Yi Wang, Ioannis Avramopoulos, and Jennifer Rexford, Princeton University
We present the design, implementation, and evaluation of Morpheus, a routing control platform that enables a single ISP to realize a much broader range of routing policies without changing its routers or coordinating with other ISPs. Morpheus allows network operators to easily define new policy objectives, make flexible trade-offs between the objectives, and realize customer-specific policies (e.g., provide customer-specific routes). Our experiments show that Morpheus is scalable in large ISPs.
Bio:
Yi Wang is a 3rd year Ph.D candidate in Department of Computer Science at Princeton University, working with Professor Jennifer Rexford. His research interests include Internet routing, network measurement and network management. His recent projects include Morpheus, a modular, open routing platform that supports flexible control of interdomain routing policies for a backbone network, and VROOM, a new network architecture which simplifies network management by enabling (virtual) routers to freely move from one physical node to another, without changing the IP-layer topology. He received his BSE and MSE degrees in electrical engineering from Tsinghua University, Beijing, China, in 2003 and 2005, respectively.
Ioannis Avramopoulos is a postdoctoral researcher in the Computer Science Department at Princeton University in Princeton, New Jersey. He received a diploma in Electrical and Computer Engineering from the National Technical University of Athens in 1999 and the Master and Ph.D. degrees in Electrical Engineering from Princeton University in 2003 and 2006, respectively. His research interest is in networking and security.
Jennifer Rexford is a Professor in the Computer Science department at Princeton University. From 1996-2004, she was a member of the Network Management and Performance department at AT&T Labs-Research. She received her BSE degree in electrical engineering from Princeton University in 1991, and her MSE and PhD degrees in computer science and electrical engineering from the University of Michigan in 1993 and 1996, respectively.
Link to the Presentation
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