Observed structure of addresses in IP traffic
Proceedings of the 2nd ACM SIGCOMM Workshop on Internet measurment
NIRA: a new Internet routing architecture
FDNA '03 Proceedings of the ACM SIGCOMM workshop on Future directions in network architecture
Implications of the topological properties of Internet traffic on traffic engineering
Proceedings of the 2004 ACM symposium on Applied computing
Flow classification by histograms: or how to go on safari in the internet
Proceedings of the joint international conference on Measurement and modeling of computer systems
iPlane: an information plane for distributed services
OSDI '06 Proceedings of the 7th USENIX Symposium on Operating Systems Design and Implementation - Volume 7
Scaling IP Routing with the Core Router-Integrated Overlay
ICNP '06 Proceedings of the Proceedings of the 2006 IEEE International Conference on Network Protocols
Evaluating the benefits of the locator/identifier separation
Proceedings of 2nd ACM/IEEE international workshop on Mobility in the evolving internet architecture
Revisiting Route Caching: The World Should Be Flat
PAM '09 Proceedings of the 10th International Conference on Passive and Active Network Measurement
Scalable support of interdomain routes in a single AS
GLOBECOM'09 Proceedings of the 28th IEEE conference on Global telecommunications
FIRMS: a mapping system for future internet routing
IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communications - Special issue title on scaling the internet routing system: an interim report
LISP-TREE: a DNS hierarchy to support the lisp mapping system
IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communications - Special issue title on scaling the internet routing system: an interim report
Decoupling the design of identifier-to-locator mapping services from identifiers
Computer Networks: The International Journal of Computer and Telecommunications Networking
Implementing the Locator/ID Separation Protocol: Design and experience
Computer Networks: The International Journal of Computer and Telecommunications Networking
A deep dive into the LISP cache and what ISPs should know about it
NETWORKING'11 Proceedings of the 10th international IFIP TC 6 conference on Networking - Volume Part I
Catching popular prefixes at AS border routers with a prediction based method
Computer Networks: The International Journal of Computer and Telecommunications Networking
On supporting mobility and multihoming in recursive internet architectures
Computer Communications
A local approach to fast failure recovery of LISP ingress tunnel routers
IFIP'12 Proceedings of the 11th international IFIP TC 6 conference on Networking - Volume Part I
An analytical model for the LISP cache size
IFIP'12 Proceedings of the 11th international IFIP TC 6 conference on Networking - Volume Part I
Caching Locator/ID mappings: An experimental scalability analysis and its implications
Computer Networks: The International Journal of Computer and Telecommunications Networking
A first measurement look at the deployment and evolution of thelocator/id separation protocol
ACM SIGCOMM Computer Communication Review
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Very recent activities in the IETF and in the Routing Research Group (RRG) of the IRTG focus on defining a new Internet architecture, in order to solve scalability issues related to interdo-main routing. The approach that is being explored is based on the separation of the end-systems' addressing space (the identifiers) and the routing locators' space. This separation is meant to alleviate the routing burden of the Default Free Zone, but it implies the need of distributing and storing mappings between identifiers and locators on caches placed on routers. In this paper we evaluate the cost of maintaining these caches when the distribution mechanism is based on a pull model. Taking as a reference the LISP protocol, we base our evaluation on real Netflow traces collected on the border router of our campus network. We thoroughly analyze the impact of the locator/ID separation, and related cost, showing that there is a trade-off between the dynamism of the mapping distribution protocol, the demand in terms of bandwidth, and the size of the caches.