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ANCS
2011
ACM

A Scalability Study of Enterprise Network Architectures

12 years 11 months ago
A Scalability Study of Enterprise Network Architectures
The largest enterprise networks already contain hundreds of thousands of hosts. Enterprise networks are composed of Ethernet subnets interconnected by IP routers. These routers require expensive configuration and maintenance. If the Ethernet subnets are made more scalable, the high cost of the IP routers can be eliminated. Unfortunately, it has been widely acknowledged that Ethernet does not scale well because it relies on broadcast, which wastes bandwidth, and a cycle-free topology, which poorly distributes load and forwarding state. There are many recent proposals to replace Ethernet, each with its own set of architectural mechanisms. These mechanisms include eliminating broadcasts, using source routing, and restricting routing paths. Although there are many different proposed designs, there is little data available that allows for comparisons between designs. This study performs simulations to evaluate all of the factors that affect the scalability of Ethernet together, which has...
Brent Stephens, Alan L. Cox, Scott Rixner, T. S. E
Added 12 Dec 2011
Updated 12 Dec 2011
Type Journal
Year 2011
Where ANCS
Authors Brent Stephens, Alan L. Cox, Scott Rixner, T. S. Eugene Ng
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