The Locator/Identifier Separation Protocol (LISP) is a new routing architecture for the Internet that separates local and global routing. It offers more flexibility to edge networks and has the …
During the last few years, the network research community and the industry have been working on the design of an alternate Internet Routing Architecture aiming at solving the …
The Locator/ID Separation Protocol (LISP) is currently being developed and standardized in the IETF aiming to solve the Internet's routing scaling problem. It separates global routing in …
M Hoefling, M Menth… - … Communications Surveys & …, 2013 - ieeexplore.ieee.org
The locator/identifier split is a core principle of many recently proposed routing architectures for a scalable future Internet. It splits the function of today's IP addresses into two separate …
D Farinacci, V Fuller, D Meyer, D Lewis - 2013 - dl.acm.org
This document describes a network-layer-based protocol that enables separation of IP addresses into two new numbering spaces: Endpoint Identifiers (EIDs) and Routing Locators …
L Mathy, L Iannone - Proceedings of the 2008 ACM CoNEXT …, 2008 - dl.acm.org
Recent activities in the IRTF (Internet Research Task Force), and in particular in the Routing Research Group (RRG), focus on defining a new Internet architecture, in order to solve …
The Locator/ID Separation Protocol (LISP) splits current IP addresses overlapping semantics of identity and location into two separate names-paces. Since its inception the protocol has …
B Quoitin, L Iannone, C De Launois… - Proceedings of 2nd …, 2007 - dl.acm.org
Since recent years, it has been recognized that the existing routing architecture of today's Internet is facing scalability problems. Single numbering space, multi-homing, and traffic …
It is accepted wisdom that the current Internet architecture conflates network locations and host identities, but there is no agreement on how a future architecture should distinguish the …