2 Apr 17:14
RE: Geo pros and cons
marcelo bagnulo <marcelo <at> it.uc3m.es>
2003-04-02 15:14:17 GMT
2003-04-02 15:14:17 GMT
Hi Tony, [...] > As we concluded many years ago: for addressing to scale, it has > to match the topology. Fully agree. I would say that the question is if topology matches geography or not. I have heard many claims that the Internet is becoming a dense interconnection mesh. If this is true, it should be easy to determine geographical areas that are interconnected, so geo aggregation works without the need of more specific routes. I think that this is certainly not the case for all geo locations, but i would say that it is probably the case for some locations as big cities where a lot of users reside. Wouldn't geo addressing be suitable for this situations? I am not aware of any analysis of how dense is the interconnection in geo areas, but i would say that this input is important when considering geo addressing. Does anyone have information about this? Thanks, marcelo > If addressing does not match the topology, > then additional information in the form of longer prefixes must be > advertised into the routing subsystem. Ergo, if one chooses geographic > address, one must force only geographically based links. Anything > else destroys the aggregatability of the address assignment. Since(Continue reading)
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