1972:

– ARPAnet demonstrated publicly

– NCP (Network Control Protocol) first host-host protocol (equivalent to TCP/IP)

– First e-mail program to operate across networks

– ARPAnet has 15 nodes and connected 26 hosts

1961-1972: Early packet-switching principles

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Internet History

• 1970: ALOHAnet satellite network in Hawaii

• 1973: Metcalfe’s PhD thesis proposes Ethernet

• 1974: Cerf and Kahn - architecture for interconnecting networks (TCP)

• late70’s: proprietary architectures: DECnet, SNA, XNA

• late 70’s: switching fixed length packets (ATM precursor)

• 1979: ARPAnet has 200 nodes

Cerf and Kahn’s internetworking principles:

– minimalism, autonomy - no internal changes is required to interconnect networks

– best effort service model

– stateless routers

– decentralized control

define today’s Internet architecture

1972-1980: Internetworking, new and proprietary nets

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1971-1973: Arpanet Growing• 1970 - First 2 cross-country link, UCLA-BBN and MIT-Utah,

installed by AT&T at 56kbps

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Internet History

• 1983: deployment of TCP/IP

• 1982: SMTP e-mail protocol defined

• 1983: DNS defined for name-to-IP-address translation

• 1985: ftp protocol defined (first version: 1972)

• 1988: TCP congestion control

• New national networks: CSnet, BITnet, NSFnet, Minitel

• 100,000 hosts connected to confederation of networks

1980-1990: new protocols, a proliferation of networks

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Internet History

• Early 1990’s: ARPAnet decomissioned

• 1991: NSF lifts restrictions on commercial use of NSFnet (decommissioned, 1995)

• early 1990s: WWW

– hypertext [Bush 1945, Nelson 1960’s]

– HTML, http: Berners-Lee

– 1994: Mosaic, later Netscape

– late 1990’s: commercialization of the WWW

Late 1990’s:

• est. 50 million computers on Internet

• est. 100 million+ users in 160 countries

• backbone links running at 1 Gbps+

2000’s

• VoIP, Video on demand, IPTV, Internet business

• RSS, Web 2.0

• Social networking

1990’s: commercialization, the WWW

CSIT560 by M. Hamdi

Internet - Global Statistics

1999• 32.5 Million Hosts

• 80 Million Users

2010• 800 Million Hosts

• 1966 Million Users

(approx. 4.6Billion mobile phone users, as of 2010)

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Internet Users by World Region

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Internet Domain Survey Host Count

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Internet Penetration 2010

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Top 20: % Internet Use (2009)

# Country or RegionPenetration

(% Population)Internet Users

Latest DataPopulation( 2010 Est. )

Source and Dateof Latest Data

1 Falkland Islands 100.0 % 2,546 2,546 ITU - June/10

2 Iceland 97.6 % 301,600 308,910 ITU - June/10

3 Norway 94.8 % 4,431,100 4,676,305 ITU - June/10

4 Greenland 90.2 % 52,000 57,637 ITU - Mar/08

5 Sweden 92.5 % 8,397,900 9,074,055 ITU - June/10

6 Saint Kitts and Nevis 34.1 % 49,898 17,000 ITU - June/10

7 Netherlands 88.6 % 14,872,200 16,783,092 ITU - June/10

8 Denmark 86.1 % 4,750,500 5,515,575 ITU - June/10

9 Finland 85.3 % 4,480,900 5,255,695 ITU - June/10

10 New Zealand 85.4 % 3,600,000 4,213,418 ITU - June/10

11 Australia 80.1 % 17,033,826 21,262,641 N-O - AUG/09

12 Luxembourg 85.3 % 424,500 497,538 ITU - June/10

13 Korea 81.1 % 39,440,000 48,636,068 ITU - June/10

14 Faroe Islands 76.4 % 37,500 49,057 ITU - Nov/08

15 United Kingdom 82.5 % 51,442,100 62,348,447 ITU - June/10

16 United States 77.3 % 239,893,600 310,232,863 ITU - June/10

17 Antigua & Barbuda 74.9 % 65,000 86,754 ITU - June/09

18 Switzerland 75.3 % 5,739,300 7,623,438 ITU - Sept/09

19 Japan 78.2 % 99,143,700 126,804,433 ITU - June/10

20 Germany 79.1 % 65,123,800 82,282,988 ITU - June/10

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Languages of Internet Users

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Who is Who on the Internet ?

• Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF): The IETF is the protocol engineering and development arm of the Internet. Subdivided into many working groups, which specify Request For Comments or RFCs.

