Saturday, October 2, 2010
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RecordingsFull AbstractHow to get the best out of your attendance at NANOG. What on earth is a BoF or a Track? Famous faces, usual suspects. Go on, submit a lightning talk. If you like it tell your friends, if you don't, tell us. Speakers |
Full AbstractThe tutorial introduces service providers to some more advanced BGP features and techniques to aid with operating their networks within the Internet. After a recap of iBGP, eBGP and common attributes, the tutorial will look at the various scaling techniques available, when to use BGP instead of an IGP, and examine policy options available through the use of local preference, MED and communities. The second half of the tutorial looks at deployment techniques, including BGP network design, the announcing and receiving refixes, aggregation, routing table growth and stability, finishing off with some configuration advice. Speakers |
Full AbstractIEEE 802.1aq Shortest Path Bridging (presented at Nanog 49) is a new layer 2 control protocol using IS-IS to replace and greatly enchance the capabilities of the layer 2 data paths Q-in-Q and Mac-in-Mac. The shortest and multi path virtualized routing have applications in the Data Center , Metro, and Enterprise we will give an overview of 802.1aq, then drop into a deeper dive into how it works, looking at some of the algorithms in some detail, and will finish with a look at some live CLI on a 30+ node network. An emulator will also be available and time permitting we can experiment with different networks to see the behaviors. Speakers |
Full AbstractWith the mandated roll out of DNSSEC for US Government and the widespread adoption of DNSSEC throughout the world, many network operators are being asked to make changes to infrastructure that has been stable for years. Speakers |
Sunday, October 3, 2010
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Full AbstractThe second half of the tutorial looks at deployment techniques, including BGP network design, the announcing and receiving prefixes, aggregation, routing table growth and stability, finishing off with some configuration advice. Speakers |
Full AbstractRBridges, based on the IETF TRILL protocol, provide safe optimal pair-wise forwarding without configuration and support for multipathing of both unicast and multicast traffic. They achieve this with IS-IS routing and encapsulation of traffic with a header that includes a hop count. RBridges are compatible with previous IEEE 802.1 customer bridges, as well as IPv4 and IPv6 routers and end nodes, and such bridges can be incrementally replaced by RBridges. Current work on minimizing broadcast traffic, including ARP/ND optimization, will also be covered. Speakers |
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RecordingsFull AbstractWe demonstrate a low-cost MPLS LSR capable of forwarding 4x1GE in hardware. It utilizes an open-source implementation of LDP in Quagga, open-source modifications to the Linux kernel to support MPLS, an open-source implementation of an OpenFlow controller modified to support MPLS, and a NetFPGA card as the open platform to program the hardware for MPLS forwarding. Speakers |
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Full AbstractWe all see the size of the global routing table constantly growing, but what is really behind the number of prefixes being announced? A knee jerk answer is "more people on the internet", or "intentional deaggregation for policy reasons", but does this really explain it? How much of the routing table size is caused by unintentional configurations, or slow growth allocations? Can we do a better job of identifying these route sources by looking at common BGP attributes rather than simple route aggregation techniques (which often miss "holes" in otherwise aggregatable large blocks)? And is IPv6 really helping to improve this issue and reduce routing table size, or are people just making the same mistakes all over again. Speakers |
Monday, October 4, 2010
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RecordingsFull AbstractTwo competing methods of solving the multipath/redundant L2 Ethernet challenge have been emerging over the years, and have now become viable. In this showdown of TRILL versus 802.1aq (SPB) we will debate issues including stability, convergence, vendor support, and standardization. Speakers Panelist - Peter Ashwood-Smith, Huawei Fellow Panelist - Donald Eastlake, TRILL Panelist - Srikanth Keesara, Avaya Panelist - Paul Unbehagen, Alcatel-Lucent |
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RecordingsFull AbstractThe Research Forum will include:
Speakers Srikanth Sundaresan, Georgia Tech Vyautus Valancius, Georgia Institute of Technology |
Full AbstractOpenFlow: An Update Speakers Nick McKeown, Stanford University. |
Full AbstractAlcatel-Lucent |
Full AbstractAll 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 Cat Hoffman of Equinix.Pacnet |
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RecordingsFull AbstractJohn will provide an update on the ARIN portion of the joint NANOG/ARIN meeting. As IPv4 and 2-Byte AS run-out dates are quickly approaching, there are a number of issues/policies that are being discussed in ARIN that may be of interest to the community. Speakers |
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Full AbstractTelx |
