
| Technical Documents | |
| Name | Description |
| “Networking is IPC”: A Guiding Principle to a Better Internet | In Proceedings of ReArch'08 - Re-Architecting the Internet, Madrid, SPAIN, December 2008. Co-located with ACM CoNEXT 2008. Authors: Day, Matta, Mattar |
| Why Loc/Id Split Isn’t the Answer | A companion paper to Dave Meyer's Internet draft that explains why scaling problems were encountered with loc/id split and its implications. Author: John Day, Draft |
| The Fundamentals of Naming | A short paper that lays the groundwork for what names are required in a network architecture with a couple of implications. Author: John Day, 2009, Draft |
| Creating a Viable Economic Model for a Viable Internet | A first attempt to explore how the PNA model naturally creates a viable economic model unlike the current model created by TCP/IP. Author: John Day, 2008 |
| How to Clean a Slate | A slide presentation that follows the development of the IPC Model as the basis for understanding networking from Chapter 6 of Patterns in Network Architecture. The point is not that this idea is new, quite the contrary. The point is that we didn't pursue what we already knew with suffiicient intensity. Author: John Day, 2006 |
| Architectural Implications of Locator/ID Separation | This Internet draft uncovers potential scaling problems with loc/id split. Author: Dave Meyer, 2009 |
| On the Performance and Robustness of Managing Reliable Transport Connections | An analysis of connection reliability in soft state and hard state protocols such as TCP/IP and Delta-tAuthors: Gursun, Matta, Mattar, 2009 |
| Internet - Coming of Age | Lecture at Boston University by Louis Pouzin. Part of FutureNet 2009.Author: Louis Pouzin, 2009 |
| FutureNet 2009 Keynote Address | Keynote Address at FutureNet given by John Day May 6th 2009 outlining the implications of the scaling problems discovered in the loc/id split approach to the current IP addressing problems.Author: John Day, 2009 |
| No Widgets | An Overview of the Implications of the IPC Model that is described in Patterns in Network Architecture. Given the fundamental structure and its mechanisms, the answers can simply be read off of the model. No middleboxes are required.Author: John Day, 2009 |
| Things They Never Taught You About Naming and Addressing | An overview of the necessary elements of a complete addressing architecture.Author: John Day, 2009 |
| Announcements and Meetings | |
| Name | Description |
| Initial Meeting Agenda | Proposed agenda for initial Pouzin Society meeting May 4th-7th |
| Architecture Task Group Agenda | Naming and Addressing Draft Agenda, May 6-7th |
| Pouzin Lecture Announcement | Louis Pouzin to speak at Boston University on May 7th, 2009 |
| A Challenge for Researchers | John Day challenges researchers to explore PNA. |
| A Challenge for Business | Chris Williams challenges businesses to explore new network architectures. |
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Patterns in Network Architecture: A Return to Fundamentals by John Day Published by Prentice Hall ISBN 0132252422 In Patterns in Network Architecture, pioneer John Day takes a unique approach to solving the problem of network architecture. Piercing the fog of history, he bridges the gap between our experience from the original ARPANET and today’s Internet to a new perspective on networking. Along the way, he shows how socioeconomic forces derailed progress and led to the current crisis. Beginning with the seven fundamental, and still unanswered, questions identified during the ARPANET’s development, Patterns in Network Architecture returns to bedrock and traces our experience both good and bad. Along the way, he uncovers overlooked patterns in protocols that simplify design and implementation and resolves the classic conflict between connection and connectionless while retaining the best of both. He finds deep new insights into the core challenges of naming and addressing, along with results from upper-layer architecture. All of this in Day’s deft hands comes together in a tour de force of elegance and simplicity with the annoying turn of events that the answer has been staring us in the face: Operating systems tell us even more about networking than we thought. The result is, in essence, the first “unified theory of networking,” and leads to a simpler, more powerful–and above all–more scalable network infrastructure. The book then lays the groundwork for how to exploit the result in the design, development, and management as we move beyond the limitations of the Internet. |