How (not) to shoot in your foot with SDN local fast failover: A load-connectivity tradeoff

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Abstract

This paper studies the resilient routing and (in-band) fast failover mechanisms supported in Software-Defined Networks (SDN). We analyze the potential benefits and limitations of such failover mechanisms, and focus on two main metrics: (1) correctness (in terms of connectivity and loop-freeness) and (2) load-balancing. We make the following contributions. First, we show that in the worst-case (i.e., under adversarial link failures), the usefulness of local failover is rather limited: already a small number of failures will violate connectivity properties under any fast failover policy, even though the underlying substrate network remains highly connected. We then present randomized and deterministic algorithms to compute resilient forwarding sets; these algorithms achieve an almost optimal tradeoff. Our worst-case analysis is complemented with a simulation study. © 2013 Springer International Publishing.

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Borokhovich, M., & Schmid, S. (2013). How (not) to shoot in your foot with SDN local fast failover: A load-connectivity tradeoff. In Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics) (Vol. 8304 LNCS, pp. 68–82). https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-03850-6_6

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