• IRTF (Internet Research Task Force): The Internet Research Task Force is composed of a number of focused, long-term and small Research Groups.

• Internet Architecture Board (IAB): The IAB is responsible for defining the overall architecture of the Internet, providing guidance and broad direction to the IETF.

• The Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG): The IESG is responsible for technical management of IETF activities and the Internet standards process. Composed of the Area Directors of the IETF working groups.

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Internet Standardization Process

• All standards of the Internet are published as RFC (Request for Comments). But not all RFCs are Internet Standards !

– available: http://www.ietf.org

• A typical (but not only) way of standardization is:

– Internet Drafts

– RFC

– Proposed Standard

– Draft Standard (requires 2 working implementation)

– Internet Standard (declared by IAB)

• David Clark, MIT, 1992: "We reject: kings, presidents, and voting. We believe in: rough consensus and running code.”

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Services Provided by the Internet• Shared access to computing resources

– telnet (1970’s)

• Shared access to data/files– FTP, NFS, AFS (1980’s)

• Communication medium over which people interact– email (1980’s), on-line chat rooms, instant messaging (1990’s)

– audio, video (1990’s) • replacing telephone network?

• A medium for information dissemination– USENET (1980’s)– WWW (1990’s)

• replacing newspaper, magazine?– audio, video (1990’s)

• replacing radio, CD, TV?

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Today’s Vision

• Everything is digital: voice, video, music, pictures, live events, …

• Everything is on-line: bank statement, medical record, books, airline schedule, weather, highway traffic, …

• Everyone is connected: doctor, teacher, broker, mother, son, friends, enemies, voter

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What is Next? – many of it already here

• E-Health, e-Govrnment, e-Banking, e-Business, ….

• Internet of Things

• Social Networking (Facebook, Twitter)

– Already has huge impact (e.g., Tunisia, Egypt, etc.)

• Electronic democracy

– little people can voice their opinions to the whole world

– WikiLeaks

– bridge the gap between information haves and have no’s

• Electronic Crimes

– hacker can bring the whole world to its knee

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Industrial Players• Telephone companies

– own long-haul and access communication links, customers

• Cable companies

– own access links

• Wireless/Satellite companies

– alternative communication links

• Utility companies: power, water, railway

– own right of way to lay down more wires

• Medium companies

– own content

• Internet Service Providers

• Equipment companies

– switches/routers, chips, optics, computers

• Software companies

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What is the Internet?

• The collection of hosts and routers that are mutually reachable at any given instant

• All run the Internet Protocol (IP)– Version 4 (IPv4) is the dominant protocol

– Version 6 (IPv6) is the future protocol

• Lots of protocols below and above IP, but only one IP– Common layer

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Commercial Internet after 1994

NBP A

NBP B

NAP NAP

regional ISP

regional ISP

localISP

localISP

• Roughly hierarchical• National/international

backbone providers (NBPs)– e.g., Sprint, AT&T,

UUNet– interconnect (peer) with

each other privately, or at public Network Access Point (NAPs)

• regional ISPs– connect into NBPs

• local ISP, company– connect into regional

ISPs

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Internet Organization

ISP = Internet Service ProviderBSP = Backbone Service ProviderNAP = Network Access PointPOP = Point of PresenceCN = Customer Network

NAP

NAP

NAP

BSP

ISP

ISP

POP

POP

POP

ISPPOP

BSP

BSPPOP

POP

CN

CN

CN

CNCN

CN

CN

CN

POP

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Commercial Internet after 1994

NSF Network

Regional ISP

America On Line

IBM

BartnetCampus Network

Joe's CompanyStanford

Xerox Parc

Berkeley

NSF Network

Internet MCI

UUnet

SprintNet

Modem

IBM

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Topology of CERNET

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The Role of Hong Kong Internet Exchange

