nanog mailing list archives

RE: Greedy Routing


From: Jake Mertel <jake () nobistech net>
Date: Wed, 18 Feb 2009 17:39:44 -0600

I had to laugh when reading... This is how I think someone who doesn't "get" how the Internet works may try to 
re-explain what a researcher explained to them about how metrics influence the flow of traffic in BGP path selection.


Regards,

Jake Mertel
Nobis Technology Group, L.L.C.



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-----Original Message-----
From: Deepak Jain [mailto:deepak () ai net] 
Sent: Wednesday, February 18, 2009 5:01 PM
To: Valdis.Kletnieks () vt edu; Rod Beck
Cc: nanog list
Subject: RE: Greedy Routing


Maybe there's some critical insight in the paper that Physorg managed
to totally not mention, I dunno.

I saw it the same way...

" As the researchers explain, some types of networks are not navigable. For instance, if the probability that two nodes 
are linked doesn't depend on the metric distance between them, then such networks are difficult to navigate, as there 
is no way to choose one node over another based on distance. But when there is a connection between the link existence 
probability and the hidden distance between nodes, metric distances can help to navigate the network, i.e., such 
networks are "navigable.""

If your network doesn't calculate or use metrics or weights, or AS path lengths... then you are not able to
throw packets like fairy dust to their intended destination. Worse, if you use metrics unrelated to distance
(like link cost) you could actually send your packets the wrong way.

It's funny, but I think they said that their math shows that the Internet works to generally route packets
(to a shorter path) than other possible paths.

I'm sure that will come as a surprise to all of us.

Deepak Jain
AiNET



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