DocumentCode
395837
Title
APLS: active protocol label switching
Author
Lau, William ; Jha, Sanjay
Author_Institution
Sch. of Comput. Sci. & Eng., New South Wales Univ., Sydney, NSW, Australia
Volume
1
fYear
2003
fDate
11-15 May 2003
Firstpage
641
Abstract
The current trend of increasing accessibility and reachability of the Internet has resulted in many new services at the application layer. The potential growth of services on the Internet is only restricted by the network technologies that realize the Internet. In particular, layer 3 technologies are conventionally inflexible and do not adapt well to rapid changes in the Internet environment. Service-oriented networks should be more user-focused, which includes providing mechanisms that show value to the network providers, service providers, and clients. The next generation networking technologies must not only excel in performance, but also in flexibility, control, and scalability. This paper introduces a new network architecture called active protocol label switching (APLS), which establishes a foundation offering the same level of performance and scalability as current label-switching architectures lack. All existing label-switching architectures position the label as a shim layer between layers 2 and 3. The major reason behind this is to make the architecture network protocol independent. However, in designing APLS we investigated the merit of a new concept: label switching over IP. Several other new concepts are introduced: virtual label space, micro-instruction architecture, and micro-policy based forwarding. We will also focus on how APLS can be combined with active programmable networks to offer services at an unprecedented level.
Keywords
IP networks; Internet; multiprotocol label switching; telecommunication services; Internet; accessibility; active protocol label switching; architecture network protocol; clients; current label-switching architectures; label switching over IP; microinstruction architecture; micropolicy based forwarding; network providers; reachability; service providers; service-oriented networks; shim layer; virtual label space; Access protocols; Application software; Australia; Bandwidth; Communication system traffic control; Computer science; IP networks; Next generation networking; Scalability; Web and internet services;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Communications, 2003. ICC '03. IEEE International Conference on
Print_ISBN
0-7803-7802-4
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ICC.2003.1204254
Filename
1204254
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