Saturday, January 29, 2011
Topic/Presenter
Full Abstract

Around 25-35% of attendees at each NANOG are new to the meeting (some are even new to the mailing list!) and NANOG isn't quite the same as your average conference.

This tutorial explains the community ethos that makes NANOG different, features that are unusual to the NANOG meeting, and how a newcomer might get the best out of their attendance in Miami.

Speakers
Mike Hughes, NONE
Mike Hughes was previously Chief Technical Officer for London Internet Exchange (LINX), where he was responsible for the organisation's overall technical strategy, core peering infrastructure, and operational performance, specialising in high-speed metro ethernet platforms. With over 10 years of industry experience, Mike has become involved in activities within the community as a regular participant at industry for a (such as NANOG and RIPE meetings), and is a co-chair of the RIPE European Internet Exchange Working Group, as well as being a member of the UKNOF programme committee. He also sits on the Customer Technical Advisory Council of Extreme Networks.

Full Abstract

A comprehensive tutorial on Internet peering, covering everything from the basics of peering for those who have never done it, to the best engineering practices and network design

Speakers
Richard A. Steenbergen, nLayer Communications
Richard Steenbergen is the co-founder of nLayer Communications, a respectably sized and profitable North American based IP backbone, where he currently serves as the Chief Technical Officer. Richard brings years of experience in practical techniques for network operators, and is a frequent contributor in many community forums. Previously, Richard served as a Senior Network Engineer at several large NSPs, and was the Senior Software Engineer responsible for developing optimized routing technologies at netVmg, Inc.

Richard is also an active developer for tools and software used by the network operator community. Some notable projects include PeeringDB, a portal used by many networks to help coordinate their peering activities, and IRRPT, a software package used by ISPs to maintain IRR-based prefix filters.

Full Abstract

This tutorial provides a high level Overview of IPv6 Technology. This is is the first session for the two part Tutorial on IPv6 fundamentals. This tutorial session will cover the following topics at high level:
*Structure of IPv6 Protocol
**IPv4 and IPv6 Header Comparison
**IPv6 Extension Headers
*IPv6 Addressing
**Addressing Format
**Types of IPv6 addresses
*ICMPv6 and Neighbor Discovery
**Router Solicitation & Advertisement
**Neighbor Solicitation & Advertisement
**Duplicate Address Detection
*Multicast in IPv6
*DHCP & DNS for IPv6
**DNS with IPv6
**DHCPv6 Overview

Speakers
Byju Pularikkal, Cisco Systems, Inc.
Byju Pularikkal is a Customer Solutions Architect with the Advanced Services Organization of Cisco Systems. He holds 'Cisco Certified Internetwork Expert (CCIE)' Certifications on Routing & Switching and Service Provider tracks. Byju is a Subject Matter Expert on DOCSIS 1.X, DOCSIS 2.0 DOCSIS 3.0, Packetcable, Video over DOCSIS & IP Core Technologies including IPv6. Byju has been providing consultancy services to major Cable Operators in the United States and abroad. He is a co-inventor of some of the patent applications filed by Cisco Systems. Byju was a speaker at NANOG-46 and NANOG-48 where he presented tutorials on DOCSIS 3.0 & Video over DOCSIS.

Full Abstract

Storage traffic is an increasingly important use of networks, as most enterprise deployments of storage are networked in some fashion. This presentation surveys the commonly used block storage protocols (SCSI-based), including deployment examples and recent technology developments. The protocols to be covered include:
- Fibre Channel over Ethernet (FCoE)
- Fibre Channel over TCP/IP (FCIP, iFCP)
- Fibre Channel over MPLS (FC pseudowire)
- iSCSI
The deployment discussion will cover both storage access (server to storage) and storage replication (storage to storage) over both enterprise and carrier networks. Distributed filesystem protocols are not covered by this presentation.

