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RouterFarm: Towards a Dynamic, Manageable Network Edge

URL: https://doi.org/10.1145/1162638.1162639

Bibtex Entry:

@inproceedings{2006-Agrawal-inm, author = “Agrawal, Mukesh and Bailey, Susan R. and Greenberg, Albert and Pastor, Jorge and Sebos, Panagiotis and Seshan, Srinivasan and van der Merwe, Kobus and Yates, Jennifer”, title = “RouterFarm: Towards a Dynamic, Manageable Network Edge”, year = “2006”, isbn = “1595935703”, publisher = “Association for Computing Machinery”, address = “New York, NY, USA”, url = “https://doi.org/10.1145/1162638.1162639”, doi = “10.1145/1162638.1162639”, abstract = “Planned maintenance is a fact of life in IP networks. Examples of maintenance activities include updating router software as well as processor upgrades, memory upgrades, installation of additional line cards, and other hardware upgrades. While planned maintenance is clearly necessary, it is also costly. Software upgrades, for example, require rebooting the router. Due to the time required to reboot the router, and then synchronize state (such as BGP routing information) with network neighbors, the upgrade process can yield outages of 10–15 minutes.”, booktitle = “SIGCOMM Workshop on Internet Network Management”, pages = “5–10”, numpages = “6”, keywords = “network edge, availability, reliability, manageability”, location = “Pisa, Italy”, month = “September”, category = “Multihoming”, series = “INM ‘06” }

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