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An algebraic theory of dynamic network routing | IEEE Journals & Magazine | IEEE Xplore

An algebraic theory of dynamic network routing


Abstract:

We develop a non-classic algebraic theory for the purpose of investigating the convergence properties of dynamic routing protocols. The algebraic theory can be regarded a...Show More

Abstract:

We develop a non-classic algebraic theory for the purpose of investigating the convergence properties of dynamic routing protocols. The algebraic theory can be regarded as a generalization of shortest-path routing, where the new concept of free cycle generalizes that of a positive-length cycle. A primary result then states that routing protocols always converge, though not necessarily onto optimal paths, in networks where all cycles are free. Monotonicity and isotonicity are two algebraic properties that strengthen convergence results. Monotonicity implies protocol convergence in every network, and isotonicity assures convergence onto optimal paths. A great many applications arise as particular instances of the algebraic theory. In intra-domain routing, we show that routing protocols can be made to converge to shortest and widest paths, for example, but that the composite metric of Internet Gateway Routing Protocol (IGRP) does not lead to optimal paths. The more interesting applications, however, relate to inter-domain routing and its Border Gateway Protocol (BGP), where the algebraic framework provides a mathematical template for the specification, design, and verification of routing policies. We formulate existing guidelines for inter-domain routing in algebraic terms, propose new guidelines contemplating backup relationships between domains, and derive a sufficient condition for signaling correctness of internal-BGP.
Published in: IEEE/ACM Transactions on Networking ( Volume: 13, Issue: 5, October 2005)
Page(s): 1160 - 1173
Date of Publication: 07 November 2005

ISSN Information:


I. Introduction

Non-Classic algebra has made headway in many branches of electrical engineering and computer science, from coding and cryptography to compiler design and networking, unifying seemingly unrelated concepts and establishing fundamental results. Can it also shed light into distributed network routing, especially as witnessed in the Internet protocols? We answer affirmatively by defining suitable algebraic structures and exploring their properties.

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