Evolution of internet address space deaggregation: myths and reality
journal contribution
posted on 2013-09-12, 13:50authored byLuca Cittadini, Wolfgang Muehlbauer, Steve Uhlig, Randy Bush, Pierre Francois, Olaf Maennel
Internet routing table size growth and BGP update
churn are two prominent Internet scaling issues. There is
widespread belief in a high and fast growing number of ASs
that deaggregate prefixes, e.g., due to multi-homing and for the
purpose of traffic engineering [1]. Moreover, researchers often
blame specific classes of ASs for generating a disproportionate
amount of BGP updates. Our primary objective is to challenge
such widespread assumptions (“myths”) and not solely to confirm
previous findings [1]–[3]. Surprisingly, we find severe discrepancies
between existing myths and reality. According to our results,
there is no trend towards more aggressive prefix deaggregation or
traffic engineering over time. With respect to update dynamics,
we observe that deaggregated prefixes generally do not generate
a disproportionate number of BGP updates, with respect to their
share of the BGP routing table. On the other side, we observe
much more widespread traffic engineering in the form of AS path
prepending and scoped advertisements compared to previous
studies [1]. Overall, our work gives a far more positive picture
compared to the alarming discourses typically heard [1], [2], [4]:
The impact of “bad guys” on routing table size growth and BGP
churn has not changed for the worse in recent years. Rather, it
increases at the same pace as the Internet itself.
History
School
Science
Department
Computer Science
Citation
CITTADINI, L. ... et al, 2010. Evolution of internet address space deaggregation: myths and reality. IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communications, 28 (8), pp. 1238 - 1249