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PAM
2009
Springer

Revisiting Route Caching: The World Should Be Flat

14 years 7 months ago
Revisiting Route Caching: The World Should Be Flat
Internet routers’ forwarding tables (FIBs), which must be stored in expensive fast memory for high-speed packet forwarding, are growing quickly in size due to increased multihoming, finer-grained traffic engineering, and deployment of IPv6 and VPNs. To address this problem, several Internet architectures have been proposed to reduce FIB size by returning to the earlier approach of route caching: storing only the working set of popular routes in the FIB. This paper revisits route caching. We build upon previous work by studying flat, uni-class (/24) prefix caching, with modern traffic traces from more than 60 routers in a tier-1 ISP. We first characterize routers’ working sets and then evaluate route-caching performance under different cache replacement strategies and cache sizes. Surprisingly, despite the large number of deaggregated /24 subnets, caching uni-class prefixes can effectively curb the increase of FIB sizes. Moreover, uni-class prefixes substantially simplify a ...
Changhoon Kim, Matthew Caesar, Alexandre Gerber, J
Added 20 May 2010
Updated 20 May 2010
Type Conference
Year 2009
Where PAM
Authors Changhoon Kim, Matthew Caesar, Alexandre Gerber, Jennifer Rexford
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