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Incentive-compatible interdomain routing
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Source Electronic Commerce archive
Proceedings of the 7th ACM conference on Electronic commerce table of contents
Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA
Pages: 130 - 139  
Year of Publication: 2006
ISBN:1-59593-236-4
Authors
Joan Feigenbaum  Yale University, New Haven, CT, USA
Vijay Ramachandran  ICSI, Berkeley, CA, USA
Michael Schapira  The Hebrew University, Jerusalem, Israel
Sponsors
ACM: Association for Computing Machinery
SIGEcom: ACM Special Interest Group on Electronic Commerce
Publisher
ACM  New York, NY, USA
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ABSTRACT

The routing of traffic between Internet domains, or Autonomous Systems (ASes), a task known as interdomain routing, is currently handled by the Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) [17]. Using BGP, autonomous systems can apply semantically rich routing policies to choose interdomain routes in a distributed fashion. This expressiveness in routing-policy choice supports domains' autonomy in network operations and in business decisions, but it comes at a price: The interaction of locally defined routing policies can lead to unexpected global anomalies, including route oscillations or overall protocol divergence (see, e.g., [20]). Networking researchers have addressed this problem by devising constraints on policies that guarantee BGP convergence without unduly limiting expressiveness and autonomy (see, e.g., [7, 8]).In addition to taking this engineering or "protocol-design" approach, researchers have approached interdomain routing from an economic or "mechanism-design" point of view. It is known that lowest-cost-path (LCP) routing can be implemented in a truthful, BGP-compatible manner [3] but that several other natural classes of routing policies cannot [2, 5]. In this paper, we present a natural class of interdomain-routing policies that is more realistic than LCP routing and admits incentive-compatible, BGP-compatible implementation. We also present several positive steps toward a general theory of incentive-compatible interdomain routing.


REFERENCES

Note: OCR errors may be found in this Reference List extracted from the full text article. ACM has opted to expose the complete List rather than only correct and linked references.

 
1
M. Caesar and J. Rexford. BGP Policies in ISP Networks. IEEE Network Magazine 19(6):5--11, Nov. 2005.
 
2
J. Feigenbaum, D. Karger, V. Mirrokni, and R. Sami. Subjective-Cost Policy Routing. In Proc. Wshp. Internet and Network Economics (WINE), pp. 174--183, LNCS vol. 3828. Springer-Verlag, Dec. 2005.
 
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J. Feigenbaum, V. Ramachandran, and M. Schapira. Incentive-Compatible Interdomain Routing (full version). Yale Univ. Tech. Report 1342. ftp://ftp.cs.yale.edu/pub/TR/tr1342.pdf.
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J. Moy. Open Shortest Pouting First (OSPF) version 2. RFC 2328. Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF), Apr. 1998.
 
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17
Y. Rekhter and T. Li. A Border Gateway Protocol (BGP-4). RFC 1771. Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF), Mar. 1995.
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K. Varadhan, R. Govindan, and D. Estrin. Persistent Route Oscillations in Interdomain Routing. Computer Networks 32(1):1--16, Jan. 2000.


Collaborative Colleagues:
Joan Feigenbaum: colleagues
Vijay Ramachandran: colleagues
Michael Schapira: colleagues