The layer 2 network technology is extending beyond its traditional local area implementation and finding wider acceptance in provider’s metropolitan area networks and large-scale cloud data center networks. This is m...The layer 2 network technology is extending beyond its traditional local area implementation and finding wider acceptance in provider’s metropolitan area networks and large-scale cloud data center networks. This is mainly due to its plug-and-play capability and native mobility support. Many efforts have been put to increase the bisection bandwidth in a layer 2 network, which has been constrained by the spanning tree protocol that a layer 2 network uses for preventing looping. The recent trend is to incorporate layer 3’s routing approach into a layer 2 network so that multiple paths can be used for forwarding traffic between any source-destination (S-D) node pair. ECMP (equal cost multipath) is one such example. However, ECMP may still be limited in generating multiple paths due to its shortest path (lowest cost) requirement. In this paper, we consider a non-shortest-path routing approach, called EPMP (Equal Preference Multi-Path) that can generate more paths than ECMP. The EPMP is based on the ordered semi-group algebra. In the EPMP routing, paths that differ in traditionally-defined costs, such as hops, bandwidth, etc., can be made equally preferred and thus become candidate paths. We found that, in comparison with ECMP, EPMP routing not only generates more paths, provides higher bisection bandwidth, but also allows bottleneck links in a hierarchical network to be identified when different traffic patterns are applied. EPMP is also versatile in that it can use various ways of path preference calculations to control the number and the length of paths, making it flexible (like policy-based routing) but also objective (like shortest path first routing) in calculating preferred paths.展开更多
文摘The layer 2 network technology is extending beyond its traditional local area implementation and finding wider acceptance in provider’s metropolitan area networks and large-scale cloud data center networks. This is mainly due to its plug-and-play capability and native mobility support. Many efforts have been put to increase the bisection bandwidth in a layer 2 network, which has been constrained by the spanning tree protocol that a layer 2 network uses for preventing looping. The recent trend is to incorporate layer 3’s routing approach into a layer 2 network so that multiple paths can be used for forwarding traffic between any source-destination (S-D) node pair. ECMP (equal cost multipath) is one such example. However, ECMP may still be limited in generating multiple paths due to its shortest path (lowest cost) requirement. In this paper, we consider a non-shortest-path routing approach, called EPMP (Equal Preference Multi-Path) that can generate more paths than ECMP. The EPMP is based on the ordered semi-group algebra. In the EPMP routing, paths that differ in traditionally-defined costs, such as hops, bandwidth, etc., can be made equally preferred and thus become candidate paths. We found that, in comparison with ECMP, EPMP routing not only generates more paths, provides higher bisection bandwidth, but also allows bottleneck links in a hierarchical network to be identified when different traffic patterns are applied. EPMP is also versatile in that it can use various ways of path preference calculations to control the number and the length of paths, making it flexible (like policy-based routing) but also objective (like shortest path first routing) in calculating preferred paths.