IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communications - Special issue title on scaling the internet routing system: an interim report
At what layer does mobility belong?
IEEE Communications Magazine
Network layer soft handoff for IP mobility
Proceedings of the 8th ACM workshop on Performance monitoring and measurement of heterogeneous wireless and wired networks
A distributed mobility control scheme in LISP networks
Wireless Networks
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The current Internet architecture was not designed to easily accommodate mobility because IP addresses are used both to identify and locate hosts. The Locator/Identifier Separation Protocol (LISP) decouples them by considering two types of addresses: EIDs that identify hosts, and RLOCs that identify network attachment points and are used as routing locators. LISP, with such separation in place, can also offer native mobility. LISP-MN is a particular case of LISP which specifies mobility. In this paper we provide a comprehensive tutorial on LISP-MN, showing its main features and how it compares to existing mobility protocols.