DocumentCode
2167283
Title
QoS routing in multi-domain networks
Author
Benmohamed, Lotfi ; Doshi, Bharat
Author_Institution
Appl. Phys. Lab., Johns Hopkins Univ., Laurel, MD, USA
fYear
2005
fDate
24-26 Aug. 2005
Firstpage
137
Lastpage
140
Abstract
With increasing number of mission critical applications and associated traffic volume on commercial and DoD IP networks, it is becoming increasingly critical for the network infrastructure to be more aware of the quality of service (in a broad sense of the word) requirements and use this awareness in routing, differential treatment of packets, in management-level resource provisioning and allocation. In this paper, we focus on the implication of these requirements on the routing architecture and protocols. In particular, we argue that the inter domain routing protocols like the border gateway protocol (BGP) and its integration with the interior gateway protocol (IGP) need to account for the diversity in the QoS requirements of the applications, users, and mission. The solution we suggest involves allowing multiple inter-AS routes for the same source destination pair, propagation of multiple routes, and of multiple QoS-affecting metrics in the BGP UPDATE messages. These enhancements allow routes to be matched with application requirements and hence allow satisfaction of applications QoS requirements at minimal cost. In order to keep the solution scalable, we limit the propagation of information to non-dominated routes, and design a small set of QoS metrics. Details of the protocols and quantitative analysis will be presented in future papers. Our approach, along with IntServe and DiffServe based QoS capabilities, and traffic engineering extensions of intra domain routing protocols, provide a framework for end-to-end QoS-aware networking.
Keywords
DiffServ networks; IntServ networks; computer network management; quality of service; routing protocols; telecommunication traffic; DiffServe; IP networks; IntServe; UPDATE messages; border gateway protocol; end-to-end QoS-aware networking; inter domain routing protocols; interior gateway protocol; management-level resource provisioning; multidomain networks; multiple interAS routes; quality of service; quantitative analysis; resource allocation; source destination pair; traffic engineering extensions; Intelligent networks; Routing;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Communications, Computers and signal Processing, 2005. PACRIM. 2005 IEEE Pacific Rim Conference on
Print_ISBN
0-7803-9195-0
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/PACRIM.2005.1517244
Filename
1517244
Link To Document