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PAM
2009
Springer

Triangle Inequality and Routing Policy Violations in the Internet

13 years 11 months ago
Triangle Inequality and Routing Policy Violations in the Internet
Triangle inequality violations (TIVs) are the effect of packets between two nodes being routed on the longer direct path between them when a shorter detour path through an intermediary is available. TIVs are a natural, widespread and persistent consequence of Internet routing policies. By exposing opportunities to improve the delay between two nodes, TIVs can help myriad applications that seek to minimize end-to-end latency. However, sending traffic along the detour paths revealed by TIVs may influence Internet routing negatively. In this paper we study the interaction between triangle inequality violations and policy routing in the Internet. We use measured and predicted AS paths between Internet nodes to show that 25% of the detour paths exposed by TIVs are in fact available to BGP but are simply deemed “less efficient”. We also compare the AS paths of detours and direct paths and find that detours use AS edges that are rarely followed by default Internet paths, while avoidin...
Cristian Lumezanu, Randolph Baden, Neil Spring, Bo
Added 20 May 2010
Updated 20 May 2010
Type Conference
Year 2009
Where PAM
Authors Cristian Lumezanu, Randolph Baden, Neil Spring, Bobby Bhattacharjee
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