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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Networking named content

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TLDR
Content-Centric Networking (CCN) is presented, which treats content as a primitive - decoupling location from identity, security and access, and retrieving content by name, using new approaches to routing named content.
Abstract
Network use has evolved to be dominated by content distribution and retrieval, while networking technology still speaks only of connections between hosts. Accessing content and services requires mapping from the what that users care about to the network's where. We present Content-Centric Networking (CCN) which treats content as a primitive - decoupling location from identity, security and access, and retrieving content by name. Using new approaches to routing named content, derived heavily from IP, we can simultaneously achieve scalability, security and performance. We implemented our architecture's basic features and demonstrate resilience and performance with secure file downloads and VoIP calls.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Internet of things: Vision, applications and research challenges

TL;DR: A survey of technologies, applications and research challenges for Internetof-Things is presented, in which digital and physical entities can be linked by means of appropriate information and communication technologies to enable a whole new class of applications and services.
Journal ArticleDOI

Networking named content

TL;DR: Content-Centric Networking (CCN) is presented which uses content chunks as a primitive---decoupling location from identity, security and access, and retrieving chunks of content by name, and simultaneously achieves scalability, security, and performance.
Journal ArticleDOI

Named data networking

TL;DR: The NDN project investigates Van Jacobson's proposed evolution from today's host-centric network architecture (IP) to a data-centricnetwork architecture (NDN), which has far-reaching implications for how the authors design, develop, deploy, and use networks and applications.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Survey of Software-Defined Networking: Past, Present, and Future of Programmable Networks

TL;DR: The SDN architecture and the OpenFlow standard in particular are presented, current alternatives for implementation and testing of SDN-based protocols and services are discussed, current and future SDN applications are examined, and promising research directions based on the SDN paradigm are explored.
Journal ArticleDOI

A survey of information-centric networking

TL;DR: This work compares and discusses design choices and features of proposed ICN architectures, focusing on the following main components: named data objects, naming and security, API, routing and transport, and caching.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Fast and secure distributed read-only file system

TL;DR: The read-only file system as discussed by the authors is a content distribution system that provides secure, scalable access to public, read only data, but it does not provide any integrity or authenticity guarantees.
Journal ArticleDOI

Packet caches on routers: the implications of universal redundant traffic elimination

TL;DR: It is argued that far more significant network-wide benefits can be derived by redesigning network routing protocols to leverage the universal deployment of packet-level redundant content elimination as a universal primitive on all Internet routers.
Journal ArticleDOI

The design and implementation of an intentional naming system

TL;DR: The design and implementation of the Intentional Naming System (INS), a resource discovery and service location system for dynamic and mobile networks of devices and computers, is presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

On SDSI's linked local name spaces

TL;DR: This paper suggests a logical explanation of SDSIs local name spaces, as a complement to the operational explanation given in the SDSI definition.
ReportDOI

Host Identity Protocol Architecture

TL;DR: This document obsoletes RFC 4423 and addresses the concerns raised by the IESG, particularly that of crypto agility, and incorporates lessons learned from the implementations of RFC 5201.
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