Amazing technological breakthrough possible @S-Logix pro@slogix.in

Office Address

  • #5, First Floor, 4th Street Dr. Subbarayan Nagar Kodambakkam, Chennai-600 024 Landmark : Samiyar Madam
  • pro@slogix.in
  • +91- 81240 01111

Social List

A secure and high-performance multi-controller architecture for software-defined networking - 2016

A secure and high-performance multi-controller architecture for software-defined networking

Research Area:  Software Defined Networks

Abstract:

Controllers play a critical role in software-defined networking (SDN). However, existing single-controller SDN architectures are vulnerable to single-point failures, where a controller-s capacity can be saturated by flooded flow requests. In addition, due to the complicated interactions between applications and controllers, the flow setup latency is relatively large. To address the above security and performance issues of current SDN controllers, we propose distributed rule store (DRS), a new multi-controller architecture for SDNs. In DRS, the controller caches the flow rules calculated by applications, and distributes these rules to multiple controller instances. Each controller instance holds only a subset of all rules, and periodically checks the consistency of flow rules with each other. Requests from switches are distributed among multiple controllers, in order to mitigate controller capacity saturation attack. At the same time, when rules at one controller are maliciously modified, they can be detected and recovered in time. We implement DRS based on Floodlight and evaluate it with extensive emulation. The results show that DRS can effectively maintain a consistently distributed rule store, and at the same time can achieve a shorter flow setup time and a higher processing throughput, compared with ONOS and Floodlight.

Keywords:  

Author(s) Name:  Huan-zhao Wang, Peng Zhang, Lei Xiong, Xin Liu & Cheng-chen Hu

Journal name:  Frontiers of Information Technology & Electronic Engineering

Conferrence name:  

Publisher name:  Springer

DOI:  10.1631/FITEE.1500321

Volume Information:  volume 17, pages: 634–646 (2016)