Global Internet

HK ISP-A HK ISP-B

HKIX

Downstream CustomersDownstream Customers

CSIT560 by M. Hamdi 45

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HKIX Infrastructure

HKIX - AS4635

ISP 4 ISP 5 ISP 6

ISP 1 ISP 2 ISP 3

InternetInternet Internet

Internet Internet Internet

HKIX2 HKIX1

2 x 10Gbps links

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CSIT560 by M. Hamdi 48

HARNET/Internet

CityU

LU

HKU

CUHK

PolyU

HKBU

HKIEdHKUST

54M/108M5M/10M

22M/44M11M/22M 10M/20M

54M/108M6M/12M54M/108M

6M/12M

54M/108M6M/12M

PCCWATM

NETWORK

35M/70M25M/50M 24M/48M

6M/12M24M/48M6M/12M

Internet2Internet2STARTAPSTARTAP

Commodity Commodity InternetInternet

HKIXHKIX

CERNET/ CERNET/ TANETTANET

45M IPLC45M IPLC

EQUANTINTERNETBACKBONE

PCCW Data Centre

Equant Data Centre

96M IP96M IP

45M/90M45M/90M24M/48M24M/48M8 8

2 2 50M/100M50M/100M

2 M2 M

10M10M

CSIT560 by M. Hamdi 49

Internet Architecture

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Basic Architecture: NAPs and National ISPs

• The Internet has a hierarchical structure.

• At the highest level are large national Internet Service Providers that interconnect through Network Access Points (NAPs).

• There are about a dozen NAPs in the U.S., run by common carriers such as Sprint and Ameritech, and many more around the world (Many of these are traditional telephone companies, others are pure data network companies).

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The real story…

• Regional ISPs interconnect with national ISPs and provide services to their customers and sell access to local ISPs who, in turn, sell access to individuals and companies.

CSIT560 by M. Hamdi 52

pop

pop

pop po

p

CSIT560 by M. Hamdi 53

Long Distance Network

Central

Office

Central

Office

The Hierarchical Nature of the InternetThe Hierarchical Nature of the Internet

Central

Office

Central

Office

Central

Office

Central

Office

Central

Office

Central

Office

Central

Office

Central

Office

Central

Office

Central

Office

Major

City

-

Regional

Center

Major

City

-

Regional

Center

Major

City

-

Regional

Center

Major

City

-

Regional

Center

Node

Node

Node

Node

San FranciscoSan Francisco New YorkNew York

Metro Network

CSIT560 by M. Hamdi 54

Points of Presence (POPs)

A

B

C

POP1

POP3POP2

POP4 D

E

F

POP5

POP6 POP7POP8

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Router Market Share

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A Bird’s View of the Internet

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A Bird’s View of the Internet

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Hop-by-Hop Behavior

From traceroute.pacific.net.hk to cs.stanford.edutraceroute to cs.stanford.edu (171.64.64.64) from lamtin.pacific.net.hk (202.14.67.228), rsm-vl1.pacific.net.hk (202.14.67.5) gw2.hk.super.net (202.14.67.2) 3 wtcr7002.pacific.net.hk (202.64.22.254) 4 atm3-0-33.hsipaccess2.hkg1.net.reach.com (210.57.26.1) 5 ge-0-3-0.mpls1.hkg1.net.reach.com (210.57.2.129) 6 so-4-2-0.tap2.LosAngeles1.net.reach.com (210.57.0.249) 7 unknown.Level3.net (209.0.227.42) 8 lax-core-01.inet.qwest.net (205.171.19.37) 9 sjo-core-03.inet.qwest.net (205.171.5.155) 10 sjo-core-01.inet.qwest.net (205.171.22.10) 11 svl-core-01.inet.qwest.net (205.171.5.97) 12 svl-edge-09.inet.qwest.net (205.171.14.94) 13 65.113.32.210 (65.113.32.210) 14 sunet-gateway.Stanford.EDU (171.66.1.13) 15 CS.Stanford.EDU (171.64.64.64)

Within HK

Qwest(Backbone)

Stanford

Los Angeles

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NAP-Based Architecture

UUNET

NYNAP

CHINAP

WDCNAP

SFNAP

MCI

QWest

Sprint Net

MAEWest

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Basic Architecture: MAEs and local ISPs

• As the number of ISPs has grown, a new type of network access point, called a metropolitan area exchange (MAE) has arisen.

• There are about 50 such MAEs around the U.S. today.

• Sometimes large regional and local ISPs (AOL) also have access directly to NAPs.

• It has to be approved by the other networks already connected to the NAPs – generally it is a business decision.

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Internet Packet Exchange ChargesPeering

• ISPs at the same level usually do not charge each other for exchanging messages.

• They update their routing tables with each other customers or pop.

• This is called peering.

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Charges: Non-Peering

• Higher level ISPs, however, charge lower level ones (national ISPs charge regional ISPs which in turn charge local ISPs) for carrying Internet traffic.

• Local ISPs, of course, charge individuals and corporate users for access.

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Connecting to an ISP• ISPs provide access to the Internet through a Point

of Presence (POP).

