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Chapter 4 Network Layer Computer Networking: A Top Down Approach CPSC 335 Data Communication Systems Readings: 4.5.3, 4.6, 4.6.1, 4.6.2 David Nguyen 6th edition Jim Kurose, Keith Ross Addison-Wesley March 2012 Adapted from Kurose Ross Transport Layer 3-1 Chapter 4: outline 4.1 introduction 4.2 virtual circuit and datagram networks 4.3 what’s inside a router 4.4 IP: Internet Protocol datagram format IPv4 addressing ICMP IPv6 4.5 routing algorithms link state distance vector hierarchical routing 4.6 routing in the Internet RIP OSPF BGP 4.7 broadcast and multicast routing Network Layer 4-2 Hierarchical routing our routing study thus far - idealization all routers identical network “flat” … not true in practice scale can’t store all dest’s in routing tables! routing table exchange would swamp links! administrative autonomy internet = network of networks each network admin may want to control routing in its own network Network Layer 4-3 Hierarchical routing aggregate routers into regions, “autonomous systems” (AS) routers in same AS run same routing protocol gateway router: at “edge” of its own AS has link to router in another AS “intra-AS” routing protocol routers in different AS can run different intraAS routing protocol Network Layer 4-4 Interconnected ASes 3c 3a 3b AS3 2a 1c 1a 1d 2c 2b AS2 1b AS1 Intra-AS Routing algorithm Inter-AS Routing algorithm Forwarding table forwarding table configured by both intraand inter-AS routing algorithm intra-AS sets entries for internal dests inter-AS & intra-AS sets entries for external dests Network Layer 4-5 Inter-AS tasks suppose router in AS1 receives datagram destined outside of AS1: router should forward packet to gateway router, but which one? AS1 must: 1. learn which dests are reachable through AS2, which through AS3 2. propagate this reachability info to all routers in AS1 job of inter-AS routing! 3c 3b other networks 3a AS3 2c 1c 1a AS1 1d 2a 1b 2b other networks AS2 Network Layer 4-6 Example: setting forwarding table in router 1d suppose AS1 learns (via inter-AS protocol) that subnet x reachable via AS3 (gateway 1c), but not via AS2 inter-AS protocol propagates reachability info to all internal routers router 1d determines from intra-AS routing info that its interface I is on the least cost path to 1c installs forwarding table entry (x,I) x 3c 3b other networks 3a AS3 2c 1c 1a AS1 1d 2a 1b 2b other networks AS2 Network Layer 4-7 Example: choosing among multiple ASes now suppose AS1 learns from inter-AS protocol that subnet x is reachable from AS3 and from AS2. to configure forwarding table, router 1d must determine which gateway it should forward packets towards for dest x this is also job of inter-AS routing protocol! x 3c 3b other networks 3a AS3 2c 1c 1a AS1 2a 1d 1b 2b other networks AS2 ? Network Layer 4-8 Example: choosing among multiple ASes now suppose AS1 learns from inter-AS protocol that subnet x is reachable from AS3 and from AS2. to configure forwarding table, router 1d must determine towards which gateway it should forward packets for dest x this is also job of inter-AS routing protocol! hot potato routing: send packet towards closest router and it will figure out learn from inter-AS protocol that subnet x is reachable via multiple gateways use routing info from intra-AS protocol to determine costs of least-cost paths to each of the gateways hot potato routing: choose the gateway that has the smallest least cost determine from forwarding table the interface I that leads to least-cost gateway. Enter (x,I) in forwarding table Network Layer 4-9 Chapter 4: outline 4.1 introduction 4.2 virtual circuit and datagram networks 4.3 what’s inside a router 4.4 IP: Internet Protocol datagram format IPv4 addressing ICMP IPv6 4.5 routing algorithms link state distance vector hierarchical routing 4.6 routing in the Internet RIP OSPF BGP 4.7 broadcast and multicast routing Network Layer 4-10 Intra-AS Routing most common intra-AS routing protocols: RIP: Routing Information Protocol OSPF: Open Shortest Path First Network Layer 4-11 RIP ( Routing Information Protocol) included in BSD-UNIX distribution in 1982 distance vector algorithm distance metric: # hops (max = 15 hops), each link has cost 1 DVs exchanged with neighbors every 30 sec in response message (aka advertisement) each advertisement: list of up to 25 destination subnets (in IP addressing sense) from router A to destination subnets: u v A z C B w x D y subnet u v w x y z hops 1 2 2 3 3 2 Network Layer 4-12 RIP: example z w y x A B D C routing table in router D destination subnet next router # hops to dest w y z x A B B -- 2 2 7 1 …. …. .... Network Layer 4-13 RIP: example A-to-D advertisement next hops 1 1 C 4 … ... dest w x z …. w y x A z B D C routing table in router D destination subnet next router # hops to dest w y z x A B A B -- 2 2 5 7 1 …. …. .... Network Layer 4-14 RIP: link failure, recovery if no advertisement heard after 180 sec --> neighbor/link declared dead routes via neighbor invalidated new advertisements sent to neighbors neighbors in turn send out new advertisements (if tables changed) link failure info propagates to entire net Network Layer 4-15 RIP table processing RIP routing tables managed by applicationlevel process called route-d (daemon) advertisements sent in UDP packets, periodically repeated routed routed transport (UDP) network (IP) forwarding table link physical transprt (UDP) forwarding table network (IP) link physical Network Layer 4-16 OSPF (Open Shortest Path First) “open”: publicly available uses link state algorithm LS packet dissemination topology map at each node route computation using Dijkstra’s algorithm OSPF advertisement carries one entry per neighbor advertisements flooded to entire AS Network Layer 4-17 OSPF “advanced” features (not in RIP) security: all OSPF messages authenticated (to prevent malicious intrusion) multiple same-cost paths allowed (only one path in RIP) hierarchical OSPF in large domains. Network Layer 4-18 Hierarchical OSPF boundary router backbone router backbone area border routers area 3 internal routers area 1 area 2 Network Layer 4-19 How to get a dream job at big IT companies? Tips based on personal experience and “Cracking the Coding Interview” GOOGLE AND AMAZON INTERVIEW TIPS! Transport Layer 3-20 Behavioral Questions to get to know your personality deeply understand your resume to ease you into an interview usually of the form “tell me about a time when you ...” Recommend filling this table Transport Layer 3-21 Behavioral Questions Do the similar table with major aspects of your resume (jobs,…) Study the tables before the interview Additional advice When asked about your weaknesses, give a real weakness! (I work too hard / am a perfectionist - arrogant) When asked what the most challenging part was, don’t say “I had to learn a lot of new languages and technologies.” (means nothing was really that hard) Transport Layer 3-22 Sample theory questions (Google) What are the differences between TCP and UDP? (should be easy for you now :) Explain what happens, step by step, after you type a URL into a browser. Use as much detail as possible. (piece of cake again) Transport Layer 3-23