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Efficient caching through stateful SDN in named data networking
Author(s) -
Mahmood A.,
Casetti C.,
Chiasserini C. F.,
Giaccone P.,
Härri J.
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
transactions on emerging telecommunications technologies
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.366
H-Index - 47
ISSN - 2161-3915
DOI - 10.1002/ett.3271
Subject(s) - stateful firewall , computer science , computer network , forwarding plane , software defined networking , openflow , cache , network packet , overhead (engineering) , information centric networking , benchmark (surveying) , node (physics) , distributed computing , controller (irrigation) , network topology , operating system , agronomy , geodesy , structural engineering , geography , engineering , biology
Named data networking (NDN) is an innovative paradigm to provide content‐based services in future networks. As compared with legacy networks, naming of network packets and in‐network caching of content make NDN more feasible for content dissemination. However, the implementation of NDN requires drastic changes to the existing network infrastructure. One feasible approach is to use software‐defined networking (SDN), according to which the control of the network is delegated to a centralized controller, which configures the forwarding data plane. This approach leads to large signaling overhead and large end‐to‐end delays. In order to overcome these issues, we propose to enable NDN using a stateful data plane in the SDN network. In particular, we realize the functionality of an NDN node using a stateful SDN switch attached with a local cache for content storage and use OpenState to implement such an approach. In our solution, no involvement of the controller is required once the OpenState switch has been configured. We benchmark the performance of our solution against the traditional SDN approach considering several relevant metrics. Experimental results highlight the benefits of a stateful approach and of our implementation, which avoids signaling overhead and significantly reduces end‐to‐end delays.