Open Architectural Issues in the Development of
the Internet
This web page contains pointers to open architectural issues facing
the Internet.
The goal is for each item to include pointers to
papers in the literature (including IAB documents) discussing the issues.
The point is not for the IAB to try to solve or answer these issues,
just for the IAB to provide pointers to the ongoing
discussions of these open architectural
issues. Ultimately, we will provide a way for the IETF community to
suggest items to
add to this web page.
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Addressing:
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Problems: Renumbering.
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Problems: Disconnected networks.
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Problems: Multihoming.
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Problems: Packet filtering.
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Issues: Identifiers that are not globally unique?
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Issues: End nodes using topology information?
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Issues: Are global addresses globally routable?
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Issues: Security?
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D. Clark et al.,
FARA: Reorganizing the Addressing Architecture, 2003.
"The intent is to cleanly separate location from identity...
FARA should provide a framework for proposing and understanding a range
of alternative protocol architectures."
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Naming and Identity:
- Layering and modularity:
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Routing:
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Security.
- Security that is incrementally deployable and easy to use.
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Resource allocation:
- Congestion control:
- QoS.
- G. Huston,
Next Steps for the IP QoS Architecture,
RFC 2990, November 2000.
"This document highlights the outstanding architectural issues
relating to the deployment and use of QoS mechanisms within internet
networks"
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DoS.
- Middleboxes
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B. Carpenter et al.,
Middleboxes: Taxonomy and Issues,
RFC 3234, Informational, February 2002.
"The principle goal of this document is to describe and analyse the
current impact of middleboxes on the architecture of the Internet and
its applications."
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L. Daigle,
IAB Considerations for UNilateral Self-Address Fixing (UNSAF) Across Network
Address Translation,
RFC 3424, November 2002.
"As a result of the nature of Network Address Translation (NAT)
Middleboxes, communicating endpoints that are separated by one or
more NATs do not know how to refer to themselves using addresses
that are valid in the addressing realms of their (current and future)
peers."
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S. Floyd and L. Daigle,
IAB Architectural and Policy Considerations for Open Pluggable Edge
Services,
RFC 3238, January 2002.
"The question of chartering OPES in the IETF and the related controversy
in the IETF community ave raised
to the fore several architectural and policy issues about robustness
and the end-to-end integrity of data."
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Zero Configuration and Service Discovery.
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Issues: Interoperability; mobility; one/many mechanisms?
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Mechanisms: DHCP; anycast; PPP IPCP extensions?
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DNS discovery for IPv6.
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IKE Modecfg.
- General Architecture Issues
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Bob Braden,
Architectural Principles of the Internet,
IPAM Tutorial, March 2002.
"Network Architecture:
* What entities are named, and how?
* How do naming, addressing, and routing inter-relate?
* Where & how is state installed and removed?
* How are functions modularized?
* How are resources allocated?
* How are security boundaries drawn and enforced?"
-
S. Floyd,
General Architectural and Policy Considerations,
RFC 3426,
November 2002.
Related web pages:
Pointers to documents to add to this page can be sent
to Sally Floyd, floyd at acm.org, or to the IAB, iab at ietf.org.
Last modified: August 2003.