Speakers
David Black, EMC Corporation
David L. Black, Ph.D. is a Distinguished Engineer at EMC Corporation and has been the chair of multiple IETF (Internet Engineering Task Force) Working Groups, including the IP Storage (ips) Working Group. In the latter role, he has overseen the design and standardization of storage protocols that include iSCSI (Internet SCSI) and FCIP (Fibre Channel over TCP/IP). At EMC he contributes to technology and product strategy and serves as a consulting engineer to product groups across the company. Prior to joining EMC, Dr. Black performed operating systems research and development at the Research Institute of the Open Software Foundation (OSF), which later became part of The Open Group. Dr. Black holds an M.S. and a Ph.D. in Computer Science from Carnegie Mellon University and an M.A. in Mathematics from the University of Pennsylvania. He is a member of the IEEE Computer Society.

Sunday, January 30, 2011
Topic/Presenter
Full Abstract

This tutorial provides a high level Overview of IPv6 Technology with special emphasis on Cable. This is is the second session for the two part Tutorial on IPv6 fundamentals. This tutorial session will cover the following topics at high level:
*Routing in IPv6
**RIPng
**OSPFv3
**BGP-4 Extensions for IPv6
**Multi-Topology IS-IS
*Tunneling Techniques
**Automatic 6 to 4 Tunnels
**ISATAP
*IPv6 for DOCSIS Overview
**IPv6 Drivers in Broadband Access Networks
**CMTS & CM Requirements for IPv6
**MSO CPE Address Assignment Strategies

Speakers
Byju Pularikkal, Cisco Systems, Inc..

Full Abstract

This session is a brief introduction to DNSSEC and how it works. We'll discuss the motivations for its creation, what it does (and doesn't do), and how it works. We'll describe the new DNS resource records used by DNSSEC and how a DNSSEC validator uses them to verify the authenticity and integrity of DNS data.
Basic knowledge of how DNS itself works is helpful but not strictly required.

Speakers
Matt Larson, VeriSign
Matt Larson is Vice President of DNS Research in VeriSign Labs, where he works as a specialist in DNS protocol and operational issues. He is an active participant in the wider DNS community and the co-author of three O'Reilly & Associates Nutshell Handbooks ("DNS on Windows Server 2003", "DNS on Windows 2000" and "DNS on Windows NT"). He also co-authored the core DNSSEC standards documents: RFCs 4033, 4034 and 4035.

Full Abstract

This tutorial will provide an overview of Internet Routing Registries and the Routing Policy Specification Language (RPSL). It will focus on real-world usage of Internet Routing Registries and on tools used to automate the generation of router configurations.

Speakers
Larry J. Blunk, Merit Network
Larry Blunk is a Senior Network Engineer at Merit Network. He has held a number of roles within Merit, and in addition to working with the network engineering team, also works closely with the Research and IT groups within Merit. Larry initially joined Merit in 1985 and has been an active participant in the IETF since 1991 and has published several RFC's. He has a B.S. in Computer Engineering from the University of Michigan.

Manish Karir, Merit Network
Manish Karir as the Research Program Manager leads the Networking Research and Development group at Merit Network Inc. He is responsible for setting the overall research agenda for the group as well as program management for various projects. At Merit he has led the research activities of Merit in the direction of Internet data analysis and tool development. Based on his research activities, Manish has published technical papers in various refereed conferences or as Merit technical reports, and has often presented his work at these venues. In the past, Manish has developed tools such as BGPInspect and Flamingo and is currently involved DHS sponsored PREDICT project.

Full Abstract

Community Meeting Agenda:

Steering Committee Report
Program Committee Report
Communications Committee Report
Marketing Working Group Report
Merit Report
Transition Update
Open Discussion

Speakers
Moderator - Steve Feldman, Steering Committee Chair, CBS Interactive

Full Abstract

Direct Server Return (DSR) load balancing is a common way to distribute network traffic using an approach that currently requires the load balancer and all hosts behind the Virtual IP (VIP) to be within the same Layer 2 network. This is a severe limitation that hinders scaling VIPs beyond a single contiguous subnet. In this paper, we present a method to perform DSR load balancing across Layer 3 boundaries (``L3DSR''), a solution allowing us to serve up to ten times as many VIPs on a single hardware Load Balancer compared to other Layer 3 load balancing methods. This technology has been developed and implemented in-house together with our hardware vendors and internal software development teams. We plan on open sourcing the relevant code on the server side in the near future.

