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Computer Networks

The document discusses network layer functions and routing algorithms. It describes the key functions of path determination, switching, and call setup. It also discusses the differences between virtual circuits and datagrams, describing the Internet as an example of a datagram network. Common routing algorithms are classified as either link-state or distance-vector, and either static or dynamic. Dijkstra's algorithm is provided as an example link-state routing algorithm.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
78 views

Computer Networks

The document discusses network layer functions and routing algorithms. It describes the key functions of path determination, switching, and call setup. It also discusses the differences between virtual circuits and datagrams, describing the Internet as an example of a datagram network. Common routing algorithms are classified as either link-state or distance-vector, and either static or dynamic. Dijkstra's algorithm is provided as an example link-state routing algorithm.

Uploaded by

uflilla
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 36

ECSE-4730: Computer

Communication Networks (CCN)

Network Layer (Routing)


Shivkumar Kalyanaraman: shivkuma@ecse.rpi.edu
Biplab Sikdar: sikdab@rpi.edu
http://www.ecse.rpi.edu/Homepages/shivkuma

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute © Shivkumar Kalvanaraman & © Biplab Sikdar 1


Network layer functions - 1
application
transport
network

• transport packet
data link network
physical data link
network network
data link physical data link

from sending to physical

network
physical

data link

receiving hosts physical network


data link
physical

• network layer network


data link
network
data link
physical

protocols in every physical


network
data link application

host, router physical transport


network
data link
physical

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute © Shivkumar Kalvanaraman & © Biplab Sikdar 2


Network layer functions - 2
three important functions:

• path determination: route taken by


packets from source to dest. Routing
algorithms
• Switching (forwarding): move packets
from router’s input to appropriate router
output
• call setup: (optional) some network
architectures require router call setup
along path before data flows
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute © Shivkumar Kalvanaraman & © Biplab Sikdar 3
Network service model
Q: What service model for
“channel” transporting
packets from sender to The most important
abstraction provided
receiver? by network layer:

? ?
• guaranteed bandwidth?
service abstraction

• preservation of inter-packet virtual circuit


timing (no jitter)?

?
or
• loss-free delivery? datagram?
• in-order delivery?
• congestion feedback to
sender?

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute © Shivkumar Kalvanaraman & © Biplab Sikdar 4


Datagram networks: the Internet model - 1

• no call setup at network layer


• routers: no state about end-to-end
connections
– no network-level concept of
“connection”
• packets typically routed using destination
host ID
– packets between same source-dest pair
may take different paths

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute © Shivkumar Kalvanaraman & © Biplab Sikdar 5


Datagram networks: the Internet model - 2

application
application
transport
transport
network
data link 1. Send data 2. Receive data network
data link
physical
physical

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute © Shivkumar Kalvanaraman & © Biplab Sikdar 6


Routing
Routing protocol
Goal: determine “good” path
5
(sequence of routers) thru
network from source to dest. 3
B C 5
2
A 2 1 F
• Graph abstraction for 1
3
2
routing algorithms: D E
1
• graph nodes are routers
“good” path:
• graph edges are typically means
physical links minimum cost path
• link cost: delay, $ cost, or other def’s possible
congestion level
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute © Shivkumar Kalvanaraman & © Biplab Sikdar 7
Routing Algorithm classification - 1
Global or decentralized information?
Global:
• all routers have complete topology, link cost info
• “link state” algorithms
Decentralized:
• router knows physically-connected neighbors,
link costs to neighbors
• iterative process of computation, exchange of
partial info with neighbors
• “distance vector” algorithms

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute © Shivkumar Kalvanaraman & © Biplab Sikdar 8


Routing Algorithm classification - 2
Static or dynamic?
Static:
• routes change slowly over time

Dynamic:
• routes change more quickly
– periodic update
– in response to link cost changes

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute © Shivkumar Kalvanaraman & © Biplab Sikdar 9


A Link-State Routing Algorithm - 1
Dijkstra’s algorithm
• net topology, link costs known to all nodes
– accomplished via “link state broadcast”
– all nodes have same info
• computes least cost paths from one node (‘source”) to
all other nodes
– gives routing table for that node
– iterative: after k iterations, know least cost path to k
dest.’s

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute © Shivkumar Kalvanaraman & © Biplab Sikdar 10


A Link-State Routing Algorithm - 2
Notation:
• c(i,j): link cost from node i to j. cost infinite if not direct
neighbors
• D(v): current value of cost of path from source to dest.
V
• p(v): predecessor node (neighbor of v) along path from
source to v
• N: set of nodes whose least cost path definitively
known

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute © Shivkumar Kalvanaraman & © Biplab Sikdar 11


Dijkstra’s algorithm: example

Step start N D(B),p(B) D(C),p(C) D(D),p(D) D(E),p(E) D(F),p(F)


