The original paper is in English. Non-English content has been machine-translated and may contain typographical errors or mistranslations. ex. Some numerals are expressed as "XNUMX".
Copyrights notice
The original paper is in English. Non-English content has been machine-translated and may contain typographical errors or mistranslations. Copyrights notice
TCP Redirection (TCP-R) ialah lanjutan TCP, yang mengekalkan sambungan TCP aktif apabila pemotongan berlaku disebabkan oleh perubahan alamat IP. Dalam persekitaran pengkomputeran mudah alih, alamat IP boleh ditukar dengan kerap apabila hos bergerak merentasi subnet atau menukar peranti rangkaian. Walau bagaimanapun, adalah sukar untuk kebanyakan aplikasi rangkaian stateful untuk bekerja secara berterusan dalam keadaan itu. Terdapat banyak penyelidikan untuk menyokong dinamik sedemikian dalam lapisan rangkaian, tetapi percubaan dalam lapisan IP ini cenderung untuk menanggung sedikit kerumitan. Kertas kerja ini berhasrat untuk menyiasat sokongan mobiliti hujung ke hujung dalam lapisan pengangkutan. Kami membangunkan mekanisme ubah hala mudah untuk TCP, yang membolehkan kami mengekalkan aktiviti kerja kami berterusan tanpa sebarang ejen perantaraan untuk pemajuan paket IP. Kami juga menunjukkan bahawa TCP-R membolehkan penggantian alamat IP yang disengajakan, yang berguna untuk perkhidmatan rangkaian tertentu. Kami melaksanakan dan menilai prototaip TCP-R. Prestasi yang diukur menunjukkan bahawa TCP-R boleh merealisasikan operasi berterusan dengan overhed minimum dan kerumitan.
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Salinan
Daichi FUNATO, Shunichiro OKADA, Hideyuki TOKUDA, Nobuo SAITO, "TCP Redirection for Adaptive Mobility Support in Stateful Applications" in IEICE TRANSACTIONS on Information,
vol. E82-D, no. 4, pp. 831-837, April 1999, doi: .
Abstract: TCP Redirection (TCP-R) is an extension of TCP, which maintains active TCP connections when the disconnection occurs due to IP address changes. In mobile computing environments, IP addresses may be changed frequently as the host moves across subnets or changes network devices. However, it is difficult for most stateful network applications to work continuously in that situation. There is much research to support such dynamics in the network layer, but these attempts in the IP layer tend to incur some complexity. This paper intends to investigate the end-to-end mobility support in the transport layer. We developed a simple redirection mechanism for TCP, which enables us to keep our working activities continuous without any intermediate agents for IP packet forwarding. We also show that TCP-R enables the intentional replacement of IP addresses, which is useful for certain network services. We implemented and evaluated a prototype of TCP-R. The measured performance indicates that TCP-R can realize continuous operation with minimal overhead and complexity.
URL: https://global.ieice.org/en_transactions/information/10.1587/e82-d_4_831/_p
Salinan
@ARTICLE{e82-d_4_831,
author={Daichi FUNATO, Shunichiro OKADA, Hideyuki TOKUDA, Nobuo SAITO, },
journal={IEICE TRANSACTIONS on Information},
title={TCP Redirection for Adaptive Mobility Support in Stateful Applications},
year={1999},
volume={E82-D},
number={4},
pages={831-837},
abstract={TCP Redirection (TCP-R) is an extension of TCP, which maintains active TCP connections when the disconnection occurs due to IP address changes. In mobile computing environments, IP addresses may be changed frequently as the host moves across subnets or changes network devices. However, it is difficult for most stateful network applications to work continuously in that situation. There is much research to support such dynamics in the network layer, but these attempts in the IP layer tend to incur some complexity. This paper intends to investigate the end-to-end mobility support in the transport layer. We developed a simple redirection mechanism for TCP, which enables us to keep our working activities continuous without any intermediate agents for IP packet forwarding. We also show that TCP-R enables the intentional replacement of IP addresses, which is useful for certain network services. We implemented and evaluated a prototype of TCP-R. The measured performance indicates that TCP-R can realize continuous operation with minimal overhead and complexity.},
keywords={},
doi={},
ISSN={},
month={April},}
Salinan
TY - JOUR
TI - TCP Redirection for Adaptive Mobility Support in Stateful Applications
T2 - IEICE TRANSACTIONS on Information
SP - 831
EP - 837
AU - Daichi FUNATO
AU - Shunichiro OKADA
AU - Hideyuki TOKUDA
AU - Nobuo SAITO
PY - 1999
DO -
JO - IEICE TRANSACTIONS on Information
SN -
VL - E82-D
IS - 4
JA - IEICE TRANSACTIONS on Information
Y1 - April 1999
AB - TCP Redirection (TCP-R) is an extension of TCP, which maintains active TCP connections when the disconnection occurs due to IP address changes. In mobile computing environments, IP addresses may be changed frequently as the host moves across subnets or changes network devices. However, it is difficult for most stateful network applications to work continuously in that situation. There is much research to support such dynamics in the network layer, but these attempts in the IP layer tend to incur some complexity. This paper intends to investigate the end-to-end mobility support in the transport layer. We developed a simple redirection mechanism for TCP, which enables us to keep our working activities continuous without any intermediate agents for IP packet forwarding. We also show that TCP-R enables the intentional replacement of IP addresses, which is useful for certain network services. We implemented and evaluated a prototype of TCP-R. The measured performance indicates that TCP-R can realize continuous operation with minimal overhead and complexity.
ER -