A measurement-based analysis of multihoming
Proceedings of the 2003 conference on Applications, technologies, architectures, and protocols for computer communications
FARA: reorganizing the addressing architecture
FDNA '03 Proceedings of the ACM SIGCOMM workshop on Future directions in network architecture
IPv4 address allocation and the BGP routing table evolution
ACM SIGCOMM Computer Communication Review
Internet clean-slate design: what and why?
ACM SIGCOMM Computer Communication Review
OpenFlow: enabling innovation in campus networks
ACM SIGCOMM Computer Communication Review
On the cost of caching locator/ID mappings
CoNEXT '07 Proceedings of the 2007 ACM CoNEXT conference
Evaluating the benefits of the locator/identifier separation
Proceedings of 2nd ACM/IEEE international workshop on Mobility in the evolving internet architecture
HAIR: hierarchical architecture for internet routing
Proceedings of the 2009 workshop on Re-architecting the internet
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
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
An analytical model for the LISP cache size
IFIP'12 Proceedings of the 11th international IFIP TC 6 conference on Networking - Volume Part I
Designing a Deployable Internet: The Locator/Identifier Separation Protocol
IEEE Internet Computing
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During the last decade, we have seen the rise of discussions regarding the emergence of a Future Internet. One of the proposed approaches leverages on the separation of the identifier and the locator roles of IP addresses, leading to the LISP (Locator/Identifier Separation Protocol) protocol, currently under development at the IETF (Internet Engineering Task Force). Up to now, researches made on LISP have been rather theoretical, i.e., based on simulations/emulations often using Internet traffic traces. There is no work in the literature attempting to assess the state of its deployment and how this has evolved in recent years. This paper aims at bridging this gap by presenting a first measurement study on the existing worldwide LISP network (lisp4.net). Early results indicate that there is a steady growth of the LISP network but also that network manageability might receive a higher priority than performance in a large scale deployment.