Reliable Internet Routing (thesis)

Report ID: TR-902-11
Author: Suchara, Martin
Date: 2011-06-00
Pages: 141
Download Formats: |PDF|
Abstract:

Network routing algorithms responsible for selecting paths to destinations have a profound impact on network reliability experienced by the network users. Unfortunately, performance of state-of-the-art routing algorithms often falls short of users expectations.

(i) The flexibility with which operators of independently administered networks can choose their routing policies allows them to make selections that are "conflicting" and may lead to route oscillations. Oscillating routes have a negative impact on performance experienced by the user, and also cause overloading of the routers with control messages. (ii) Interdomain routing in the Internet is based on trust. As a result, false route announcements can be made by a malicious network operator. Such false announcements can be made even without knowledge of the network operator, e.g., due to accidentally misconfigurations or router hijacking. False route announcements may lead to denial of service, or worse yet, traffic can be intercepted without detection of both the sender and recipient. (iii) Even if network routes are stable and secure, unexpected equipment failures may cause performance degradation. It is difficult to pre-configure current routing protocols with all possible failures in mind, and not enough flexibility is offered to balance load in the network evenly.

This thesis addresses these three challenging problems. (i) We provide a new theoretical model of interdomain routing and derive the necessary and sufficient conditions that determine which policy combinations lead to route oscillations. Moreover, we also provide a practical polynomial-time algorithm that allows network operators to verify the existence of such conflicts. (ii) To secure routing against malicious attacks, we offer a new secure routing protocol that, unlike earlier attempts, is incrementally deployable. Our solution can protect both participants and non-participants if as few as 5-10 independently administered domains deploy our solution. (iii) To handle traffic engineering in the presence of failures, we propose a new architecture that optimizes load balancing for a wide range of failure scenarios. Our architecture supports flexible splitting of traffic over multiple precomputed paths, with efficient path-level failure detection and automatic load balancing over the remaining paths.

Collectively, the contributions of the dissertation provide tools that improve routing reliability and as a result network performance perceived by the user.