2011-05-06

LISP part 1: problem definition, architecture and protocol description

Google Tech Talk Summary 10th February 2010 by Dino Farinacci submitted. We describe the problem statement was originally created for LISP. Since autumn 2006, when the IAB held a workshop routing of Amsterdam, there are many more cases to the level of indirection door LISP found. LISP is under the semantic overload of the IP address from which a network device, the identity and address in position so that you can keep separate the addresses set and change the other.This first part of a series of 3-part discusses the problem statements, an architectural deep dive into the idea of ​​place, and show how the protocols are used in LISP. This session is a prerequisite for Part 2 and Part 3 LISP LISP. Dino Farinacci Dino was originally from Cisco in the spring of 1991 and was one of the first two Fellows Cisco. He built router for 27 years. Dino is currently working in the Data Center Business Unit at Cisco, where his focus is on building a new generationPlatform and operating system for enterprise and data center environments. This platform is the Nexus 7000 NX-OS is running, which shipped in April 2008. His experience is focused on routing protocols, which has a deep knowledge and practical experience with the IS-IS, EIGRP, OSPF, BGP, IGMP, PIM and MSDP, as well as IPv6 and MPLS. He is a lawyer for the operating systems modular. Dino is also a member of the IETF for 19 years by many contributions in this periodTime ...

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