RecordingsFull AbstractGrowing concerns about the use of the current Internet protocol have caused many to consider how it should be changed in order to address problems such as DFZ RIB growth, implementation of certain functionality (such as multi-homing and mobility), as well as dealing with issues of scalability. We take the position that an evolutionary approach is possible for a practical and scaleable solution, giving much of the functionality required, being backwards compatible with the currently deployed architecture, with incremental deployment capability, and which can reduce the current routing state overhead for the core network. By enhancing the way we use naming in the Internet Architecture, it is possible to provide a harmonised approach to the provision of much functionality (such as multi-homing, mobility and others), including specific improvement to the scalability of inter-domain routing state. Speakers |
Full AbstractThis presentation aims to bring the low-cost economic 1U/2U top-of-rack device beyond just the datacenter. I intend to outline how you can take some of the low-cost commodity top-of-rack router/switches and transform it into a viable BGP Internet peering router, providing you a dense Nx10GE peering router at an order of magnitude cheaper than the big metal boxes on the market. Through a variety of tricks with MPLS and BGP, an operator can still have roughly the same functionality they have today with a few additional enhancements. Speakers |
RecordingsFull AbstractThis talk will cover: Drivers for LISP, Design, Deployment considerations & results, Operations, IPv6 (LISP6), and Future tasks. Speakers |
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RecordingsFull AbstractDNS Caching: Running on Zero Speakers |
Tuesday, October 5, 2010
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Full AbstractFollow-up from last BCP BoF Speakers |
RecordingsFull AbstractThe Day the Root Got Signed Speakers Duane Wessels, VeriSign |
Full AbstractMatt Peterson leads network and systems operations at Square, Inc -AS15211. Mr. Peterson's career spans a diverse mixture of non-profit, start-up, enterprise and small business engagements. Matt is well known for his humble, education-without-drama attitude and approachable demeanor. Previously he installed ccTLD DNS root servers around the Speakers |
Full AbstractThe NANOG50 Demo Room will feature an IPv6 demonstration with an opportunity to view a live IPv6 dual stack configuration that is currently in production. Technological capabilities of various hardware and software will be featured, allowing you to experience technology, content and services first-hand. |
Full AbstractThe pS Performance Toolkit Speakers Pat Pannuto, Merit Network Jason Zurawski, Internet2. |
RecordingsFull AbstractThe Open Policy Hour (OPH) is an informal gathering where folks can talk Internet number resource policy. Would you like to “test drive” a policy idea? Everyone is invited to attend this session and raise ideas and suggestions. You do not need to have a formal presentation in order to participate. Signing up in advance allows us to confirm your turn to present, but is not required. Speakers |
Full AbstractARIN would like to welcome you to Atlanta! We are sponsoring a social |
Full AbstractIn this talk, we present detailed, quantitative data on 5,000 operator confirmed (via manual classification) network infrastructure attacks over the last year across 37 carriers. We explore the magnitude, frequency and characterize both the attack vectors and victims. Previously, most data on carrier security trends has come from qualitative vendor surveys (e.g. Cisco, Arbor, etc). We believe this talk represents the first large scale study of validated (i.e. "ground-truth") botnet and DDoS attacks. We conclude with estimates of botnet size and efficacy. Speakers |
RecordingsFull AbstractSpeakers Sylvie LaPerrière, Google David Ross, Davis Ross Group |
Full AbstractThe East African region acquired undersea capacity in mid 2009. Previously, connectivity was via E1 copper lines or in some cases fiber, but to slow VSAT connections. By the end of 2010, three undersea cables will be active. In the research and education area, users made the big leap from shared VSAT to undersea capacity as well. My presentation will show what impact this had and what has needed to be done to adjust to the new bandwidth prices. I will also describe the problems encountered and solutions deployed to counter problems related to the new Internet speeds achieved with undersea capacity. Speakers |
Full AbstractARIN, Global Peering Forum |
RecordingsFull AbstractIn this presentation we'll take a look at what Ethernet developments are taking place in the IEEE, ITU-T, IETF and MEF. We'll start with a quick overview on how the various standards organizations fit together, and then dive deeper into the following new and emerging Ethernet technologies: Speakers |
Full AbstractWe present an innovative network monitoring tool that groups under the same "look and feel" interface, access to multiple databases associated with network and client erformance. These include data from our own polling engine Apoll, Spectrum for equipment failure, Nagios for CPU performance, Sflow for traffic flow analysis and environmental for power and cooling. Speakers |
Wednesday, October 6, 2010
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Full AbstractA panel discussion on IPv4 to IPv6 transition and co-existence mechanisms. Speakers |
Full AbstractXKL |
Full AbstractA panel discussion on IPv4 to IPv6 transition and Co-Existence experiences. Speakers Panelist - John Brzozowski, Comcast. |
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