Publication | Closed Access
Efficient hardware architecture for fast IP address lookup
43
Citations
10
References
2003
Year
Unknown Venue
Cluster ComputingEngineeringComputer ArchitectureData StructureMultigigabit Ip RouterHardware SecurityHigh-performance ArchitectureRouter DesignScalable RoutingParallel ComputingRouter ArchitectureEfficient Hardware ArchitectureComputer EngineeringHigh-speed NetworkingComputer ScienceExternal-memory AlgorithmNetwork Interface ArchitectureEdge ComputingCloud ComputingParallel ProgrammingLongest Matching Prefix
A multigigabit IP router may receive several million packets per second from each input link. For each packet, the router needs to find the longest matching prefix in the forwarding table in order to determine the packet's next-hop. In this paper, we present an efficient hardware solution for the IP address lookup problem. We model the address lookup problem as a searching problem on a binary-trie. The binary-trie is partitioned into four levels of fixed size 255-node subtrees. We employ a hierarchical indexing structure to facilitate direct access to subtrees in a given level. It is estimated that a forwarding table with 40 K prefixes will consume 2.5 Mbytes of memory. The searching is implemented using a hardware pipeline with a minimum cycle of 12.5 ns if the memory modules are implemented using SRAM. A distinguishing feature of our design is that forwarding table entries are not replicated in the data structure. Hence, table updates can be done in constant time with only a few memory accesses.
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