• Individual users access the POP through a dial-up line using the PPP protocol.

• The call connects the user to the ISP’s modem pool, after which a remote access server (RAS) checks the user-id and password.

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More on connecting

• Once logged in, the user can send TCP/IP/[PPP] packets over the telephone line which are then sent out over the Internet through the ISP’s POP (point of presence)

• Corporate users might access the POP using a T-1, T-3 or ATM OC-3 connections, for example, provided by a common carrier.

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DS (telephone carrier) Data Rates

DesignationNumber of

Voice CircuitsBandwidth

DS0 1 64 kb/s

DS1 (T1) 24 1.544 Mb/s

DS2 (T2) 96 6.312 Mb/s

DS3 (T3) 672 44.736 Mb/s

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SONET Data RatesA small set of fixed data transmission rates is defined for SONET. All of these rates are multiples of 51.84 Mb/s, which is referred to as Optical Carrier Level 1 (on the fiber) or Synchronous Transport Signal Level 1 (when converted to electrical signals)

A small set of fixed data transmission rates is defined for SONET. All of these rates are multiples of 51.84 Mb/s, which is referred to as Optical Carrier Level 1 (on the fiber) or Synchronous Transport Signal Level 1 (when converted to electrical signals)

Optical Level Line Rate, Mb/sOptical Level Line Rate, Mb/s

OC-1

OC-3

OC-9

OC-12

OC-18

OC-24

OC-36

OC-48

OC-96

OC-192

OC-768

51.840

155.520

466.560

622.080

933.120

1244.160

1866.240

2488.320

4976.640

9953.280

39813.120

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ISPs and Backbones

LineServer

Dialup Linesto Customers

Ethernet

Router

T1 Lines toCustomers

CoreRouter

Point of Presence (POP)

T3 Line

T3 Lines toOther POPs

ATMSwitch

OC-3Line

OC-3Lines

to OtherATM Switches

POP: Connection with customers

POP: connection with POP of the same ISP or different

ISPs

CSIT560 by M. Hamdi 68Inside the Pacific/Northwest Gigapop

Router

High-speedRouter

Abilene

DREN

WSU

Boeing

U Idaho

High-speedRouter

Router

Router

Montana State U

U Montana

U Alaska

Portland POP

Microsoft

Router Router

Switch

U Wash

Router

Switch Switch

CA*Net 3Sprint UUNet Verio

Router

AT&T

Sprint

Router

OC-48OC-12T-3

HSCC

Switch

SCCD

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From the ISP to the NAP/MAE

• Each ISP acts as an autonomous system, with is own interior and exterior routing protocols.

• Messages destined for locations within the same ISP are routed through the ISP’s own network.

• Since most messages are destined for other networks, they are sent to the nearest MAE or NAP where they get routed to the appropriate “next hop” network.

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• Next is the connection from the local ISP to the NAP. From there packets are routed to the next higher level of ISP.

• Actual connections can be complex and packets sometimes travel long distances. Each local ISP might connect a different regional ISP, causing packets to flow between cities, even though their destination is to another local ISP within the same city.

From the ISP to the NAP/MAE

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Network Access Point

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ISPs and Backbones

ATM/SONETCore

Router Core

Access Network

POP

POP

POP

POPPOP

POP

POP

POP

POP

POPPOPPOP

POP

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Three national ISPs in North America

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Backbone Map of UUNET - USA

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UUNET

• Mixed OC-12 – OC-48 – OC 192 backbone

• 1000s miles of fiber

• 3000 POPs

• 2,000,000 dial-in ports

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Backbone Map of UUNET - World

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Qwest

• OC-192 backbone

• 25,000 miles of fiber

• 635 POPs

• 85,000 dial-in ports

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AT&T

• OC-192 backbone

• 53,000 miles of fiber

• 2000 POPs

• 0 dial-in ports

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Internet Backbones after 2006

• As of mid-2001, most backbone circuits for national ISPs in the US are 622 Mbps ATM OC-12 lines.

• The largest national ISPs converted to OC-192 (10 Gbps) by the end of 2005.

• Many are now experimenting with OC-768 (40 Gbps) and some are planning to use OC-3072 (160 Gbps).

• Aggregate Internet traffic reached 2.5 Terabits per second (Tbps) by mid-2001. It is expected to reach 100 Tbps by 2011.

