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[ NNSquad ] Internet Futures Paper


------- Forwarded Message

From: David Farber <dave@farber.net>
To: "ip" <ip@v2.listbox.com>
Date: Thu, 20 Mar 2008 08:37:54 -0700
Subject: [IP] Paper: "State of the Internet & Challenges ahead "

________________________________________
From: Steve Goldstein [steve.goldstein@cox.net]
Sent: Thursday, March 20, 2008 10:59 AM
To: Dewayne Hendricks; David Farber
Subject: Paper: "State of the Internet & Challenges ahead "

Olivier Martin, a long-time colleague, formerly from CERN (the
European high energy accelerator lab in Geneva), has a fine "State
of the Internet" preprint on his web site. Be sure to view it in
Page Layout so that you can see the footnotes.  I did not at first,
and missed them entirely, which was very confusing, as there are
numbered references listed at the end as well.

http://www.ictconsulting.ch/reports/NEC2007-OHMartin.doc

Olivier has retired, but apparently keeps busy as a consultant.  He
was a major player in CERN networking from the very start of
things.  In the early days, CERN was the hub of European Internet
Protocol networking, and it still is a major player because of the
HUGE amounts of data that are generated by the accelerators and
shared globally.


State of the Internet & Challenges ahead
"How is the Internet likely to evolve in the coming decade"

To be published in the NEC'2007 conference proceedings

Olivier H. Martin

ICTConsulting, Gingins (VD), Switzerland

Abstract

After a fairly extensive review of the state of the Commercial and
Research & Education, aka Academic, Internet the problematic behind
the, still hypothetic, IPv4 to IPv6 migration will be examined in
detail.  A short review of the ongoing efforts to re-design the
Internet in a clean-slate approach will then be made. This will
include the National Science Foundation (NSF) funded programs such
as FIND (Future Internet Network Design) [1] and GENI (Global
Environment for Network Innovations) [2], European Union (EU)
Framework Program 7 (FP7), but also more specific architectural
proposals such as the publish/subscribe (pub/sub) paradigm and Data
Oriented Network Architecture (DONA) [3].

Key words: Internet, GANT2, Internet2, NLR, NSF, GENI, FIND, DONA,
OECD, IETF, IAB, IGF, ICANN, RIPE , IPv6, EU, FP7, clean-slate, new
paradigms.  1 Introduction While there appears to be a wide
consensus about the fact that the Internet has stalled or ossified,
some would even say that it is in a rapid state of degeneracy, there
is no agreement on a plan of action to rescue the Internet. There
are two competing approaches, evolutionary or clean-slate. While a
clean-slate approach has a lot of attractiveness it does not seem to
be realistic given the time constraints arising from the fact that
the IPv4 address space will be exhausted in a few years time,
despite the fact that IANA (the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority)
is about to allow an IPv4 "trading model" to be created . Therefore,
the migration to IPv6 looks "almost" unavoidable, though by no means
certain , as the widespread usage of Network Address Translators
(NAT) and Application Level Gateways (ALG) is both unlikely to scale
indefinitely and/or to meet the ever evolving Internet users'
expectations and requirements. However, new ideas arising from more
radical and innovative approaches could probably be retrofitted into
the existing Internet, e.g. self-certifying names, la "DONA ". The
purpose of this paper is to raise awareness about the ongoing
initiatives with a special emphasis on technical issues and possible
remedies or solutions, it does not attempt in any way to be
exhaustive as the subject of the Internet evolution including the
societal, ethical and governance aspects are far too wide and
complex to be addressed in a single article.

2 Main Sources Most of the information appearing in this paper has
been extracted from the following Web sites and conferences, Terena
Networking Conference 2007 [4] and, in particular: "The latest
development in NSF's GENI/FIND projects and their influence on the
European Networking Community [5]" by Jiri Navratil (CESNET),
STARPLANE: "An Application-controlled Photonic network [6]", by Cees
de Laat (University of Amsterdam), "Is Global IPv6 Deployment on
Track? [7]", by Carlos Friaas (FCCN), RIPE55 [8], NANOG41 [9], CCIRN
2007 [10], IEPG 2007 [11], "IPv6 Transition and Operational Reality
[12]", by Randy Bush (IIJ ), Australian IPv6 summit 2007 [13], OECD
workshops [14], IAB workshops [15], "Living the Future [16]" by Dirk
Trossen (NOKIA), IPv4 Address Report [17], CircleID [18], Geoff
Houston's posts [19], Global IPv6 launch event (2004) [20].

Regards,

--SteveG