Online Aggregation of the Forwarding Information Base: Accounting for Locality and Churn

Marcin Bienkowski, Nadi Sarrar, Stefan Schmid*, Steve Uhlig

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

8 Citations (Scopus)
38 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

This paper studies the problem of compressing the forwarding information base (FIB), but taking a wider perspective. Indeed, FIB compression goes beyond sheer compression, as the gain in memory use obtained from the compression has consequences on the updates that will have to be applied to the compressed FIB. We are interested in the situation where forwarding rules can change over time, e.g., due to border gateway protocol (BGP) route updates. Accordingly, we frame FIB compression as an online problem and design competitive online algorithms to solve it. In contrast to prior work which mostly focused on static optimizations, we study an online variant of the problem where routes can change over time and where the number of updates to the FIB is taken into account explicitly. The reason to consider this version of the problem is that leveraging temporal locality while accounting for the number of FIB updates helps to keep routers CPU load low and reduces the number of FIB updates to be transferred, e.g., from the network-Attached software-defined network controller to a remote switch. This paper introduces a formal model which is an interesting generalization of several classic online aggregation problems. Our main contribution is an O(w)-competitive algorithm, where {w} is the length of an IP address. We also derive a lower bound which shows that our result is asymptotically optimal within a natural class of algorithms, based on so-called sticks.

Original languageEnglish
JournalIEEE/ACM Transactions on Networking
Volume26
Issue number1
Pages (from-to)591-604
Number of pages14
ISSN1063-6692
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Feb 2018

Keywords

  • competitive analysis
  • Prefix aggregation
  • software-defined networking

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