The Flattening Internet Topology: Natural Evolution, Unsightly Barnacles or Contrived


 
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Old 05-22-2008
The Flattening Internet Topology: Natural Evolution, Unsightly Barnacles or Contrived

HPL-2008-47 The Flattening Internet Topology: Natural Evolution, Unsightly Barnacles or Contrived Collapse? - Gill, Phillipa; Arlitt, Martin; Li, Zongpeng; Mahanti, Anirban
Keyword(s): Internet, topology, content providers, private WAN, measurement
Abstract: In this paper we collect and analyze traceroute measurements 1 to show that large content providers (e.g., Google, Microsoft, Yahoo!) are deploying their own wide-area networks, bringing their networks closer to users, and bypassing Tier-1 ISPs on many paths. This trend, should it continue and be ad ...
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inet(7F)																  inet(7F)

NAME
inet - Internet protocol family SYNOPSIS
DESCRIPTION
The internet protocol family is a collection of protocols layered on top of the (IP) network layer, which utilizes the internet address format. The internet family supports the SOCK_STREAM and SOCK_DGRAM socket types. Addressing Internet addresses are four byte entities. The include file defines this address as the structure Sockets bound to the internet protocol family utilize an addressing structure called Pointers to this structure can be used in system calls wherever they ask for a pointer to a There are three fields of interest within this structure. The first is which must be set to AF_INET. The next is which specifies the port number to be used on the desired host. The third is which is of type and specifies the address of the desired host. Protocols The internet protocol family is comprised of the IP network protocol, Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMP), Transmission Control Proto- col (TCP), and User Datagram Protocol (UDP). TCP is used to support the socket type while UDP is used to support the socket type. The ICMP message protocol and IP network protocol are not directly accessible. The local port address is selected from independent domains for TCP and UDP sockets. This means that creating a TCP socket and binding it to local port number 10000, for example, does not interfere with creating a UDP socket and also binding it to local port number 10000 at the same time. Port numbers in the range 1-1023 inclusive are reserved for use by the super-user only. Attempts to bind to port numbers in this range by non-super-users fail and result in an error returned. AUTHOR
was developed by the University of California, Berkeley. SEE ALSO
tcp(7P), udp(7P). inet(7F)