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Data CentersData Centers

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Links for Long Haul Transmission

• Possibilities– IP over SONET

– IP over ATM

– IP over Satellite

– IP over WDM

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User Services & Core Transport

ATMSwitch

SonetADM

IPRouter

TDMSwitch

Transport ProviderNetworks

Service ProviderNetworks

OC-3

OC-3

OC-12

STS-1STS-1STS-1

FrameRelay

UsersServices

Frame Relay

IP

ATM

Lease Lines

COREEDGE

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Typical (BUT NOT ALL) IP Backbone (Mid 2000s)

• Data piggybacked over traditional voice/TDM transport

SONET/SDHDCS

SONET/SDHDCS

CoreRouter

ATMSwitch

MUX

SONET/SDHADM

CoreRouter

ATMSwitch

MUX

CoreRouter

ATMSwitch

MUX

CoreRouter

ATMSwitch

MUX

SONET/SDHADM

SONET/SDHADM

SONET/SDHADM

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SONET/SDH

DWDM

CoreRouter(IP/MPLS)

IP Backbone Evolution (One version)

• Removal of ATM Layer– Next generation routers

provide trunk speeds and SONET interfaces

– Multi-protocol Label Switching (MPLS) on routers provides traffic engineering

CoreRouter(IP/MPLS)

MUX

SONET/SDH

DWDM(Maybe)

FR/ATM Switch

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Hierarchy of Routers and Switches

SONET/SDHCoreIP Router

FR/ATM Switch

•IP Router (datagram packet switching) • Deals directly with IP addresses; • Slow – typically no interface to SONET equipment• Expensive• Efficient (No header overhead and alternative routing)

•ATM Switch (VC packet switching) • Label based switching• Fast (Hardware forwarding)• Header Tax

•SONET OXC (Circuit switching)• Extremely fast – Optical technology• Inexpensive

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Customer Network

• All hosts owned by a single enterprise or business

• Common case– Lots of PCs

– Some servers

– Routers

– Ethernet 10/100/1000-Mb/s LAN

– T1/T3 1.54/45-Mb/s wide area network (WAN) connection

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Customer Network

Clients

Servers

LAN

WAN

Ethernet10 Mb/s

T1 Link1.54 Mb/s

Router

http://www.ust.hk/itsc/network/

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Internet Access Technologies

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Internet Access Technologies

• Previously, most people use 56K dial-up lines to access the Internet, but a number of new access technologies are now being offered.

• The main new access technologies are:– Digital Subscriber Line/ADSL

– Cable Modems

– Fixed Wireless (including satellite access)

– Mobile Wireless (WAP)

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Digital Subscriber Line

• Digital Subscriber Line (DSL) is one of the most used technologies now being implemented to significantly increase the data rates over traditional telephone lines.

• Historically, voice telephone circuits have had only a limited capacity for data communications because they were constrained by the 4 kHz bandwidth voice channel.

• Most local loop telephone lines actually have a much higher bandwidth and can therefore carry data at much higher rates.

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Digital Subscriber Line

• DSL services are relatively new and not all common carriers offer them.

• Two general categories of DSL services have emerged in the marketplace. – Symmetric DSL (SDSL) provides the same transmission

rates (up to 128 Kbps) in both directions on the circuits.

– Asymmetric DSL (ADSL) provides different data rates to (up to 640 Kbps) and from (up to 6.144 Mbps) the carrier’s end office. It also includes an analog channel for voice transmissions.

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DSL Architecture

Local Carrier End Office

Line Splitter

Customer Premises

Telephone

DSL Modem

Hub

Computer Computer

Local Loop

MainDistribution

Frame

CustomerPremises

CustomerPremises

VoiceTelephoneNetwork

DSL AccessMultiplexer

ATM Switch

ISP POP

ISP POP

ISP POP

ISP POP

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Cable Modems

• One potential competitor to DSL is the “cable modem” a digital service offered by cable television companies which offers an upstream rate of 1.5-10 Mbps and a downstream rate of 2-30 Mbps.

• A few cable companies offer downstream services only, with upstream communications using regular telephone lines.

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Cable Modem Architecture

Cable Company Distribution Hub

Cable Splitter

Customer Premises

TV

Cable Modem

Hub

Computer Computer

SharedCoaxCable

System

Combiner

CustomerPremises

CustomerPremises

TV VideoNetwork

Cable ModemTermination

System

ISP POP

Cable CompanyFiber Node

Optical/ElectricalConverter

Downstream

Upstream

Router

Cable Company

Fiber Node

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Fixed Wireless

• Fixed Wireless is another “dish-based” microwave transmission technology.

