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The Network Layer & Routing

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Presentation on theme: "The Network Layer & Routing"— Presentation transcript:

1 The Network Layer & Routing
application transport network data link physical network data link physical network data link physical network data link physical The Network Layer & Routing network data link physical network data link physical network data link physical network data link physical application transport network data link physical network data link physical application transport network data link physical The network layer moves transport layer segments from host to host in the network, to deliver them to their destination. This layer involves each and every host and router in the network. We will study the key principles and algorithms of routing, with a focus on the Internet Protocol (IP) service model. 4: Network Layer

2 Network layer functions
transport packet from sending to receiving hosts network layer protocols in every host, router three important functions: path determination: route taken by packets from source to destination - routing algorithms switching: move packets from router’s input to appropriate router output call setup: some network architectures require router call setup along path before data flows (what types?) application transport network data link physical network data link physical 4: Network Layer

3 Virtual circuits the source-to-destination path behaves much like a telephone circuit performance-wise network actions along source-to-destination path call setup, teardown for each call before data can flow each packet carries VC identifier (not destination host ID) every router/switch on source-destination path maintains a “state” for each passing connection Recall: transport-layer connection only involved two end systems link and router resources (bandwidth, buffers) may be dedicated to the VC to get circuit-like performance but… what about start-up delay? 4: Network Layer

4 Virtual circuits: signaling protocols
used to setup, maintain and teardown the VC used in ATM, frame-relay and X.25 not used in the Internet (why?) application transport network data link physical application transport network data link physical 5. Data flow begins 6. Receive data 4. Call connected 3. Accept call 1. Initiate call 2. incoming call 4: Network Layer

5 Datagram networks: the Internet model
no call setup at network layer routers: do not maintain state for the end-to-end connections no network-level concept of a “connection” packets are typically routed using only destination host ID which is carried in the packet packets between same source-destination pair may take different paths application transport network data link physical application transport network data link physical 1. Send data 2. Receive data 4: Network Layer

6 Routing Routing protocol Graph abstraction for routing algorithms:
Goal: determine “good” path (sequence of routers) thru network from source to dest. 5 3 B C 2 5 A 2 1 F 3 Graph abstraction for routing algorithms: graph nodes are routers graph edges are physical links link cost: delay, $ cost, or congestion level 1 2 D E 1 “good” path: typically means minimum cost path other def’s possible 4: Network Layer

7 Routing Algorithm classification
Global or decentralized cost information? Global: all routers have complete topology & link cost info “link state” algorithms Decentralized: router knows physically-connected neighbors, link costs to route to neighbors iterative process of computation & exchange of info with neighbors “distance vector” algorithms Static or dynamic? Static: routes change slowly over time Dynamic: routes change more quickly periodic algorithm-driven updates responsive to link cost changes A E D C B F 2 1 3 5 4: Network Layer

8 4: Network Layer

9 4: Network Layer

10 4: Network Layer

11 4: Network Layer

12 4: Network Layer

13 4: Network Layer

14 Dijsktra’s Algorithm 1 Initialization: 2 N = {A} // Source node is “A”
3 for all nodes v if v adjacent to A then D(v) = c(A,v) else D(v) = infinity 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: D(v) = min( D(v), D(w) + c(w,v) ) 13 /* new cost to v is either old cost to v or known shortest path cost to w plus cost from w to v */ 15 until all nodes in N A E D C B F 2 1 3 5 4: Network Layer

15 Dijkstra’s algorithm: example
Step 1 2 3 4 5 start N A AD ADE ADEB ADEBC ADEBCF D(B),p(B) 2,A - D(C),p(C) 5,A 4,D 3,E - D(D),p(D) 1,A - D(E),p(E) infinity 2,D - D(F),p(F) infinity 4,E A E D C B F 2 1 3 5 4: Network Layer

16 Distance Vector Routing Algorithm
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 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 destination Y via neighbor Z: distance from X to Y, via Z as next hop = DX(Y,Z) = c(X,Z) + minw {DZ(Y,w)} 4: Network Layer

17 Distance Table: example
7 8 1 2 D () A B C D 1 7 6 4 14 8 9 11 5 2 E cost to destination via destination D (C,D) E c(E,D) + min {D (C,w)} D w = 2+2 = 4 D (A,D) E c(E,D) + min {D (A,w)} D w = 2+3 = 5 loop back through E! D (A,B) E c(E,B) + min {D (A,w)} B w = 8+6 = 14 loop back through E! 4: Network Layer

18 Distance table gives routing table
1 7 6 4 14 8 9 11 5 2 E cost to destination via destination Outgoing link to use, cost E A B C D A,1 D,5 D,4 D,2 destination Distance table Routing table >> next link, cost 4: Network Layer

19 Distance Vector Algorithm (Bellman-Ford):
At all nodes, X: 1 Initialization: 2 for all adjacent nodes v: D (*,v) = infinity /* the * operator means "for all rows" */ D (v,v) = c(X,v) 5 for all destinations, y send min D (y,w) to each neighbor /* w over all X's neighbors */ X X X w 4: Network Layer

20 Distance Vector Algorithm (cont.):
8 loop 9 wait (until I see a link cost change to neighbor V or until I receive update from neighbor V) 11 12 if (c(X,V) changes by d) /* change cost to all dest's via neighbor v by d */ /* note: d could be positive or negative */ for all destinations y: D (y,V) = D (y,V) + d 16 17 else if (update received from V wrt destination Y) /* shortest path from V to some Y has changed */ /* V has sent a new value for its min DV(Y,w) */ /* call this received new value "newval" */ for the single destination y: D(Y,V) = c(X,V) + newval 22 23 if we have a new min D (Y,w) for any destination Y send new value of min D (Y,w) to all neighbors 25 26 forever X X w X X w X w 4: Network Layer

21 Comparison of LS and DV algorithms
Message complexity LS: with n nodes, E links, O(nE) msgs sent/broadcast DV: exchange between neighbors only convergence time varies Speed of Convergence LS: O(n2) algorithm requires O(nE) msgs may have oscillations DV: convergence time varies may be routing loops count-to-infinity problem poisoned reverse is sometimes successful 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 errors propagate through the network 4: Network Layer


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