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Evolving a Manageable Internet

Evolving a Manageable Internet. Tom Anderson University of Washington. Internet at an Impasse. The Internet’s current evolutionary path will not address its fundamental challenges: Security

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Evolving a Manageable Internet

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  1. Evolving a Manageable Internet Tom Anderson University of Washington

  2. Internet at an Impasse The Internet’s current evolutionary path will not address its fundamental challenges: • Security • Security costs of connecting to the Internet dwarf bandwidth costs; no end in sight to viruses, worms, DoS, spam • Robustness • End to end reliability orders of magnitude lower than phone service • Manageability • State of the art: “tweak and pray” • Performance • End to end performance orders of magnitude slower than the raw hw • Evolvability • QoS, ad hoc networks, mobility, etc.

  3. What is to be done? Do we know how to fix these problems? If we did know, could we implement the fix? Answer is no to both, for today’s Internet • Little to no conceptual understanding of how to address these issues • Little to no ability to implement changes to the Internet architecture, except via point solutions that often make matters worse in the long run Analogy with programming languages in 80’s/90’s • dominant standards in industry crowd out academic innovation; eventually more radical approaches succeed

  4. IP Internet Myth: Thin Waist Simple, universal end to end packet delivery service, implemented by multiple, cooperating service providers

  5. IP IP IP NAT, VPN, firewalls, IDS, … NAT, VPN, firewalls, IDS, … NAT, VPN, firewalls, IDS, … Internet Reality: Thick Waist Any architectural change requires global agreement • ISPs have little incentive or ability to evolve architecture • result: ossification with feature creep

  6. RIP Thesis Services can only have two out of three among: multiprovider (e.g., planetary scale) high level interface (e.g., IP) evolvability Examples: IP, email, telephony, CDNs, multicast, …

  7. HWP HWP HWP HWP A New Model for Planetary Services RIP: horizontal, planetary-scale service providers • At base, a virtual hardware abstraction (cycles and bit pipes to neighbors); layer planetary-scale services on top … IP as a service Routing Resource Management Information plane

  8. Why now? Rate of increase in cycles/$ >> internet bw/$ Jim Gray (2003): Cost of sending TCP ack = 500K instructions What about future? Moore’s Law vastly understates potential for CPU improvement: 60% squared (density) * 30% (cycle time) * 20% (volume) Raw optics improving at a similar rate => captive backbones Cumulative improvement in the engineering of distributed systems We understand how to engineer secure, reliable, efficient distributed systems, if we aren't constrained by legacy systems

  9. Overlays as a Disruptive Technology • Add a new layer to the network architecture • overlay networks • Challenges • isolate services from each other and the Internet • exploit planetary-scale cooperation/vantage points • become the intermediary for WAN packets overlay • purpose-built virtual networks that use the existing Internet for transmission • the Internet was once deployed as an overlay on top of the telephony network Internet

  10. Evolution Requirements Any new architecture needs to be: Incentive compatible for end users Opt-in at a fine-grain (hijack packets via name xlation) Overlay routing for reliability, bandwidth, latency PCP to manage legacy Internet paths Incentive compatible for hardware providers Avoid 95% charging intervals Win-win bilateral barter Self-managing, secure, evolvable as an engineered solution

  11. Example: Multiple ISP Negotiation anarchy barter cumulative % of flows path length inflation relative to socially optimal • Bilateral barter closely approximates socially optimal • Reduces need for manual route tweaks

  12. Summary Make security, manageability, efficiency, etc. engineering problems, not political ones

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