• It requires “line of sight” access between transmitters.

• Data access speeds range from 1.5 to 11 Mbps depending on the vendor.

• Transmissions travel between transceivers at the customer premises and ISP’s wireless access office.

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Fixed Wireless Architecture

Wireless Access Office

WirelessTransceiver

Customer Premises

Telephone

DSL Modem

Hub

Computer Computer

CustomerPremises

CustomerPremises

MainDistribution

Frame

VoiceTelephoneNetwork

DSL AccessMultiplexer

WirelessTransceiver

Router

Line Splitter

Individual Premise

IndividualPremise

IndividualPremise

ISP POP

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Classifying Computer Networks

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• Communication networks can be classified based on the way in which the nodes exchange information:

A Taxonomy of Communication Networks

Communication Network

SwitchedCommunication

Network

BroadcastCommunication

Network

Circuit-Switched

Communication Network

Packet-Switched

Communication Network

Datagram Network

Virtual Circuit Network

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• Broadcast communication networks

– information transmitted by any node is received by every other node in the network

• examples: usually in LANs (Ethernet, Wavelan)

– Problem: coordinate the access of all nodes to the shared communication medium (Multiple Access Problem)

• Switched communication networks

– information is transmitted to a sub-set of designated nodes

• examples: WANs (Telephony Network, Internet)

– Problem: how to forward information to intended node(s)

• this is done by special nodes (e.g., routers, switches) running routing protocols

Broadcast vs. Switched Communication Networks

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Circuit Switching

• Three phases1. circuit establishment

2. data transfer

3. circuit termination

• If circuit is not available: “Busy signal”

• Examples Telephone networks

ISDN (Integrated Services Digital Networks)

Optical Backbone Internet (going in this direction)

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Timing in Circuit Switching

DATA

Circuit Establishment

Data Transmission

Circuit Termination

Host 1 Host 2Node 1 Node 2

propagation delay between Host 1 and Node 1

propagation delay between Host 2 and Node 1

processing delay at Node 1

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Circuit Switching

• A node (switch) in a circuit switching network

incoming links outgoing linksNode

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Circuit Switching: Multiplexing/Demultiplexing

• Time divided in frames and frames divided in slots• Relative slot position inside a frame determines which

conversation the data belongs to• If a slot is not used, it is wasted• There is no statistical gain

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Packet Switching

• Data are sent as formatted bit-sequences, so-called packets.• Packets have the following structure:

• Header and Trailer carry control information (e.g., destination address, check sum)

• Each packet is passed through the network from node to node along some path (Routing)

• At each node the entire packet is received, stored briefly, and then forwarded to the next node (Store-and-Forward Networks)

• Typically no capacity is allocated for packets

Header Data Trailer

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Packet Switching

• A node in a packet switching network

incoming links outgoing linksNode

Memory

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Packet Switching: Multiplexing/Demultiplexing

• Data from any conversation can be transmitted at any given time

• How to tell them apart?– use meta-data (header) to describe data

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Datagram Packet Switching

• Each packet is independently switched– each packet header contains destination address

• No resources are pre-allocated (reserved) in advance

• Example: IP networks

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Packet 1

Packet 2

Packet 3

Packet 1

Packet 2

Packet 3

Timing of Datagram Packet Switching

Packet 1

Packet 2

Packet 3

processing delay of Packet 1 at Node 2

Host 1 Host 2Node

1Node

2

propagationdelay betweenHost 1 and Node 2

transmission time of Packet 1at Host 1

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Datagram Packet Switching

Host A

Host BHost E

Host D

Host C

Node 1 Node 2

Node 3

Node 4

Node 5

Node 6 Node 7

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Virtual-Circuit Packet Switching

• Hybrid of circuit switching and packet switching– data is transmitted as packets

– all packets from one packet stream are sent along a pre-established path (=virtual circuit)

• Guarantees in-sequence delivery of packets

• However: Packets from different virtual circuits may be interleaved

• Example: ATM networks

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Virtual-Circuit Packet Switching

• Communication using virtual circuits takes place in three phases

1. VC establishment

2. data transfer

3. VC disconnect

• Note: packet headers don’t need to contain the full destination address of the packet (One key to this idea)

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Packet 1

Packet 2

Packet 3

Packet 1

Packet 2

Packet 3

Timing of VC Packet Switching

Packet 1

Packet 2

Packet 3

Host 1 Host 2Node

1Node

2

propagation delay between Host 1 and Node 1VC

establishment

VCtermination

Datatransfer

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VC Packet Switching

Host A

Host BHost E

Host D

Host C

Node 1 Node 2

Node 3

Node 4

Node 5

Node 6 Node 7

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Packet-Switching vs. Circuit-Switching