Speakers
Jan Schaumann, Yahoo!
Jan Schaumann is a Systems Architect at Yahoo!, a nice place to stay on the internet, and an Adjunct Professor of Computer Science at Stevens Institute of Technology, teaching classes in System Administration and UNIX Programming. He remains continually astonished that the internet at large does not break down spectacularly on a regular basis. Jan can be
reached at: [email protected]

Full Abstract

This session will give delegates the latest information on how to increase packet traffic capacity, while simultaneously containing CPU power usage, by transporting packets at the lowest, cost optimized, layers.

Speakers
Neil Farquharson, Alcatel-Lucent
Neil Farquharson graduated from the University of Glasgow in 1991 with an honors degree in Electrical Engineering. Over the next 13 years he worked in manufacturing industry managing the production of goods as disparate as shielded thermocouples, monocrystalline germanium and confectionary. In 2003, he attended the School of Management at the University of Texas at Dallas where he gained an MBA with a concentration in Marketing, graduating with a GPA of 4.0. For the last five years he has worked as a Business Development Manager for Alcatel-Lucent focusing on making the high tech world of telecoms more understandable to its staff and customer clients. He lives in Plano, Texas with his Dallas born wife and young daughter.

Full Abstract

Mobile Internet has rapidly gone from an expensive curiosity to the normal mode of Internet access in many global markets. The rapid buildout of 3G/4G networks leaves mobile operators facing many of the same IP engineering challenges solved by fixed line operators, yet the two communities seldom mingle.

In this panel, mobile network operators will give an overview of the technologies between the handset and the Internet, and review their biggest NANOG-scale engineering challenges. We'll also discuss the mobile world's unique (and rapidly evolving) approach to peering strategy: GRX, IPX, or just plain IP.

Speakers
Moderator - Jim Cowie, Renesys Corporation
Jim Cowie is the co-founder and Chief Technology Officer of Renesys Corporation. Although best known to the NANOG community for his work on BGP routing dynamics and analysis of Internet transit markets, Jim's research roots are actually in high performance computing, parallel language compilation, and network modeling and simulation. When the web was young, he authored one of the first web-based collaborative environments for large-integer factorization, and was part of the distributed research team that cracked RSA-130. His current interests include Internet stability metrics and the economics of the developing world's Internet markets. Jim received a BS in Computer Science from Yale University.

Panelist - Carlos Dasilva, Orange
Carlos Dasilva is the Americas’ Strategic Marketing Senior Director at France Telecom International wholesale solutions. France Telecom offers an extensive portfolio of telecommunications solutions for ISPs, content providers, fixed and mobile carriers. Prior to his current position, Carlos was the Director of network provisioning for the North American transmission backbone. In this position he was responsible for the provisioning of hundreds of international circuits ranging from E1s to 10Gbs wavelengths. Carlos joined France Telecom in 1997 at the IT department of France Telecom International network. He worked on several IT solutions to monitor and operate the satellite and IP networks. Carlos relocated to the US in 2001 to assist setting-
up the US network operations center of France Telecom International network.

Panelist - Eric Troyer, Equinix
As Director of Global Mobile Data and Peering for Equinix, Eric Troyer is responsible for the company's overall strategy for interconnection enablement of traditional Internet and Mobile Data services. Prior to joining Equinix in 2004, Mr. Troyer was responsible for managing the peering initiatives and IP backbone build out at Cablevision. Prior to that, he joined Carrier1, a Pan European network where he was Manager of Internet Services in North America.

