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Postcards from the Edge – Offense Presented by: Sam McIngvale Rob Kotz
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General Premise Why Cache-N-Forward? The authors argue that advances in wireless technology will render the current Internet architecture useless. How? What makes new mobile devices ‘unstable’? TCP has been effective thus far…why change?
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General Premise v2.0 What are the benefits of Cache-N- Forward? How will changing the current architecture fix the ‘unstability’? Will there be an increase in speed? Will there be an increase in throughput? What will be different? Why should I want to change?
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General Premise v3.0 Paper argues the need to ‘push complexity into the network and make the end-to-end transport protocol simpler.’ This conjecture contradicts the fundamental principle the original Internet was built-on. Keeping the network simple has gotten us this far…why change? The authors offer no reasoning to support where this conjecture comes from.
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General Premise v4.0 Is Cache-N-Forward a new architecture? All that is happening is the file is getting moved somewhere closer to the requesting end-user. Then the end-user receives the file via a ‘TCP-like’ protocol. Should we implement a new architecture that only improves large file-transfer? Real-time applications are increasing and user- experience (QoS) is a major concern.
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Overhead How much overhead will Cache-n- Forwarding introduce into the Internet? We don’t know because the authors don’t tell us. Reading/Writing files to disk at each hop will dramatically slow-down the rate of transmission. Disk I/O is already the limiting factor for many operations.
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Overhead v2.0 For a single mobile-device (end-user) to request a file, the following steps must take place: The receiver contacts a file name resolution service to resolve the location of the requested file. The receiver looks-up the host in DNS. The receiver sends a query to the sender. The sender contacts a name resolution service that resolves the name of the mobile host to a set of PO nodes. The sender forwards the file to one or more PO’s. PO’s hold the file until contacted by end-user to arrange delivery. Finally, there is delivery of the file via direct-transmission (TCP?). I would much rather just take my file directly.
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Overhead v3.0 This architecture is not appropriate for real-time applications. Definitely does not solve any issues with QoS – a major concern for future architectures. All we get is a guarantee of delivery (already present with TCP) but we sacrifice extreme transfer times.
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Current State of Proposal The authors recognize several key questions that still remain with their architecture. How should routing be integrated with caching? How do we implement congestion control? What are the storage needs of a CNF node? What are the necessary post office descriptors? How do we specify routing tables? How should cache-based multicast be implemented? Why I am I writing this paper? What is the Internet?
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Current State of Proposal v2.0 This is an Internet Architecture proposal. You CANNOT leave important issues such as routing tables and congestion control up in the air. We would like to argue specific (low- level) design and implementation issues, but the design is so high-level there is nothing to argue about.
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Current State of Proposal v3.0 The Wireless Revolution the authors are hoping to address is happening right now. By the time their architecture is anywhere near a state that can be deployed, this issue will have been solved or addressed (if it needs to be).
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Evaluation? Instead of offering concrete results to support their conjectures we are presented with the difficulties of testing such an architecture There are no concrete results to support the validation of this new architecture It’s ok though…we have an Impact Statement and Intellectual Merit…
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Deployment? The authors offer no plan for deployment. They are proposing a major ($$$$) overhaul of the Internet – for this to ever happen there must be: 1) Concrete results to justify the change. 2) Some plan to completely change the current infrastructure. Neither of these issues are addresses.
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Conclusion Does not feel like a science paper. The authors make wild claims with absolutely no backing evidence. There is no evaluation of their proposed architecture. Seems this paper is more of a preliminary outline of a project yet to be completed.
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