• Most important advantage of packet-switching over circuit switching: Ability to exploit statistical multiplexing:

– efficient bandwidth usage; ratio between peek and average rate is 3:1 for audio, and 15:1 for data traffic

• However, packet-switching needs to deal with congestion:

– more complex routers

– harder to provide good network services (e.g., delay and bandwidth guarantees)

• In practice they are combined– IP over SONET, IP over Frame Relay

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Fixed-Rate versus Bursty Data

CSIT560 by M. Hamdi 116

Connec-tion

Table

RoutingTable

Packet Switches

DestinationAddress

ConnectionIdentifier

A

B

A

A

B B

Possibly different paths through switch

Always same path through switch

ConnectionlessPacket Switch

Connection-OrientedPacket Switch

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Store-and-Forward Operation

• Packet entering switch or router is stored in a queue until it can be forwarded– Queueing

– Header processing

– Routing-table lookup of destination address

– Forwarding to next hop

• Queueing time variation can result in non-deterministic delay behavior (maximum delay and delay jitter)

• Packets might overflow finite buffers (Network congestion)

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Link Diversity• Internet meant to accommodate many different link

technologies– Ethernet

– ATM

– SONET

– ISDN

– Modem

• The list continues to grow

• “IP on Everything”

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Internet Protocols

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Internet Protocols

Network

Link

Transport

Application

Network

Link

Transport

Application

Network

Link Link

Host HostRouter

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IP Protocol Stack

Link Layer

RARP

Telnet FTP

OSPF

SIP RTSP RSVPS/MGCP/

NCSUser

application

UDP

H.323

IGMPIP

TCP

ICMP

Ping

ARP

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Demultiplexing

incoming frame

RARPARP

UDP

Application Application

TCP

Application Application

IGMPICMP

EthernetDriver

IP

Application

Transport

Network

Link

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Link Protocols

• Numerous link protocols– Ethernet + LLC (Logical Link Control)

– T1/DS1 + HDLC (High-level Data Link Control)

– T3/DS3 + HDLC

– Dialup + PPP (Point-to-Point Protocol)

– ATM/SONET + AAL (ATM Adaptation Layer)

– ISDN + LAPD (Link Access Protocol) + PPP

– FDDI + LLC

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Additional Link Protocols

• ARP (Address Resolution Protocol) is a protocol for mapping an IP address to a physical machine address that is recognized in the local network. Most commonly, this is used to associate IP addresses (32-bits long) with Ethernet MAC addresses (48-bits long).

• RARP is the reverse of ARP

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ARP Protocol

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Sending an IP Packet over a LAN

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Transport Protocols

• Transmission Control Protocol (TCP)

• User Datagram Protocol (UDP)

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Application Protocols

• File Transfer Protocol (FTP)

• Simple Mail Transfer Protocol (SMTP)

• Telnet

• Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP)

• Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP)

• Remote Procedure Call (RPC)

• DNS: The Domain Name System service provides TCP/IP host name to IP address resolution.

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The Internet Network layer: The Glue of all Networks

routingtable

Routing protocols•path selection•RIP, OSPF, BGP

IP protocol•addressing conventions•datagram format•packet handling conventions

ICMP protocol•error reporting•router “signaling”

Transport layer: TCP, UDP

Link layer

physical layer

Networklayer

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Demultiplexing Details

(Ethernet frame types in hex, others in decimal)

destaddr

sourceaddr

Ethernet frame type data CRC

destaddr

sourceaddr

dataprotocol type

IP header

hdrcksum

ARP

RARPNovell

IP

Others

AppleTalk

dataTCP src port

headerTCP dest port

FTPserver

telnetserver

echoserver

discardserver

23

7

9

21User process

User processUser process

User process

1024-5000

UDP 17

6

IGMP

ICMP 1

2

TCP

IPIP

TCPTCP

x0800

x8035

x0806

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IP Features• Connectionless service

• Addressing

• Data forwarding

• Fragmentation and reassembly

• Supports variable size datagrams

• Best-effort delivery: Delay, out-of-order, corruption, and loss possible. Higher layers should handle these.

