Publication | Closed Access
Migrating home agents towards internet-scale mobility deployments
57
Citations
11
References
2006
Year
Unknown Venue
EngineeringSmart CityEdge ComputingHome Agent MigrationHome AgentsMobility ModelingMobile AgentScalable RoutingMobility ManagementMobile ComputingInternet Of ThingsHome AgentIetf Standardization ProcessTechnologyAdvanced NetworkingMobility ProtocolOverlay NetworkRouting Protocol
While the IETF standardization process of the Mobile IPv6 and Network Mobility (NEMO) protocols is almost complete, their large-scale deployment is not yet possible. With these technologies, in order to hide location changes of the mobile nodes from the rest of the Internet, a specific router called a home agent is used. However, this equipment generates resilience and performance issues such as protocol scalability and longer paths. In order to solve these problems, we describe and analyze a new concept called Home Agent Migration. The main feature of this solution is the distribution of home agents inside the current Internet topology to reduce distances to end-nodes. As is usually done for anycast routing, they advertise the same network prefix from different locations; moreover they also exchange information about their associations with mobile nodes. This produces a Global Mobile eXchange (GMX), an overlay network that efficiently handles data traffic from and to mobile nodes, and operates home agents as would an Internet eXchange Point (IXP). When a correspondent node needs to exchange packets with a mobile node, the data traffic will be intercepted by its closest GMX home agent and redirected to the home agent to which the mobile node is bound.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1