NavTalks
From Navigators
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<td style="width:30%">Rui Miguel</td> | <td style="width:30%">Rui Miguel</td> | ||
<td style="width:50%"><span title="The Internet today is mainly used for distributing content, in a fundamental departure from its original goal of enabling communication between endpoints. As a response to this change, Named Data Networking (NDN) is a new architecture rooted on the concept of naming data, in contrast to the original paradigm based on naming hosts. This radical architectural shift results in packet processing in NDN to differ substantially from IP. As a consequence, current network equipment cannot be seamlessly extended to offer NDN data-plane functions. To address this challenge, available NDN router solutions are usually software-based, and even the highly-optimised designs tailored to specific hardware platforms present limited performance, hindering adoption. In addition, these tailor-made solutions are hardly reusable in research and production networks. The emergence of programmable switching chips and of languages to program them, like P4, brings hope for the state of affairs to change. In this presentation, we present the design of an NDN router written in P4. We improve over the state-of-the-art solution by extending the NDN functionality, and by addressing its scalability limitations. A preliminary evaluation of our open-source solution running on a software target demonstrates its feasibility."> | <td style="width:50%"><span title="The Internet today is mainly used for distributing content, in a fundamental departure from its original goal of enabling communication between endpoints. As a response to this change, Named Data Networking (NDN) is a new architecture rooted on the concept of naming data, in contrast to the original paradigm based on naming hosts. This radical architectural shift results in packet processing in NDN to differ substantially from IP. As a consequence, current network equipment cannot be seamlessly extended to offer NDN data-plane functions. To address this challenge, available NDN router solutions are usually software-based, and even the highly-optimised designs tailored to specific hardware platforms present limited performance, hindering adoption. In addition, these tailor-made solutions are hardly reusable in research and production networks. The emergence of programmable switching chips and of languages to program them, like P4, brings hope for the state of affairs to change. In this presentation, we present the design of an NDN router written in P4. We improve over the state-of-the-art solution by extending the NDN functionality, and by addressing its scalability limitations. A preliminary evaluation of our open-source solution running on a software target demonstrates its feasibility."> | ||
- | <u>Named Data Networking with Programmable Switches</u> | + | <u>Named Data Networking with Programmable Switches</u></span></td> |
<td style="width:10%"> </td> | <td style="width:10%"> </td> | ||
</tr> | </tr> |
Revision as of 11:53, 12 November 2018
The Navtalks is a series of informal talks given by Navigators members or some special guests about every two-weeks at Ciências, ULisboa.
Leave mouse over title's presentation to read the abstract.
Contents |
September 2018
20 September | Alysson Bessani | SMaRtChain: A Principled Design for a New Generation of Blockchains | |
20 September | Rui Miguel | Named Data Networking with Programmable Switches |
October 2018
4 October | Bruno Vavala (Research Scientist in Intel Labs) | Private Data Objects | |
4 October | Marcus Völp (Research Scientist, CritiX, SnT, Univ. of Luxembourg) | Reflective Consensus | |
18 October | Yair Amir (Professor, Johns Hopkins University) | Timely, Reliable, and Cost-Effective Internet Transport Service using Structured Overlay Networks |
November 2018
13/11 | Salvatore Signorello | The Past, the Present and some Future of Interest Flooding Attacks in Named-Data Networking | |
13/11 | Tiago Oliveira | Vawlt - Privacy-Centered Cloud Storage | |
27/11 | Nuno Neves | ||
27/11 | Ricardo Mendes |
December 2018
11/12 | António Casimiro | |||
11/12 | Carlos Nascimento |
January 2019
15/01 | Fernando Alves | ||
15/01 | Ibéria Medeiros | ||
29/01 | Fernando Ramos | ||
29/01 | Miguel Garcia |
February 2019
19/02 | Ana Fidalgo | ||
19/02 | João Sousa |
March 2019
12/03 | Pedro Gaspar | ||
12/03 | Ricardo Morgado | ||
26/03 | André Oliveira | ||
26/03 | Nuno Dionísio |
April 2019
09/04 | Adriano Serckumecka | ||
09/04 | Tulio Ribeiro | ||
30/04 | Miguel Moreira | ||
30/04 | Pedro Ferreira |
May 2019
14/05 | Diogo Gonçalves | ||
14/05 | Vinicius Cogo | ||
28/05 | Francisco Araújo | ||
28/05 | Miguel Matos |
June 2019
11/06 | Eric Vial | ||
11/06 | Robin Vassantlal | ||
25/06 | João Pinto | ||
25/06 | Tiago Correia |