0 A 2,A 5,A 1,A infinity infinity
1 AD 2,A 4,D 2,D infinity
2 ADE 2,A 3,E 4,E
3 ADEB 3,E 4,E
4 ADEBC 4,E
5 ADEBCF

5
3
B C 5
2
A 2 1 F
3
1 2
D E
1
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute © Shivkumar Kalvanaraman & © Biplab Sikdar 12
Dijsktra’s Algorithm

1 Initialization:
2 N = {A}
3 for all nodes v
4 if v adjacent to A
5 then D(v) = c(A,v)
6 else D(v) = infty
7
8 Loop
9 find w not in N such that D(w) is a minimum
10 add w to N
11 update D(v) for all v adjacent to w and not in N:
12 D(v) = min( D(v), D(w) + c(w,v) )
13 /* new cost to v is either old cost to v or known
14 shortest path cost to w plus cost from w to v */
15 until all nodes in N
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute © Shivkumar Kalvanaraman & © Biplab Sikdar 13
Dijkstra’s algorithm: discussion
Algorithm complexity: n nodes
• each iteration: need to check all nodes, w, not in N
• n*(n+1)/2 comparisons: O(n**2)
• more efficient implementations possible: O(nlogn)

Oscillations possible:
• e.g., link cost = amount of carried traffic

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute © Shivkumar Kalvanaraman & © Biplab Sikdar 14


Distance Vector Routing Algorithm - 1

iterative:
• continues until no nodes exchange info.
• self-terminating: no “signal” to stop
asynchronous:
• nodes need not exchange info/iterate in lock
step!
distributed:
• each node communicates only with directly-
attached neighbors
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute © Shivkumar Kalvanaraman & © Biplab Sikdar 15
Distance Vector Routing Algorithm - 2
Distance Table data structure
• each node has its own
• row for each possible destination
• column for each directly-attached neighbor to node
• example: in node X, for dest. Y via neighbor Z:

distance from X to
X =
D (Y,Z) Y, via Z as next hop
c(X,Z) + min Z{D (Y,w)}
= w
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute © Shivkumar Kalvanaraman & © Biplab Sikdar 16
Distance table: example

1 cost to destination via


B C E
7 D () A B D
A 8 2
1 A 1 14 5
E D
2
B 7 8 5

destination
E D
D (C,D) = c(E,D) + minw {D (C,w)}
= 2+2 = 4 C 6 9 4
E D
D (A,D) = c(E,D) + min {D (A,w)}
w D 4 11 2
= 2+3 = 5 loop!
E B
D (A,B) = c(E,B) + minw {D (A,w)}
= 8+6 = 14
loop!
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute © Shivkumar Kalvanaraman & © Biplab Sikdar 17
Distance table gives routing table

cost to destination via Outgoing link


E
D () A B D to use, cost

A 1 14 5 A A,1

B 7 8 5 B D,5
destination

destination
C 6 9 4 C D,4

D 4 11 2 D D,4

Distance table Routing table


Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute © Shivkumar Kalvanaraman & © Biplab Sikdar 18
Distance Vector Routing: overview - 1

Iterative, asynchronous: each local iteration


caused by:
• local link cost change
• message from neighbor: its least cost path
change from neighbor

Distributed:
• each node notifies neighbors only when its
least cost path to any destination changes
– neighbors then notify their neighbors if necessary

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute © Shivkumar Kalvanaraman & © Biplab Sikdar 19


Distance Vector Routing: overview - 2
Each node:

wait for (change in local


link cost of msg from
neighbor)

recompute distance table

if least cost path to any


dest has changed, notify
neighbors

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute © Shivkumar Kalvanaraman & © Biplab Sikdar 20


Distance Vector Algorithm - 1

At all nodes, X:
1 Initialization:
2 for all adjacent nodes v:
X
3 D (*,v) = infty /* the * operator means "for all rows" */
X
4 D (v,v) = c(X,v)
5 for all destinations, y
6 send minXD (y,w) to each neighbor /* w over all X's neighbors */
w

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute © Shivkumar Kalvanaraman & © Biplab Sikdar 21


Distance Vector Algorithm - 2
8 loop
9 wait (until I see a link cost change to neighbor V
10 or until I receive update from neighbor V)
11
12 if (c(X,V) changes by d)
13 /* change cost to all dest's via neighbor v by d */
14 /* note: d could be positive or negative */
15 for all destinations y: DX(y,V) = DX(y,V) + d
16
17 else if (update received from V wrt destination Y)
18 /* shortest path from V to some Y has changed */
19 /* V has sent a new value for its min DV(Y,w) */
w
20 /* call this received new value is "newval" */
X
21 for the single destination y: D (Y,V) = c(X,V) + newval
22
X
23 if we have a new minw D (Y,w)for any destination Y
24 send new value of min DX(Y,w) to all neighbors
w
25
26 forever
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute © Shivkumar Kalvanaraman & © Biplab Sikdar 22
Distance Vector Algorithm: example - 1

Y
2 1
X Z X Z
7 D (Y,Z) = c(X,Z) + minw {D (Y,w)}
= 7+1 = 8

X Y
D (Z,Y) = c(X,Y) + minw {D (Z,w)}
= 2+1 = 3

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute © Shivkumar Kalvanaraman & © Biplab Sikdar 23


Distance Vector: link cost changes - 1

Link cost changes:


node detects local link cost change 1
Y
updates distance table (line 15) 4 1
if cost change in least cost path, X Z
notify neighbors (lines 23,24) 50

algorithm
terminates
“good
news
travels
fast”

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute © Shivkumar Kalvanaraman & © Biplab Sikdar 24


Distance Vector: link cost changes - 2

Link cost changes: 60


good news travels fast Y
bad news travels slow - “count 4 1
to infinity” problem! X Z
50

algorithm
continues
on!