Monday, January 31, 2011
Topic/Presenter
Full Abstract

Follow-up from last BCP BoF

Speakers
Aaron Hughes, 6connect

Full Abstract

Speakers
Moderator - Eric Osterweil, Verisign
Moderator - Paul Scanlon, Arbor Network

Full Abstract

This is a track to expand on the panel done at NANOG 50. I would like to capture more experiences, necessary technology, etc. NANOG 51 it going to occur very close to IANA IPv4 runout and so we should be spending more time helping our community make this transition

Speakers
Moderator - Cathy Aronson, Cascadeo Corp.
Panelist - Martin Levy, Hurricane Electric
Panelist - Craig Pierantozzi, Level3
Panelist - Arturo Servin, LACNIC

Full Abstract

Alcatel-Lucent

Full Abstract

All first-time NANOG attendees are invited to attend a special continental breakfast where committee members, Merit staff and long-time NANOGers will talk about the organization, the meeting, and how to make best use of both. Please plan to attend and learn more about NANOG and help maximize your first meeting. It will be lively and informative! The breakfast will be moderated by Tom Daly of Dyn, Inc. and Vice Chair of the NANOG Program Committee.Pacnet

Full Abstract

In this review we present results from the 2010 Worldwide Infrastructure Security Survey. The report includes responses from 111 self-classified Tier 1, Tier 2 and other IP network operators from North America, South America, Europe, Africa and Asia. Survey topics include network security technology mechanisms around core Internet and other IP-based infrastructures.

The major findings include a surprising increase in volumetric attack events, application attack trends, impact of the growth in hand held device infections and security concerns over IPv6 and DNSSec deployment.

Speakers
Roland Dobbins, Arbor Networks
Craig Labovitz, Arbor Networks
Carlos Morales, Arbor Networks
Paul Scanlon, Arbor Networks
Paul Scanlon is a Solution Architect for Arbor Networks in the Americas. Paul directs Arbor's efforts with various industry standards groups and works with our customers to develop advanced security best practices, solutions and product development. He has been active in the product vision and direction of the Arbor Networks DDoS Detection and Mitigation solutions. Most recently, Paul worked to develop and manage Arbor Network's Threat Management System (TMS) product line. Prior to coming to Arbor Networks, Paul held technical sales position at Radware, Inc. focusing on load balancing, DNS and application delivery infrastructure and Qwest Communications on the IP Architecture team where he was responsible for engineering CDN technologies, routing infrastructure architectures and backbone route policy. Paul has a Master of Science in Systems Science from State University of New York at Binghamton.

Full Abstract

Now that 100 GbE is here, what are the key considerations in deploying this technology? We will present an overview of the available 100 GbE technology, and operational issues and things to consider when deploying 100 GbE networks.

Speakers
Greg Hankins, Brocade
Brent van Dussen, Limelight

Full Abstract

Buses departing starting 8:15 p.m. Hotel LobbyTerremark

Full Abstract

Mobile infrastructure (e.g. 3G packet core) has been something most at NANOG could ignore -- different groups, closed networks, somebody elses problem. But as mobile traffic looks to overtake fixed line and carriers merge their fixed and mobile engineering / security groups,
mobile trends become a bit more important.

This talk provides an overview mobile infrastructure traffic and security trends. Specifically, we use data from ATLAS self-classified mobile providers, a detailed security survey of 117 carriers around the world, instrumentation of 30,000 handsets and extensive 3G / 4G lab tests to survey the state of traffic and security trends in mobile networks.

Speakers
Joe Eggleston, Arbor Networks
Joe Eggleston is a Principle Engineer at Arbor Networks, where he is a lead architect of Arbor's security products. His specialties include high-speed data mining and large-scale distributed systems. His current interests range from distributed, cloud-based application performance to mobile security.

Craig Labovitz, Arbor Networks.
Z. Morley Mao, University of Michigan

Full Abstract

Service Providers often operate various multivendor networks such as Public IP for Internet Access, MPLS L3 VPN network for business customers, and a residential BRAS network with LAN and LNS components. When moving services to IPv6 all the various networks have to be considered and adopted for IPv6. This document shows the design decisions for a large European SP on the road to convert three networks to IPv6: Residential Network, MPLS VPN network and Public Internet. It also highlights the lesson learned in deployment of a large scale IPv6 service.

Speakers
Amir Tabdili, UnisonIP
Amir began his networking career in 1996 at Sprint Corporation where he worked on the Sprintlink backbone as an Operations Engineer. At Sprint, Amir acted as the last level of support for the operations staff, and also implemented the first Interprovider multicast network. Amir joined Juniper Networks in 1999, and for 10 years he embarked on various leadership technical roles. At Juniper, he was instrumental in the deployment of Juniper products into numerous large service provider networks, as well as their early success in these networks. Amir founded UnisonIP Consulting in early 2009. UnisonIP provides consulting services to various large service providers and enterprises. In this role, Amir has been involved in multiple IPv6 deployments worldwide.

