This
story appeared on Network World Fusion at
http://www.nwfusion.com/columnists/2000/0821bradner.html
'Net
Insider:
Applying ignorance to
the problem
By Scott
Bradner
Network World, 08/21/00
It
is quite amazing to watch people who have just heard of some long-time
technical issue assert that they have divined the true answer that has eluded
everyone else.
Their solution always seems to be marvelously
simple.
They also seem to be attracted to forums that will maximize
the audience that can properly evaluate their technical competence - such as
the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) mailing list. In the Internet arena,
a frequent target of these instant experts is IP routing; these people cannot
imagine that it can be as hard as the router vendors and routing people at ISPs
say it is.
IP routing sounds simple. Each router maintains a list of
addresses, known as a routing table. Each address represents a network or an
aggregation of networks. Associated with each entry is the address of the next
router in the path toward the listed network. Whenever a router receives a
packet on an incoming link it compares the destination IP address in the
received packet with the entries in the routing table to find the best match.
The router then forwards the packet to the next router in the path.
If
that's all that there was to IP routing, then it would be easy. Well it would
be conceptually easy; there would still be the question of making this work at
the speeds that Internet backbones run and have enough fast memory to store the
routing table. But that's not all that is involved by a long shot.
The
content of the routing table changes all the time. Every time there are
connectivity changes anywhere in the Internet, it may cause changes in the
routing tables in your ISP's routers. Routers have to continually exchange
routing information among themselves to keep the tables up-to-date. The routing
tables are also derived from the input routing information, and that can take
quite a bit of processing. The hot spots are the size of the table, the amount
of information exchange needed to keep it current, and the time needed to
process the information.
The tables in the routers in the backbone
ISPs have almost 90,000 entries and are growing rapidly (see
www.telstra.net/ops/bgptable.html for a real-time snapshot). One way to
minimize the rate of growth is to ensure that as many networks as possible can
be aggregated under each routing table entry. This requires customers to
renumber their networks when they change ISPs so the addresses of their
networks can be aggregated with those of the new ISP.
Some of the
newly hatched experts in Internet routing claim this renumbering should not be
needed because it should be easy to build a big enough, fast enough router to
deal with much bigger tables. I assure you, if it were easy, Cisco and Juniper
would have a lot more competition.
It's fun, though somewhat sad, to
watch cluelessness in action.
Disclaimer: Harvard prefilters against
cluelessness, unlike the IETF list. But the above is my amazement.
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