Difference between revisions of "The Wunet Protocol"
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A Wunet network contains host nodes, router nodes and links that interconnect the nodes. | A Wunet network contains host nodes, router nodes and links that interconnect the nodes. | ||
− | The figure (right) shows four virtual routers directly connected to each other and each | + | The figure (right) shows four virtual routers directly connected to each other and each router is directly connected to three hosts. |
− | + | Each host has one virtual link, and each router has six virtual links. | |
+ | A link between two nodes is ''virtual'' in the sense that it is actually a path in the underlying actual network. | ||
+ | An example of the actual network might be an IP network where a virtual link is a communication path between two UDP endpoints where an endpoint is an IP address and UDP port number. | ||
= Basic Unicast DATA Packet Routing = | = Basic Unicast DATA Packet Routing = | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
= Basic Multicast DATA Packet Routing = | = Basic Multicast DATA Packet Routing = |
Revision as of 05:47, 1 February 2010
Contents
- 1 History of Wunet
- 2 A Wunet Virtual Network
- 3 Basic Unicast DATA Packet Routing
- 4 Basic Multicast DATA Packet Routing
- 5 Basic SUBSCRIBE/UNSUBSCRIBE Routing
- 6 Route Learning
- 7 Flooding
- 8 Upstream SUBSCRIBE Packet Propagation
- 9 Spoofing Protection
- 10 Wunet Concepts
- 11 Wunet Features
- 12 Wunet Packet Header
- 13 Wunet Tables
History of Wunet
The Wunet Protocol is a simplified version of the Forest Protocol. Like Forest, Wunet is an overlay network that supports unicast and multicast traffic. But Wunet only supports only a rudimentary form of multicast and there is no provision for error control (e.g., dropped bits). It was developed primarily for educational purposes during the Fall 2009 semester for a course in the Computer Science and Engineering Department at Washington University in St. Louis.
This page describes the features of Wunet and gives several examples. These features include:
- Network Virtualization
- Wunet is a virtual network overlayed over an IP network in which each Wunet packet is carried inside a UDP packet.
- Unicast and Multicast Packets
- There are unicast and multicast DATA packets and multicast SUBSCRIBE and UNSUBSCRIBE multicast packets.
- Route Learning
- A router will add a reverse route for any incoming packet with a source address not found in the routing table
- No-Route Flooding
- A unicast packet with no matching route table entry is forwarded by flooding.
- Upstream Packet Propagation
- A multicast SUBSCRIBE packet with no matching route table entry is propagated toward the root of its multicast tree.
- Spoofing Protection
- XXX
A version of Wunet that is targeted at conventional processors has been implemented in C++. We plan to implement a GPE-only version of Wunet on the GENI deployment of the SPP as a precursor to implementing a fastpath verion involving the NPR.
A Wunet Virtual Network
labels: hosts, routers, links H11 H12 H13 H21 H22 H23 ... | | | | | | ------- ------- | | R1 ------------ R2 ... R4 ------------ R3 | | ------- ------- | | | | | | H11 H12 H13 H21 H22 H23 ...
A Wunet network contains host nodes, router nodes and links that interconnect the nodes. The figure (right) shows four virtual routers directly connected to each other and each router is directly connected to three hosts.
Each host has one virtual link, and each router has six virtual links. A link between two nodes is virtual in the sense that it is actually a path in the underlying actual network. An example of the actual network might be an IP network where a virtual link is a communication path between two UDP endpoints where an endpoint is an IP address and UDP port number.
Basic Unicast DATA Packet Routing
Basic Multicast DATA Packet Routing
Basic SUBSCRIBE/UNSUBSCRIBE Routing
Route Learning
Flooding
Upstream SUBSCRIBE Packet Propagation
Spoofing Protection
Wunet Concepts
A Wunet network consists of a set of nodes consisting of hosts and router nodes. Each node has a 32-bit virtual node address (vaddr). By convention hosts have virtual node addresses between 1 and 99, and routers have addresses that are typically multiples of 100 (e.g., 300). A multicast address is any 32-bit address with its high-order bit set (i.e., any decimal number greater than 2^31-1 = 2,147,483,647).
- Virtual Node
- Vaddr (Virtual address)
- Vnet (Virtual Network)
- Vlink (Virtual Link)
- Subscribe/Unsubscribe
Wunet Features
- UDP Encapsulation:
- Each packet is encapsulated in UDP packet
- Virtual Addresses:
- There are unicast addresses(e.g., 21, 200) and
- Multicast addresses(e.g., 2200110011 = x832303BB) addresses.
- Any address with high-order bit set is mcast addr; i.e., any decimal number greater than 2^31-1 = 2,147,483,647.
- Packet Types: DATA, SUBSCRIBE, UNSUBSCRIBE
- Routing:
- Packets are routed by (vnet, vaddr)
- Route Learning:
- A router will add a reverse route for any incoming packet with a source address not found in the routing table
- Joining/Leaving Multicast Group:
- A host joins/leaves a multicast group using SUBSCRIBE/UNSUBSCRIBE
- Multicast tree is formed for each vnet through SUBSCRIBE packets that travel up the multicast tree
- Missing Routes:
- Unicast Data: Flood all downstream links when there is no route.
- Multicast Data: Send subscriptions upstream when there is no route.