DocumentCode :
3202173
Title :
A bundle of problems
Author :
Wood, Lloyd ; Eddy, Wesley M. ; Holliday, Peter
Author_Institution :
Cisco Syst., Global Gov. Solutions Group, London
fYear :
2009
fDate :
7-14 March 2009
Firstpage :
1
Lastpage :
17
Abstract :
Delay-Tolerant Networkingrdquo (DTN) is a neologism used for a new store-and-forward architecture and protocol suite intended for disrupted networks where there is intermittent or ad-hoc connectivity. This has been proposed as one approach to supporting delay-tolerant networks. Work in the late 1990s on the ldquoInterplanetary Internetrdquo forms the basis for current DTN protocols and architecture. That early work considered transport protocols robust to the hours-long propagation delays of deep-space communications. DTN is also known, primarily in military circles, as Disruption-Tolerant Networking, due to the dynamic links and outages in the military tactical environment, rather than long-delay links. In both cases, DTN technologies are well-suited to applications that are mostly asynchronous and insensitive to large variations in delivery conditions. DTN networks differ sufficiently from traditional terrestrial networks in their characteristics and connectivity that link, network and transport protocols must be carefully considered and chosen to cope with these different characteristics, or new protocols can be designed that are suited for the problems that these DTN network conditions impose. The ldquoBundle Protocolrdquo exists within the DTN architecture, which sends bundles over subnet-specific transport protocols, called ldquoconvergence layers.rdquo ldquoBundlingrdquo has undergone a large amount of shared development and design over a period of years as a research effort. We examine the Bundle Protocol and its related architecture closely, and discuss areas where we have found that the current Bundle approach is not well-suited to many of the operational concepts that it was intended to support. Problems with the Bundle Protocol and its convergence layers exist in mechanisms for error detection and overall reliability. This weakens the Bundle Protocol´s suitability to disrupted and error-prone networks. We show that these reliability issues can lead to p- erformance problems in DTN networks, requiring mitigation. Open research and development areas also exist with design choices in handling timing information, in determining necessary and sufficient security mechanisms, in its Quality of Service capabilities, and in other aspects of application or content identification. We show that the existing DTN bundling architecture has a number of open real-world deployment issues that can be addressed. We suggest possible remediation strategies for these weak areas of the bundle protocol that we have been working on. We also look at alternate approaches to DTN networking. Rather than only providing criticism, this paper identifies open issues, where work on modifying the Bundle Protocol is encouraged and approaches to address its various problems are suggested.
Keywords :
quality of service; space communication links; telecommunication network reliability; telecommunication security; transport protocols; ad-hoc connectivity; bundle protocol; convergence layers; deep-space communications; delay-tolerant networks; disrupted networks; error detection; error-prone networks; military tactical environment; quality of service; security mechanisms; store-and-forward architecture; transport protocols; Convergence; Disruption tolerant networking; Information security; Internet; Propagation delay; Quality of service; Research and development; Robustness; Timing; Transport protocols;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Aerospace conference, 2009 IEEE
Conference_Location :
Big Sky, MT
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-2621-8
Electronic_ISBN :
978-1-4244-2622-5
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/AERO.2009.4839384
Filename :
4839384
Link To Document :
بازگشت