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute © Shivkumar Kalvanaraman & © Biplab Sikdar 25


Distance Vector: poisoned reverse
If Z routes through Y to get to X : 60
Z tells Y its (Z’s) distance to X is infinite Y
4 1
(so Y won’t route to X via Z)
will this completely solve count to infinity X Z
50
problem?

algorithm
terminates

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute © Shivkumar Kalvanaraman & © Biplab Sikdar 26


Comparison of
LS and DV algorithms - 1
Message complexity
• LS: with n nodes, E links, O(nE) msgs sent each
• DV: exchange between neighbors only
– convergence time varies
Speed of Convergence
• LS: O(n**2) algorithm requires O(nE) msgs
– may have oscillations
• DV: convergence time varies
– may be routing loops
– count-to-infinity problem

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute © Shivkumar Kalvanaraman & © Biplab Sikdar 27


Comparison of
LS and DV algorithms - 1
Robustness: what happens if router
malfunctions?

LS:
– node can advertise incorrect link cost
– each node computes only its own table
DV:
– DV node can advertise incorrect path cost
– each node’s table used by others
• error propagate thru network
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute © Shivkumar Kalvanaraman & © Biplab Sikdar 28
Internet AS Hierarchy
Intra-AS border (exterior gateway) routers

Inter-AS interior (gateway) routers


Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute © Shivkumar Kalvanaraman & © Biplab Sikdar 29
Intra-AS Routing

• Also known as Interior Gateway Protocols (IGP)


• Most common IGPs:

– RIP: Routing Information Protocol

– OSPF: Open Shortest Path First

– IGRP: Interior Gateway Routing Protocol


(Cisco propr.)

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute © Shivkumar Kalvanaraman & © Biplab Sikdar 30


RIP
(Routing Information Protocol) - 1
• Distance vector algorithm
• Included in BSD-UNIX Distribution in 1982
• Distance metric: # of hops (max = 15
hops)

• Distance vectors: exchanged every 30 sec


via Response Message (also called
advertisement)
• Each advertisement: route to up to 25
destination nets
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute © Shivkumar Kalvanaraman & © Biplab Sikdar 31
RIP
(Routing Information Protocol) - 2
z
w x y
A D B

C
Destination Network Next Router Num. of hops to dest.
w A 2
y B 2
z B 7
x -- 1
…. …. ....
Routing table in D
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute © Shivkumar Kalvanaraman & © Biplab Sikdar 32
RIP: Link Failure and Recovery

If no advertisement heard after 180 sec -->


neighbor/link declared dead
– routes via neighbor invalidated
– new advertisements sent to neighbors
– neighbors in turn send out new
advertisements (if tables changed)
– link failure info quickly propagates to
entire net
– poison reverse used to prevent ping-pong
loops (infinite distance = 16 hops)
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute © Shivkumar Kalvanaraman & © Biplab Sikdar 33
RIP Table processing - 1
• RIP routing tables managed by
application-level process called route-d
(daemon)
• advertisements sent in UDP packets,
periodically repeated

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute © Shivkumar Kalvanaraman & © Biplab Sikdar 34


RIP Table processing - 2
Router: giroflee.eurocom.fr

Destination Gateway Flags Ref Use Interface


-------------------- -------------------- ----- ----- ------ ---------
127.0.0.1 127.0.0.1 UH 0 26492 lo0
192.168.2. 192.168.2.5 U 2 13 fa0
193.55.114. 193.55.114.6 U 3 58503 le0
192.168.3. 192.168.3.5 U 2 25 qaa0
224.0.0.0 193.55.114.6 U 3 0 le0
default 193.55.114.129 UG 0 143454

Three attached class C networks (LANs)


Router only knows routes to attached LANs
Default router used to “go up”
Route multicast address: 224.0.0.0
Loopback interface (for debugging)

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute © Shivkumar Kalvanaraman & © Biplab Sikdar 35


OSPF (Open Shortest Path First)

• “open”: publicly available


• Uses Link State algorithm
– LS packet dissemination
– Topology map at each node
– Route computation using Dijkstra’s
algorithm

• OSPF advertisement carries one entry per


neighbor router
• Advertisements disseminated to entire AS
(via flooding) © Shivkumar Kalvanaraman & © Biplab Sikdar
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute 36

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