Amir has bachelor degrees in Electrical Engineering and Biomedical Engineering from Vanderbilt University, and an MBA from the University of Maryland.

Full Abstract

The scalability limitations of BGP have been a major concern in the networking community lately. An important issue in this respect is the rate of routing updates (churn) that BGP routers must process. This work presents an analysis of the evolution of churn in four networks in the backbone of the Internet over a period up to seven years and eight months, using update traces from the Routeviews project. The churn rate varies widely over time and between networks, and cannot be understood through “black-box” statistical analysis. Instead we take a different approach with a focus on investigating the underlying reasons for BGP churn evolution. Through our analysis we are able to identify and isolate the main reasons behind many of the anomalies in the churn time series. We find that duplicate announcements is a major churn contributor, and responsible for most large spikes in the churn time series. Other intense periods of churn are caused by misconfigurations or other special events in or close to the monitored AS, and hence limiting these is an important mean to limit churn. We then analyze the remaining “baseline” churn, and find that it is increasing with a rate much slower than the increase in the routing table size.

Speakers
Ahmed Elmokashfi, Simula Research Laboratory
Ahmed Elmokashfi is a Ph.D student at Simula Research Laboratory and University of Oslo. He received his B.Sc. degree in Electrical and Electronics Engineering from the University of Khartoum in 2003, and his M.Sc degree in Telecommunication form Blekinge Institute of technology
in 2007. Elmokashfi research interests include IP routing, routing scalability, measurements, and network science.

Full Abstract

Latin America and the Caribbean Network Operators Community by Christian O'Flaherty, Internet Society
Internet Pollution - Part 2 by Manish Karir, Merit Network Inc.
Egypt Leaves the Internet by Jim Cowie, Renesys Corporation

Speakers
Jim Cowie, Renesys Corporation.
Manish Karir, Merit Network, Inc.
Christian O'Flaherty, Internet Society

Full Abstract

One of the key portions of IX operations today is Route Servers. But what happens when you have two IX operators that merge together be it by way of acquisition, partnership, etc.. How do you deal with different features, provisioning, ownership, etc..

Speakers
Chris Malayter, Equinix

Full Abstract

Deployment of the DNS Security Extensions (DNSSEC) has increased significantly in the last year. A number of top-level domains have also been signed in the last year, and a major milestone was reached with the signing of the root zone in July, 2010. However, the complexity introduced by DNSSEC has made its deployment non-trivial, and DNS administrators have felt the effects of DNSSEC misconfiguration, whether by expiring RRSIGs, DS RR mismatch, path MTU (PMTU) issues, or other causes. In this presentation, we categorize DNSSEC misconfigurations, introduce metrics for quantifying their impact on availability, and introduce methodology for mitigating their effects.

Speakers
Casey Deccio, Sandia National Laboratories
Casey Deccio is a Senior Member of Technical Staff at Sandia National Laboratories in Livermore, CA. He joined Sandia in 2004 after receiving his BS and MS degrees in Computer Science from Brigham Young University, and he received his PhD in Computer Science from the University of California, Davis in 2010. Casey's research interests lie primarily in modeling and availability analysis of DNS and DNSSEC, and he leads Sandia's DNSSEC deployment efforts.

Tuesday, February 1, 2011
Topic/Presenter
Full Abstract

Peering Track on growing network outside of North America region.

- Content from networks that have 'Skipped the ponds' to Asia and Europe on their experiences - a North American network perspective on growing their footprint.
- How do you engineer a network with global spread for the first time ? (hot potato routing, international peering agreements)
- Content from IXPs on their services abroad, how does it differ from the NA scene.
- What technologies do you need to use in order to have transmission across an ocean.
- Peering personals from the larger international networks with traffic to NA region.

Speakers
Moderator - Andy Davidson, LONAP

Full Abstract

DNS BoF is where certain topics are covered using small slides or brief mike discussions.