• Provides only “Send” and “Delivery” servicesError and control messages generated by Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMP)

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What IP does NOT provide

• End-to-end data reliability & flow control (done by TCP or application layer protocols)

• Sequencing of packets (like TCP)

• Error detection in payload (TCP, UDP or other transport layers)

• Error reporting (ICMP)

• Setting up route tables (RIP, OSPF, BGP etc)

• Connection setup (it is connectionless)

• Address/Name resolution (ARP, RARP, DNS)

• Configuration (BOOTP, DHCP)

• Multicast (IGMP, MBONE)

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Internet Protocol (IP)

• Two versions – IPv4

– IPv6

• IPv4 dominates today’s Internet

• IPv6 is used sporadically– 6Bone, Internet 2

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IPv4 Header

Length

Ident

Checksum

SrcAddr

DestAddr

Options

0 3115

TOS

TTL

HLenVer

Flags Offset

Protocol

Pad

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IPv4 Header Fields (1)

• Ver: version of protocol– First thing to be determined

– IPv4 4, IPv6 6

• Hlen: header length (in 32-bit words)– Usually has a value of 5

– When options are present, the value is > 5

• TOS: type of service– Packet precedence (3 bits)

– Delay/throughput/reliability specification

– Rarely used

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IPv4 Header Fields (2)

• Length: length of the datagram in bytes– Maximum datagram size of 65,535 bytes

• Ident: identifies fragments of the datagram (Ethernet 1500 Bytes max., FDDI: 4900 Bytes Max., etc.)

• Flag: indicates whether more fragments follow

• Offset: number of bytes payload is from start of original user data

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Fragmentation Example

Id = x

1400 data bytes

00 0 0

Id = x

492 data bytes

00 0 1

Id = x

492 data bytes

4920 0 1

Id = x

416 data bytes

9840 0 0

20-byte optionlessIP headers

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IPv4 Header Fields (3)

• TTL: time to live gives the maximum number of hops for the datagram

• Protocol: protocol used above IP in the datagram– TCP 6, UDP 17,

• Checksum: covers IP header

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IPv4 Header Fields (4)

• SrcAddr: 32-bit source address

• DestAddr: 32-bit destination address

• Options: variable list of options– Security: government-style markings

– Loose source routing: combination of source and table routing

– Strict source routing: specified by source

– Record route: where the datagram has been

– Options rarely used

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IPv6

• Initial motivation: 32-bit address space completely allocated by 2008.

• Additional motivation:– header format helps speed processing/forwarding

– header changes to facilitate QoS

– new “anycast” address: route to “best” of several replicated servers

• IPv6 datagram format: – fixed-length 40 byte header

– no fragmentation allowed (done only by source host)

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IPv6: Differences from IPv4

Flow label

– Intended to support quality of service (QoS)

• 128-bit network addresses

• No header checksum – reduce processing time

• Fragmentation only by source host

• Extension headers

– Handles options (but outside the header, indicated by “Next Header” field

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IPv6 Headers

Flow Label

Payload Length

Source Address

PriVer

Hop LimitNext Header

Destination Address

0 3115

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IPv6 Header Fields (1)

• Ver: version of protocol

• Pri: priority of datagram– 0 = none, 1 = background traffic, 2 = unattended data

transfer

– 4 = attended bulk transfer, 6 = interactive traffic, 7 = control traffic

• Flow Label– Identifies an end-to-end flow

– IP “label switching”

– Experimental

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IPv6 Header Fields (2)

• Payload Length: total length of the datagram less that of the basic IP header

• Next Header– Identifies the protocol header that follows the basic IP

header

– TCP => 6, UDP => 17, ICMP => 58, IP = 4, none => 59

• Hop Limit: time to live

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IPv6 Header Fields (3)

• Source/Destination Address– 128-bit address space

– Embed world-unique link address in the lower 64 bits

– Address “colon” format with hexadecimal

– FEDC:BA98:7654:3210:FEDC:BA98:7654:3210

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Addressing Modes in IPv6

• Unicast– Send a datagram to a single host

• Multicast– Send copies a datagram to a group of hosts

• Anycast– Send a datagram to the nearest in a group of hosts

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Migration from IPv4 to IPv6

• Interoperability with IPv4 is necessary for gradual deployment.

• Two mechanisms:

– dual stack operation: IPv6 nodes support both address types

– tunneling: tunnel IPv6 packets through IPv4 clouds

• Unfortunately there is little motivation for any one organization to move to IPv6.

– the challenge is the existing hosts (using IPv4 addresses)

– little benefit unless one can consistently use IPv6

• can no longer talk to IPv4 nodes

– stretching address space through address translation seems to work reasonably well