[Coin] Deadline extension: 1st ACM SIGCOMM Workshop on Future of Internet Routing & Addressing (FIRA)

Adrian Farrel <adrian@olddog.co.uk> Tue, 10 May 2022 11:05 UTC

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Reply-To: adrian@olddog.co.uk
From: Adrian Farrel <adrian@olddog.co.uk>
To: 'coin' <coin@irtf.org>
Date: Tue, 10 May 2022 12:05:42 +0100
Organization: Old Dog Consulting
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Subject: [Coin] Deadline extension: 1st ACM SIGCOMM Workshop on Future of Internet Routing & Addressing (FIRA)
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Hi all,

 

Just a quick note to say that the deadline for paper submissions for the
FIRA workshop has been extended to May 25th. All other details below are
correct.

 

We look forward to seeing your papers.

 

Best,

Adrian

 

From: Coin <coin-bounces@irtf.org> On Behalf Of Dirk Trossen
Sent: 26 April 2022 10:37
To: coin <coin@irtf.org>
Subject: [Coin] 1st ACM SIGCOMM Workshop on Future of Internet Routing &
Addressing (FIRA)

 

Dear all,

 

This upcoming event, with paper submission deadline on May 11th, may be very
relevant to this community. 

 

1st ACM SIGCOMM Workshop on Future of Internet Routing & Addressing (FIRA)
https://conferences.sigcomm.org/sigcomm/2022/workshop-fira.html  

 

>> 

Applications are placing increasingly sophisticated demands on the network
for better quality, more predictability, and greater reliability. Some of
these applications are futuristic predictions (for example, holographic
conferencing, and expansive virtual reality worlds), while others are
already seeing real network demands (such as multi-player augmented- or
virtual- reality games). This coincides with a growing trend to extend
end-to-end communications to include machines, moving objects (such as
cars), highly virtualized and replicated services or new environments (such
as 5G), manufacturing, or space networking, while increasingly aiming at
optimizing the operations of the particular networking environment in which
the communication takes place. This has led to semantic enhancements to
extend the most basic packet delivery mechanism, reflected in both routing
and addressing behaviors, often specific to a particular use case and set of
application traffic requirements or networking characteristics.

Despite this increasing plurality of communication scenarios, traditional
IP-based addressing and network layer routing have remained focused on
identifying location of communicating entities and determining suitable
paths between those locations. This has previously been complemented by
higher-layer capabilities (e.g., for name-to-location resolution) to support
those comprehensive communication scenarios, but that approach introduces
latency and dependencies (e.g., changing locator assignments may depend on
the capabilities of the upper-layer capability that are outside the core
addressing and routing system), while utilizing additional interpretations
for the steering of traffic at the network layer may remove those drawbacks.

Many proposals have been made to go beyond basic locator-based routing,
often adding information to IP packets or even entirely replace the current
IP packet delivery architecture with a new one (which may or may not include
IP-like packet delivery). The intent is always to facilitate enhanced
routing decisions to provide differentiated behaviors for different packet
flows distinct from simple shortest path first routing in basic IP packet
delivery. Moreover, dedicated networking environments, such as data-centre
networks, space networks, vehicular networks, CDNs and others have driven
the creation of a plethora of solutions, each of which improves on routing
and addressing within the requirements and specific behaviors that exist in
those environments. RFC8799 captures this phenomenon as the proliferation of
limited domains, all of which interconnect via the public Internet as we
know it.

But routing and addressing has not only shown continued interest in the
research community. Also continued public funding, with a recent
announcement of the EU research & innovation framework programme "Horizon
Europe" calling for work on 'improving data plane performance', as well as
industry interest, with recent efforts to emphasize the role of networking
in the upcoming 6G development (e.g.,
<http://jultika.oulu.fi/files/isbn9789526226842.pdf> 6G Networking
whitepaper,  <http://6g-net.org/> recent 6G Networking Symposium in Lisbon),
show the interest of the wider community in this topic; an interest this
workshop will be building on. However, this interest also poses a problem in
that those many solutions have often been developed in isolation and without
a larger and coherent architectural view of evolving the Internet as a
whole.

The Future of Internet Routing and Addressing (FIRA) workshop aims at
bringing these communities together with the intention of synthesizing a
unified architectural view on how routing and addressing ought to evolve. In
other words, FIRA is looking to investigate and expand the boundaries of
what can be achieved by introducing new architectures rather than point
solutions, those architectures extending existing or inventing new routing
and addressing techniques that modify the default forwarding behavior to be
based on other information present in the packet, said behavior being either
configured policy or dynamically programmed into the routers and devices.
These new forwarding behaviors aim at causing new and alternative path
processing by routers, such as:

*	Determinism of quality of delivery in terms of throughput, latency,
jitter, drop precedence.
*	Support for resilience in terms of survival of network failures and
delivery degradation.
*	Support for highly distributed, virtualized service execution
environments, where route changes are aligned (in time) with the ability to
establish new service execution points
*	Improvement of routing performance in terms of the volume of data
that has to be exchanged both to establish and to maintain the routing
tables.
*	Deployability in terms of configuration, training, development of
new hardware/software, and interaction with pre-existing network
technologies and uses.
*	Efficiency of manageability in terms of, i. diagnostic management,
ii. management of Service KPIs with/without guarantees, and iii. dynamic and
controlled instantiation of management information in the packets.

The FIRA workshop also solicits work on use cases, design principles,
architectures, techniques, implementations, and experience insights that
address the highlighted objectives.

Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:

*	Architecture frameworks for multi-purpose routing
*	Limited domain architectures
*	Limited domain interconnection architectures
*	Advances applications and use case analysis and requirements
*	Goals and challenges in future and evolving routing and addressing
schemes
*	Routing on multiple optimality criteria
*	Routing on semantic enhancements (including routing, addressing, and
new encapsulations)
*	Coordination of information and decisions across multiple domains
(regions and technology layers)
*	Routing based on formal routing algebras and regular expressions
approaches
*	Centralized routing architectures
*	Integration with modern SDN architectures and protocols
*	Programmable forwarding architectures
*	Security analysis of semantic enhancements
*	Impact of semantic enhancements on privacy
*	Economic and game-theoretical analysis of enhanced network semantics
*	Analysis on impact of enhanced routing semantics on net neutrality
*	Commercial and strategic cost/benefit analyses
*	Information and data models for adoption
*	Stability design and analysis
*	Experience and deployment

<< 

 

We encourage submissions from everyone working in routing and addressing. 

 

Please submit your paper via https://fira2022.hotcrp.com. 

 

 

Best,

 

Dirk