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CSC 600 Internetworking with TCP/IP. Unit 6a: IP Routing and Exterior Routing Protocols (Ch. 14, 15) Dr. Cheer-Sun Yang Spring 2001. Routing Protocols. Cores, Peers, and Algorithms :Distance Vector(Bellman-Ford), Link State(Dijkstra), Gateway-to-Gateway Protocol(GGP),
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CSC 600Internetworking withTCP/IP Unit 6a: IP Routing and Exterior Routing Protocols (Ch. 14, 15) Dr. Cheer-Sun Yang Spring 2001
Routing Protocols • Cores, Peers, and Algorithms :Distance Vector(Bellman-Ford), Link State(Dijkstra), Gateway-to-Gateway Protocol(GGP), • Interior: within an autonomous system • Exterior: between two autonomous systems • Exterior Routing Protocols :Border Gateway Protocol(BGP) • Interior Routing Protocols :RIP(distance vector), OSPF(link state).
Routing Protocols • Routing Information • About topology and delays in the internet • Routing Algorithm • Used to make routing decisions based on information
The Evolution of Internet Architecture • Core system : many non-core routers are conneced to a set of core routers. • Peer-to-peer : many routers are connected to a backbone. • Architectural: many autonomous systems are connected to their own gateways and gateways are connected as “peers”.
Original Internet Architecture and Cores • A small number of routers kept complete information about all possible destinations and a large set of routers only kept partial information. • The routing table in a given router contains partial information about possible destinations. • Routing that uses partial information allows sites autonomy in making local routing changes.
Core vs. Noncore • Core routers are controlled by the Internet Network Operations Center (INOC). • Noncore routers are controlled by individual groups. • This architecture can introduce the possibility of inconsistencies that may make some destinations unreachable from some sources unless the chain of all default routers (core) reaches every router in a giant cycle as shown in next slide.
Core System is Impractical When the NSFNET became the major part of the Internet, the core architecture became impractical for the following reasons: • The Internet outgrew a single, centrally managed long-haul backbone. • Not every site could have a core router connected to the backbone. • Because core routers all interacted to ensure consistent routing information, the core architecture did not scale to arbitrary size. The peer-to-peer architecture is formed.
Routing Becomes Complicated • For example, how can a datagram be routed from host 3 to host 2? • Which path should be taken? • How can routing be optimized? • How can loops be eliminated?
Summary of Core System Architecture • A core routing architecture assumes a centralized set of routers which serves as the repository of information about all possible destinations in an internet. • Core systems work best for internets that have a single, centrally managed backbone. • Expanding the topology to multiple backbones makes routing complex; attempting to partition the core architecture so that all routers use default routers introduces potential routing loops.
Automatic Propagation of Routing Information The Internet is not static!
Distance Vector (Bellman-Ford) Routing
Gateway-to-Gateway Protocol (GGP) • Sometimes known as exterior routing protocols. • It is a true distance-vector protocol. • It measures distance in router hops.
Autonomous Systems • Although it is desirable for routers to exchange routing information, it is impractical for all routers on an arbitrarily large internet to participate in a single routing update protocol. • The number of routers that participate in a single routing protocol must be limited.
Autonomous Systems • This idea works fine. However, it implies that some routers will be outside the group. • If a router outside of an AS uses a member of the group as the default route, routing will be suboptimal. • R1 and R2 are in one AS, while R3 is not. • If R3 sends datagrams via R1 for sending datagrams to R2, it is not optimal.
Architectural Approach:Autonomous Systems (AS) • Group of routers • Exchange information • Common routing protocol • Set of routers and networks managed by single organization - an autonomous system • The Internet is organized into a collection of Ass, each of which is normally administered by a single entity. A corporation or university campus often defines an AS. The NSF backbone forms an AS.
Architectural Approach:Autonomous Systems (AS) • Each Autonomous system can select its own routing protocol to communicate between the routers in that AS. This is called an interior gateway protocol (IGP) or intradomain routing protocol. • Separate routing protocols called exterior gateway protocol (EGS) or interdomain routing protocol are used between the routers in different autonomous systems.
Interior Routing Protocols • Routing Information Protocol (RIP): a distance vector (Bellman-Ford) • Open Shortest Path First Protocol (OSPF): a link state algorithm (Dijkstra’s algorithm)
Exterior Routing Protocol • Border Gateway Protocol (BGP)
Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) • Inter-autonomous system communication • Coordination among multiple BGP gateways • Propagation of reachability information • Next-hop paradigm • Policy support • Reliable transport • Incremental updates • Support for classless addressing • Route aggregation • Authentication
Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) • For use with TCP/IP internets • Preferred EGP of the Internet • Messages types sent over TCP connections • Open • Update: advertise or withdraw routes • Keep alive: actively test peer connectivity • Notification: response to an incorrect message • Procedures • Neighbor acquisition • Neighbor reachability • Network reachability
BGP Procedure • Open TCP connection • Send Open message • Includes proposed hold time • Receiver selects minimum of its hold time and that sent • Max time between Keep alive and/or update messages
Other Message Types • Keep Alive • To tell other routers that this router is still here • Update • Info about single routes through internet • List of routes being withdrawn • Includes path info • Origin (IGP or EGP) • AS_Path (list of AS traversed) • Next_hop (IP address of boarder router) • Multi_Exit_Disc (Info about routers internal to AS) • Local_pref (Inform other routers within AS) • Atomic_Aggregate, Aggregator (Uses address tree structure to reduce amount of info needed)
Uses of AS_Path and Next_Hop • AS_Path • Enables routing policy • Avoid a particular AS • Security • Performance • Quality • Number of AS crossed • Next_Hop • Only a few routers implement BGP • Responsible for informing outside routers of routes to other networks in AS
The Key Restriction of EGP • An exterior gateway protocol does not communicate or interpret distance metrices, even if metrics are available.
The Routing Arbiter System • For an internet to operate correctly, routing information must be globally consistent. • Individual protocols such as BGP does not guarantee global consistency. • The RA system consists of a replicated authenticated database of reachability information.Each ISP designates one of the routers near a Network Access Point (NAP) to be a BGP border router. • The designated router maintains a connection to the route server over which it uses BGP. BGP notification messages are exchanged.
BGP Routing Information Exchange • Within AS, router builds topology picture using IGP • Router issues Update message to other routers outside AS using BGP • These routers exchange info with other routers in other AS • Routers must then decide best routes
Notification Message • Message header error • Authentication and syntax • Open message error • Syntax and option not recognized • Unacceptable hold time • Update message error • Syntax and validity errors • Hold time expired • Connection is closed • Finite state machine error • Cease • Used to close a connection when there is no error