Hi,
I think it is an interesting aspect for ALTO protocol to be considered.
The current ALTO uses IP address as the endpoint adress for grouping and
locating. For the VM migration, this would fail, especailly without the
contol of the ISP or ALTO service provider. Can ALTO mechanism make some
changes to reflect this migration in some way? By using other alternatives
such as geolocations or PoP to group, can we avoid this and how?
PS: I have a question personally. How the routing would succeed after VM are
migrated without changing IP adress? Can you tell me some current mechanism?
Thanks:)
Tao Ma
Beijing University of Posts and Telecommunications
From: Y.J. GU <[email protected]>
> Date: Sat, Oct 9, 2010 at 3:18 AM
> Subject: [alto] How Data Center Virtualization influence ALTO mechanism.
> To: [email protected]
>
>
> Hi all,
> I was thinking about how Data Center Virtualization and Virtual Machine(VM)
> Migration will influence ALTO mechanism.
>
> Current ALTO Protocol defines clustering of peers according to their IP
> Addresses. E.g. peers in same subnet will be classified into same PID, and
> path cost will indicate the cost within and between PIDs, which is also
> actually based on IP Addresses.
>
> In the current world, peers are partitioned by IP subnet. While considering
> virtual machines migration, there might be more interesting things to think
> of.
>
> In Data Center operation, one basic consensus is 'When Virtual Machines
> move from one site to another, the IP Addresses will not change, so that the
> existing service connection will not be broken'. VMs can migrate to
> arbitrary site, not under the control and knowledge of ISP. For example,
> some VMs in Data Center A(IP subnet 198.1.1.0) move to Data Center B (IP
> subnet 210.1.1.0). IP-based, Vms are closer to DC-A. Physically, these VMs
> are much closer to hosts in DC-B. However things are not so easy, especially
> considering how these VMs are routed. Current ALTO may give wrong cost
> ranking.
>
> VMs may migrate under, but not limited to, these situations: 1) to save
> electricity power, 2) disaster recovery, 3) customer prefer another Data
> Center, 4) company extension, etc. In the end, the internet will not be a
> regular world partitioned by IP Addresses.
>
> Does anyone think this is an interesting aspect to study?
>
>
>
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