On 2011-04-18 21:18, Jeff Wheeler wrote:

I strongly disagree with the assumption that the number of
locations/sites would remain static.

It would grow, nobody said it would remain static.
But still - it will grow slower than the number of new
"full" allocations - covering both location *and* id.

LISP "solves" this problem by using the router's FIB as a
macro-flow-cache.  That's good except that a site with a large number
of outgoing macro-flows (either because it's a busy site, responding
to an external DoS attack, or actually originating a DoS attack from a
compromised host) will cripple that site's ITR.

Scalability is one of the points traditionally left for
the end, but that's hardly different from any protocol
that was designed and then put into mainstream use. Second - you
actually don't know that for sure - the mix of "from LISP" and
"from normal IP" traffic would change in time, and the natural grow
of the capabilities with the higher adoption would propably also
affect ITR/ETR scalability numbers.

In addition, the current negative mapping cache scheme is far from
ideal.  I've written a couple of folks with a provably superior scheme
(compared to existing work), and have received zero feedback.  This is
not good.

You mean LISP authors?

--
"There's no sense in being precise when |               Ɓukasz Bromirski
 you don't know what you're talking     |      jid:lbromir...@jabber.org
 about."               John von Neumann |    http://lukasz.bromirski.net

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