<?xml version="1.0" standalone="no"?>
                    <!DOCTYPE div SYSTEM "/www/backend/www-xml-443/dtd/caidaML.dtd">
                    <!-- do NOT ERASE the DOCTYPE declaration! --><div>


<tr bgcolor="#f4f4f4">
  <td>
<font face="helvetica,arial" size="2">
<b>URL:</b>
</font>
</td>
  <td>
<font face="helvetica,arial" size="2">
<a href="http://www.acm.org/sigcomm/sigcomm2002/papers/routedampening.pdf">http://www.acm.org/sigcomm/sigcomm2002/papers/routedampening.pdf</a><br/>
<a href="http://portal.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=964725.633047">http://portal.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=964725.633047</a>
</font>
  </td>
</tr>


<tr bgcolor="#e9e9e9">
  <td>
<font face="helvetica,arial" size="2">
<b>Entry Date:</b>
</font>
</td>
  <td>
<font face="helvetica,arial" size="2">
2002-10-28


</font>
  </td>
</tr>


<tr bgcolor="#f4f4f4">
  <td>
<font face="helvetica,arial" size="2">
<b>Abstract:</b>
</font>
</td>
  <td>
<font face="helvetica,arial" size="2">
Route flap damping is considered to be a widely deployed mechanism in
core routers that limits the widespread propagation of unstable BGP
routing information. Originally designed to suppress route changes
caused by link flaps, flap damping attempts to distinguish
persistently unstable routes from routes that occasionally fail. It is
considered to be a major contributor to the stability of the Internet
routing system.


</font>
  </td>
</tr>


<tr bgcolor="#e9e9e9">
  <td>
<font face="helvetica,arial" size="2">
<b>Datasets:</b>
</font>
</td>
  <td>
<font face="helvetica,arial" size="2">
  RIPE, 2002-10-01<br />
  RouteViews, 2001-15-11


</font>
  </td>
</tr>


<tr bgcolor="#f4f4f4">
  <td>
<font face="helvetica,arial" size="2">
<b>Results:</b>
</font>
</td>
  <td>
<font face="helvetica,arial" size="2">
  In this paper, we analyze a previously not well-studied
  interaction between BGP's route withdrawal process and its route flap
  damping mechanism for ensuring the overall stability of the
  Internet routing system. This interaction can, depending upon the
  topology, suppress up to one hour the propagation of a route that
  has been withdrawn once and re-announced. We have shown that
  this interaction has a number of subtle features. For instance, we
  found that in the pyramid topology increasing the size of the
  topology actually improved the rate of convergence.
<br /><br />
  We have proposed a simple fix to this withdrawal triggered
  suppression called selective flap damping. It relies on being able to
  weed out secondary flaps using a monotonicity condition which
  selectively avoids penalizing such secondary flaps. Our selective flap
  damping mechanism successfully eliminates withdrawal triggered
  suppression in all the topologies that we have analyzed.
<br /><br />
  We leave for further work the problem of accurately
  characterizing the network topologies and sizes which will induce withdrawal
  triggered suppression. A theoretical analysis of the properties of
  selective flap damping would also be desirable. Despite this, our
  paper together with [7, 8] makes it clear that faster convergence does
  require modifying BGP. This could be done by either fixing the
  withdrawal path exploration phenomenon (the direction followed
  in [14]) or by deploying a mechanism similar in spirit to
  selective flap damping (as in our paper). Either way, such BGP
  modifications could move us closer to the Holy Grail: an inter-domain
  routing protocol that is stable and yet reroutes traffic extremely fast
  after failure.


</font>
  </td>
</tr>


<tr bgcolor="#e9e9e9">
  <td>
<font face="helvetica,arial" size="2">
<b>References:</b>
</font>
</td>
  <td>
<font face="helvetica,arial" size="2">
<ul>
<li>  C. Villamizar, R. Chandra, and R. Govindan, "BGP Route Flap Damping", RFC 2439, 1998.</li>

<li>  C. Labovitz, A. Ahuja, A. Bose, and F. Jahanian, "Delayed Internet Routing Convergence", Proceedings of ACM SIGCOMM 2000</li>
</ul>


</font>
  </td>
</tr>


<tr bgcolor="#f4f4f4">
  <td>
<font face="helvetica,arial" size="2">
<b>Entry TODO:</b>
</font>
</td>
  <td>
<font face="helvetica,arial" size="2">
  Paraphrase results.




</font>
  </td>
</tr>
</div>

