1 / 21

Aloha Dr. Abramson: Could We Eat The Telco’s Lunch? Evolution of Computer Networking

Aloha Dr. Abramson: Could We Eat The Telco’s Lunch? Evolution of Computer Networking. Ravi Prakash Department of Computer Science. create your future. www.utdallas.edu. Surf the Net or Net the Surf?. 1970: network multiple University of Hawaii campuses. Wireless hub-and-spoke:

oriole
Télécharger la présentation

Aloha Dr. Abramson: Could We Eat The Telco’s Lunch? Evolution of Computer Networking

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Aloha Dr. Abramson: Could We Eat The Telco’s Lunch?Evolution of Computer Networking Ravi Prakash Department of Computer Science create your future www.utdallas.edu

  2. Surf the Net or Net the Surf? • 1970: network multiple University of Hawaii campuses. • Wireless hub-and-spoke: • Source to central campus. • Broadcast received signal to destination. • What if multiple sources transmit concurrently?

  3. ALOHA: Multiple Access

  4. From ALOHA to Ethernet • No central relay. • Listen before speaking. • Jamming signal on collision. • Random back-off and retry.

  5. The Past: Circuit Switched Request Reservation based. Dedicated resources. Guaranteed quality of service Resource utilization? Time Response Data Send entire message

  6. Do Computers Talk Like That? • No, no, no, no, ………………..no, no, no, …………………., no, no, no, no, ………………………………., no, no, ….. • Kleinrock et al.: Why waste resources? • Unlearn what Ma Bell taught us. • Learn from the Post Office instead • IP Datagrams

  7. Towards Packet Switching Time Time

  8. Statistical Multiplexing

  9. Routing & Packet Switching Source Destination

  10. Danger, Will Robinson! • Packets being dropped by routers! • Packets corrupted over links! • Network becoming too big to discover routes!

  11. The Reliability Question • The TCP answer • Cerf & Kahn, 1974 • If at first you don’t succeed, try, try, try again. • Acknowledgments. • Timers. • Retransmissions.

  12. Too Big To Fail?Chop, chop, chop AS1 AS3 X AS5 Y AS2 AS6 AS4

  13. Hierarchical Routing Stub AS AS1 Stub AS IDR IDR AS3 AS5 IDR Transit AS Transit AS AS2 Inter-AS path IDR AS6 IDR IDR: Intra-domain routing AS4 IDR Transit AS

  14. The Crash of October,1986 • NSFnet backbone traffic dropped from 32 kbits/s to 40 bits/s! • Blame it on TCP. • If at first you don’t succeed, try, try, try again…but don’t be bull-headed. • Van Jacobson (1987): congestion-control algorithm.

  15. Network Congestion

  16. TCP’s Congestion & Flow Control Congestion Avoidance Slow Start

  17. Design Principles • Distributed control. • Keep the network core simple. • Push all the complexity to the edge of the network. • Fundamentally different from the Telco approach. • Facilitates creation of new applications. • Has security implications.

  18. Killer (?) Applications • Email • FTP • Web browsing & search • Voice over IP • Torrent • Streaming audio and video

  19. Winners and Others Winners include: • Google • Yahoo • Amazon • Skype • Vonage • Netflix Non-winners: • Verizon • AT&T…at&t…at&t • Time Warner • Sprint • Comcast

  20. Net Neutrality Debate • Carriers/ISPs unable to share in the profits of content providers. • Are carriers trying to stifle competition? • Deep packet inspection • Metered data transport • Bundling • Telefonica intends to charge Google for its traffic.

  21. Oh What a Ride! • Last 20 years: • 9600-baud modem to 10 Mbps FIOS at home. • Plain text email to elaborate attachments. • Travel agents to Travelocity. • AT&T to Skype and Vonage. • $3/min to $19.95/month unlimited to India.

More Related