Authoritative / Recursive DNS
- Critical Infrastructures (Root/TLDs)
- how to share load? add redundancy? per site.
- Anycast technologies
-- Software routers vs hardware routers
-- monitoring anycast nodes
- Zone transfer
- Virtualization
- Nameserver software NSD, Bind, etc.
- How to place your nameservers?
- DNSSEC
- Sign or not?
- How to protect private keys?
- auto signing zones, difficulties?
- DNS related issues, troubleshooting.
- Dealing with registrars and registries.
- Common issues which leads you to lose your domain.

Speakers
Moderator - Mehmet Akcin, ICANN
Mehmet Akcin is DNS Operations Manager at ICANN. He's involved with design planning, and day to day operations of L-Root , One of the 13 DNS Root nameserver which is anycasted over 50 locations. He has also administrated the first three ROOT DNSSEC KSK Ceremonies of ICANN. Mehmet was also involved in designing and implementing the ROOT DNSSEC KSK Management Facilities. Before joining ICANN , Mehmet used to work for Univeristy of Puerto Rico and Gauss Lab in Puerto Rico where he has helped development of ccTLD PR and also involved with some other Caribbean TLDs UPR operated. Mehmet is also one of the founders of TRNOG, Turkish Network Operators Group. Mehmet attends regularly to MENOG, LACNOG, PACNOG and RIPE Meetings presenting and helping those meetings as needed.

Full Abstract

Speakers
David Meyer, Program Committee Chair, Cisco/UO.

Recordings
Full Abstract

Leslie Daigle, Internet Society
2011 is a pivotal year for IPv6 Deployment. 2010 saw the ramp-up in IPv6 deployment efforts throughout the Internet ecosystem. Major players in the Internet ecosystem are working together to showcase their content through IPv6 for a single day in 2011. This serves as a rallying point for other content providers, service providers, application developers and vendors.

Igor Gashinsky
World IPv6 Day helps companies like Yahoo! bring its services onto IPv6 through a concerted visible effort to improve the quality of implementation and operations in operating sytems, home networking equipment, and network operations through the Internet.

John Brzozowski, Comcast
Comcast has been working to deploy IPv6 in its network for many years. Substantial trial efforts in 2010 will lead to further deployment in 2011. A World IPv6 Day helps companies like Comcast by enabling more content over IPv6 on the Internet as a whole.

Patrick Gilmore, Akamai
Akamai has no content or end users ourselves, so we are here to explain our strategy for rolling out v6 and supporting our customers' v6 needs - both on World v6 Day and beyond.

Speakers
Moderator - Phil Roberts, Internet Society.
Panelist - John Brzozowski, Comcast
Panelist - Leslie Daigle, Internet Society
Panelist - Igor Gashinsky, Yahoo!
Panelist - Patrick Gilmore, Akamai

Recordings
Full Abstract

The story about deploying DNSSEC at Mozilla (for mozilla.org), the issues we faced & the mistakes we made.

Speakers
Shyam Mani, Mozilla Corporation
Based out of Singapore, Shyam [pronounced sha-am] is the only person on the Mozilla IT team outside the USA. He's a systems administrator and gets to play with most things at Mozilla. A geek at heart, he’s a part-time Gentoo developer, loves photography and was recently a Track Marshal at the 2010 Formula 1 Singapore Grand Prix.

Recordings
Full Abstract

BGP-4 is utilised as a key intra- and inter-Autonomous System routing protocol in modern IP networks. The failure modes as defined by the original protocol standards are based on a number of assumptions around the impact of session failure. Numerous failures, both within the Internet, and Service Provider networks have resulted in reacting to errors in a single UPDATE message resulting in large-scale failures in one or more Autonomous Systems' IP network.

This presentation intends to support a draft describing the current use of BGP-4 within Service Provider networks, and outlining a set of requirements for further work to enhance the mechanisms available to a BGP-4 implementation when erroneous data is detected.

It is intended that the draft supported by this presentation is reflective of operator's requirements, based on their BGP deployments, and forms a basis for an approach to BGP error handling enhancements.

