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Proceedings ArticleDOI

A simple approximation to minimum-delay routing

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TLDR
This work presents a "near-optimal" routing framework that offers delays comparable to those of optimal routing and that is as flexible and responsive as single-path routing protocols proposed to date.
Abstract
The conventional approach to routing in computer networks consists of using a heuristic to compute a single shortest path from a source to a destination. Single-path routing is very responsive to topological and link-cost changes; however, except under light traffic loads, the delays obtained with this type of routing are far from optimal. Furthermore, if link costs are associated with delays, single-path routing exhibits oscillatory behavior and becomes unstable as traffic loads increase. On the other hand, minimum-delay routing approaches can minimize delays only when traffic is stationary or very slowly changing.We present a "near-optimal" routing framework that offers delays comparable to those of optimal routing and that is as flexible and responsive as single-path routing protocols proposed to date. First, an approximation to the Gallager's minimum-delay routing problem is derived, and then algorithms that implement the approximation scheme are presented and verified. We introduce the first routing algorithm based on link-state information that provides multiple paths of unequal cost to each destination that are loop-free at every instant. We show through simulations that the delays obtained in our framework are comparable to those obtained using the Gallager's minimum-delay routing. Also, we show that our framework renders far smaller delays and makes better use of resources than traditional single-path routing.

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Proceedings ArticleDOI

CONGA: distributed congestion-aware load balancing for datacenters

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Walking the tightrope: responsive yet stable traffic engineering

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Journal ArticleDOI

Algebra and algorithms for QoS path computation and hop-by-hop routing in the Internet

TL;DR: It is concluded that shortest-widest paths can neither be computed with a generalized Dijkstra's algorithm nor can packets be routed hop-by-hop over those paths.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Name-based content routing in information centric networks using distance information

TL;DR: It is shown that DCR is correct and that is orders of magnitude more scalable than recent name-based routing approaches for ICNs, in terms of the time and signaling overhead needed to obtain correct routing to named content.
Patent

Controlling the spread of interests and content in a content centric network

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a system for controlling the spread of interests and content in a content centric network (CCN), which maintains a routing policy for content data and receives a packet associated with a piece of content or an interest for the content.
References
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OSPF Version 2

J. Moy
TL;DR: This memo documents version 2 of the OSPF protocol, a link-state routing protocol designed to be run internal to a single Autonomous System.

Routing Information Protocol

C. L. Hedrick
TL;DR: This document specifies a routing protocol, based on the Routing Information Protocol, for the Simple Internet Protocol (SIP), as defined in [3], and a companion document will define the SNMP MIB objects for SIP-RIP (TBD).
Journal ArticleDOI

The New Routing Algorithm for the ARPANET

TL;DR: The new ARPANET routing algorithm is an improvement over the old procedure in that it uses fewer network resources, operates on more realistic estimates of network conditions, reacts faster to important network changes, and does not suffer from long-term loops or oscillations.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Minimum Delay Routing Algorithm Using Distributed Computation

TL;DR: A new global convergence theorem for noncontinuous iteration algorithms is developed that converges, with successive updates of the routing tables, to the minimum average delay over all routing assignments.
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