A Data-Oriented (and Beyond) Network Architecture
Submitted by admin on Sun, 01/07/2007 - 00:00.
T. Koponen (ICSI/HIIT), M. Chawla, B.-G. Chun, A. Ermolinskiy, K. H. Kim (UCB), S. Shenker (ICSI/UCB), I. Stoica (UCB)
The Internet has evolved greatly from its original incarnation. For instance, the vast majority of current Internet usage is data retrieval and service access, whereas the architecture was designed around host-to-host applications such as telnet and ftp. Moreover, the original Internet was a purely transparent carrier of packets, but now the various network stakeholders use middleboxes to improve security and accelerate applications. To adapt to these changes, we propose the Data-Oriented Network Architecture (DONA), which involves a clean-slate redesign of Internet naming and name resolution.
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important paper flag!
I think we're going to see this paper cited quite a bit - the ideas are part of a community of thought (see also generalized swarms from don towsley and the use of pub/sub as a fundamental network layer building block proposed in some MANET/DTN work, and then spilling back into fixed core networks as the general effectiveness of the ideas takes hold)