Speakers
Rob Shakir, Cable&Wireless Worlwide
Rob works within the Network Design team in Cable&Wireless Worldwide, with a direct involvement in the architecture and design of global MPLS/IP platforms. His previous roles have been in operational teams - with experience in both network and hosting service providers. Rob maintains a strong interest in improving network protocols to meet the demands of operator networks, and is a regular contributor to various forums on this subject, with a particular focus on BGP-4.

Full Abstract

It is well known that a relatively small percentage of unstable routes exists in the global routing system which contributes an out of proportion number of routing updates. The route flap damping (RFD) was once considered an effective means to curtail such instability. However, both measurement studies and operational observations show that BGP path exploration can trigger false route damping which leads to prolonged periods of lost network reachability. As a result, many networks turned off RFD. In this paper we propose a simple solution, RFD+RG, dubbed RFD with Reachability Guard, to address the reachability problem in the RFD deployment. RFD+RG performs route flap damping without losing reachability, and the +RG enhancement component works independently from specific damping algorithms and can be integrated into any existing RFD scheme. We use collected BGP data to evaluate RFD+RG performance and our results show that RFD+RG can suppress up to 27% of route instabilities while faithfully preserving reachability.

Speakers
Pei-chun Cheng, UCLA.
John Han Park, UCLA
Keyur Patel, Cisco
Lixia Zhang, UCLA
Lixia Zhang received her Ph.D in computer science from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and joined the Xerox Palo Alto Research Center as a member of the research staff. She joined the faculty of UCLA's Computer Science Department in 1996. In the past she has served as the vice chair of ACM SIGCOMM, member of the editorial board for the IEEE/ACM Transactions on Networking, the Internet Architecture Board, and co-chair of the Routing Research Group under IRTF. She is a fellow of ACM and IEEE, and recipient of 2009 IEEE Internet Award.

Wednesday, February 2, 2011
Topic/Presenter
Full Abstract

Alcatel-Lucent

Full Abstract

This is a track to expand on the panel I did at NANOG 50. I would like to capture more experiences, necessary technology, etc. NANOG 51 it going to occur very close to IANA IPv4 runout and so we should be spending more time helping our community make this transition.

Speakers
Moderator - Cathy Aronson, Cascadeo Corporation
Cathy began her networking career in 1988 at Merit, Inc where she worked on the NSFNet backbone and also CICNet, a network which interconnected the Big 10 universities. She engineered routing and addressing for BARRNet, the Energy Sciences Network, as well as @Home Network. Cathy was also a member of the technical staff at Packet Design, where she was responsible for operational aspects of their Internet scaling projects. Cathy has served on the ARIN Advisory Council continuously since 1997 and as well as one term on the ASO Address Council.

Panelist - John Curran, ARIN
Panelist - Elise Gerich, ICANN.
Panelist - Daniel Golding, DH Capital, LLC.

Full Abstract

Prolexic Technologies.

Full Abstract

DNS queries from users have been increasing. We found that number of heavy users sent large number of queries increased during 2009 and 2010. Moreover, we found that number of heavy users who use Firefox increased.

We suspect that DNS prefetch increased number of heavy users. DNS prefetch is function that resolves domain names included in URLs in the browsed WEB page. Google Chrome, Firefox, and Safari implement DnS prefetch.

Speakers
Kazumichi Sato, NTT

Full Abstract

Network Operators are challenged with the constant growing demand for data capacity which their current circuit based SONET/SDH infrastructures cannot support in an economical way. MPLS-TP, OTN and POT-P are emerging transport technologies addressing the scalability issues of SONET/SDH networks. This talk will provide an overview of these technologies and will explain their roles, functions and benefits .

Speakers
John Volkering, Ericsson
John Volkering is Solution Consultant for Ericsson's Business Solutions within Ericsson's Product Area that is responsible for IP and Broadband activities. In his role he is focused on providing technical sales consultancy for Ericsson Business Solutions, including Mobile Backhaul, Carrier Ethernet and Mobile Packet Backbone Networks around the world.

Recordings
Full Abstract

Speakers
David Meyer, Program Committee Chair, Cisco/UO.