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Evaluating Native Load Distribution of ARP- Path Bridging Protocol in Mesh and Data Center

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Authors
Ibáñez Fernández, Guillermo AgustínUniversity of Alcalá Author; Carral Pelayo, Juan AntonioUniversity of Alcalá Author; Rojas Sánchez, ElisaUniversity of Alcalá Author; Giménez Guzmán, José ManuelUniversity of Alcalá Author
Identifiers
Permanent link (URI): http://hdl.handle.net/10017/18881
DOI: 10.1109/ICC.2013.6655142
Publisher
Communications (ICC), 2013 IEEE International Conference on , vol., no., pp.3769,3774, 9-13 June 2013 doi: 10.1109/ICC.2013.6655142
Date
2013-06-10
Affiliation
Universidad de Alcalá. Departamento de Automática
Keywords
Ethernet, Routing bridges, Spanning Tree, Load Distribution
Project
S-2009/TIC-1468/MEDIANET (Comunidad de Madrid)
Document type
info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject
Version
info:eu-repo/semantics/acceptedVersion
Access rights
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
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Abstract
RP-Path is a simple, low latency, shortest path bridging protocol for campus, enterprise and data center networks. We recently found that this protocol natively distributes the traffic load in networks having redundant paths of similar characteristics. The reason is that every new path between hosts is selected on-demand in a race among ARP Request packet replicas over all available paths: the first arriving replica gets its path selected on the fly. This means a continuous adaptation of new paths to variations on the load at links and bridges. To show this unique load distribution capability and path diversity property we use a number of simulations for complex scenarios, including two different simulators: one flow- based and one packet-based, and two basic topologies: data center and a regular mesh. We also verify this behavior on real hardware on a network of nine ARP-Path NetFPGA switches. The conclusion is that the ARP-Path protocol efficiently distributes traffic via alternative paths at all load levels, provided that multiple paths of similar propagation delays are available
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