Dynamics of hot-potato routing in IP networks
- 1 June 2004
- proceedings article
- Published by Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)
- Vol. 32 (1) , 307-319
- https://doi.org/10.1145/1005686.1005723
Abstract
International audienceDespite the architectural separation between intradomain and inter-domain routing in the Internet, intradomain protocols do influence the path-selection process in the Border Gateway Protocol (BGP). When choosing between multiple equally-good BGP routes, a router selects the one with the closest egress point, based on the intrado-main path cost. Under such hot-potato routing, an intradomain event can trigger BGP routing changes. To characterize the influ-ence of hot-potato routing, we conduct controlled experiments with a commercial router. Then, we propose a technique for associating BGP routing changes with events visible in the intradomain pro-tocol, and apply our algorithm to AT&T's backbone network. We show that (i) hot-potato routing can be a significant source of BGP updates, (ii) BGP updates can lag ¢ ¡ seconds or more behind the intradomain event, (iii) the number of BGP path changes triggered by hot-potato routing has a nearly uniform distribution across des-tination prefixes, and (iv) the fraction of BGP messages triggered by intradomain changes varies significantly across time and router locations. We show that hot-potato routing changes lead to longer delays in forwarding-plane convergence, shifts in the flow of traffic to neighboring domains, extra externally-visible BGP update mes-sages, and inaccuracies in Internet performance measurementsKeywords
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