A Case for RIP (Re-architecting the Internet Protocols)
Tom Anderson
University of Washington
DETAILS:
February 23, 4:00-5:00PM NSH 1305, Refreshments at 3:30PMABSTRACT:
The Internet is remarkably robust, scalable, and flexible, and
also at times, highly fragile, inefficient, and insecure. And like most systems
with hundreds of millions of users, it is highly resistant to change. This talk
will argue that much of the current networking research agenda is misguided by
putting backward compatibility as the primary goal. Instead, the UW RIP project
aims to develop the conceptual foundations of the next networking technology
that will replace the Internet. Among the fundamental questions we are
addressing: how do we design a scalable network that is completely free of DoS
attacks? How should multiple organizations cooperate in the management of
resources and routes? Is it possible to design efficient and flexible
congestion control? I will discuss our answers to these questions in the
context of two networking testbeds we are building at UW.
BIOGRAPHY:
Tom Anderson is Professor of Computer Science and Engineering at the University of Washington. His research interest span almost every aspect of computer systems design, from high-performance computer and network switch architectures, to operating systems, distributed file systems, wide area distributed systems, and most recently computer networks.