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Autonomous, scalable, and resilient overlay infrastructure
Author(s) -
Khaldoon Shami,
Damien Magoni,
Pascal Lorenz
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
journal of communications and networks
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.609
H-Index - 46
eISSN - 1976-5541
pISSN - 1229-2370
DOI - 10.1109/jcn.2006.6182786
Subject(s) - overlay network , computer science , distributed computing , scalability , network topology , overlay , computer network , routing (electronic design automation) , the internet , resilience (materials science) , world wide web , database , programming language , physics , thermodynamics
International audienceMany distributed applications build overlays on top of the Internet. Several unsolved issues at the network layer can explain this trend to implement network services such as multicast, mobility, and security at the application layer. On one hand, overlays creating basic topologies are usually limited in flexibility and scalability. On the other hand, overlays creating complex topologies require some form of application level addressing, routing, and naming mechanisms. Our aim is to design an efficient and robust addressing, routing, and naming infrastructure for these complex overlays. Our only assumption is that they are deployed over the Internet topology. Applications that use our middleware will be relieved from managing their own overlay topologies. Our infrastructure is based on the separation of the naming and the addressing planes and provides a convergence plane for the current heterogeneous Internet environment. To implement this property, we have designed a scalable distributed k-resilient name to address binding system. This paper describes the design of our overlay infrastructure and presents performance results concerning its routing scalability, its path inflation efficiency and its resilience to network dynamics

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