Currently the Internet has only one level of name resolution, DNS, which converts user-level domain names into IP addresses. In this paper we borrow liberally from the literature to argue that there should be three levels of name resolution: from user-level descriptors to service identifiers; from service identifiers to endpoint identifiers; and from endpoint identifiers to IP addresses. These additional levels of naming and resolution (1) allow services and data to be first class Internet objects (in that they can be directly and persistently named), (2) seamlessly accommodate mobility and multihoming and (3) integrate middleboxes (such as NATs and firewalls) into the Internet architecture. We further argue that flat names are a natural ch...
The current trend towards convergence of telecommunication and data networks considering all emergin...
The Internet has evolved greatly from its original incarnation. For instance, the vast majority of c...
A key problem in all name resolution protocols today is that no one protocol performs well across al...
Abstract—The Internet has evolved from its original design. (1)The user cares about what they are lo...
The Internet currently connects millions of hosts around the world. The domain name system (DNS) tra...
The current Internet architecture requires applications to transparently bind and manage network add...
Challenges face the Internet Architecture in order to scale to a greater number of users while provi...
Challenges face the Internet Architecture in order to scale to a greater number of users while provi...
Challenges face the Internet Architecture in order to scale to a greater number of users while provi...
Mapping human-usable and meaningful names to objects in computer systems is crucial to usability Na...
The Internet’s tremendous success as well as our maturing realization of its architectural shortcomi...
We attempt to decouple identity from location in Internet hosts. In our proposal, hosts receive flat...
The main naming system in the Internet today, DNS, is based on globally unique, hierarchically struc...
Naming is a fundamental element to evolve the current Internet into the next stage. The new host-lev...
Abstract—Many researchers agreed that splitting the IP-address into a locator and an identifier seem...
The current trend towards convergence of telecommunication and data networks considering all emergin...
The Internet has evolved greatly from its original incarnation. For instance, the vast majority of c...
A key problem in all name resolution protocols today is that no one protocol performs well across al...
Abstract—The Internet has evolved from its original design. (1)The user cares about what they are lo...
The Internet currently connects millions of hosts around the world. The domain name system (DNS) tra...
The current Internet architecture requires applications to transparently bind and manage network add...
Challenges face the Internet Architecture in order to scale to a greater number of users while provi...
Challenges face the Internet Architecture in order to scale to a greater number of users while provi...
Challenges face the Internet Architecture in order to scale to a greater number of users while provi...
Mapping human-usable and meaningful names to objects in computer systems is crucial to usability Na...
The Internet’s tremendous success as well as our maturing realization of its architectural shortcomi...
We attempt to decouple identity from location in Internet hosts. In our proposal, hosts receive flat...
The main naming system in the Internet today, DNS, is based on globally unique, hierarchically struc...
Naming is a fundamental element to evolve the current Internet into the next stage. The new host-lev...
Abstract—Many researchers agreed that splitting the IP-address into a locator and an identifier seem...
The current trend towards convergence of telecommunication and data networks considering all emergin...
The Internet has evolved greatly from its original incarnation. For instance, the vast majority of c...
A key problem in all name resolution protocols today is that no one protocol performs well across al...