The advent of Software-Defined Networking with OpenFlow first, and subsequently the emergence of programmable data planes, has boosted lots of research around many networking aspects: monitoring, security, traffic engineering. In the context of monitoring, most of the proposed solutions show the benefits of data plane programmability by simplifying the network complexity with a one big-switch abstraction. Only few papers look at network-wide solutions, but consider the network only composed by programmable devices. In this paper, we argue that the primary challenge for a successful adoption of those solutions is the deployment problem: how to compose and monitor a network consisting of both legacy and programmable switches? We propose an approach for incrementally deploy programmable devices in an ISP network with the goal of monitoring as many distinct network flows as possible. While assessing the benefits of our solution, we realized that proposed network-wide monitoring algorithms might not be optimized for a partial deployment scenario. We then also developed and implemented in P4 a novel strategy capable of detecting network-wide heavy flows: results show that it can achieve better accuracy than state-of-the-art solutions while relying on less information from the data plane and leading to only marginal additional packet processing time.
Ding D., Savi M., Antichi G., Siracusa D. (2020). An Incrementally-Deployable P4-Enabled Architecture for Network-Wide Heavy-Hitter Detection. IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON NETWORK AND SERVICE MANAGEMENT, 17(1), 75-88 [10.1109/TNSM.2020.2968979].
An Incrementally-Deployable P4-Enabled Architecture for Network-Wide Heavy-Hitter Detection
Ding D.
;
2020
Abstract
The advent of Software-Defined Networking with OpenFlow first, and subsequently the emergence of programmable data planes, has boosted lots of research around many networking aspects: monitoring, security, traffic engineering. In the context of monitoring, most of the proposed solutions show the benefits of data plane programmability by simplifying the network complexity with a one big-switch abstraction. Only few papers look at network-wide solutions, but consider the network only composed by programmable devices. In this paper, we argue that the primary challenge for a successful adoption of those solutions is the deployment problem: how to compose and monitor a network consisting of both legacy and programmable switches? We propose an approach for incrementally deploy programmable devices in an ISP network with the goal of monitoring as many distinct network flows as possible. While assessing the benefits of our solution, we realized that proposed network-wide monitoring algorithms might not be optimized for a partial deployment scenario. We then also developed and implemented in P4 a novel strategy capable of detecting network-wide heavy flows: results show that it can achieve better accuracy than state-of-the-art solutions while relying on less information from the data plane and leading to only marginal additional packet processing time.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.