7. Deployment prospects
The mass adoption of LISP as the Internet's preferred traffic routing technique remains highly uncertain. Current implementations are mainly the work of the academic community and serve as prototypes for experimentation on captive platforms or on a larger scale, using for example the resources of the LISP infrastructure deployed over the Internet. By definition, these implementations cannot be deployed in production networks. Commercial production of LISP connectivity services cannot therefore be envisaged in the short term.
In addition, the LISP protocol suffers from functional shortcomings that penalize the quality level associated with the connectivity service: the resolution time associated with the tree structure characteristic of a LISP mapping system can be extremely penalizing for the establishment of end-to-end communication, depending on the depth of the...
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Deployment prospects
Bibliography
Websites
Organizations
IANA – Internet Assigned Number Authority http://www.iana.org
IETF – Internet Engineering Task Force http://www.ietf.org
IAB – Internet Architecture Board https://www.iab.org
...Standards
- NERD: a not-so-novel endpoint ID (EID) to routing locator (RLOC) database - RFC837 - 2013
- Towards the future internet architecture - RFC1287 - 1991
- IESG deliberations on routing and addressing - RFC1380 - 1992
- TP/IX: the next Internet - RFC1475 - 1993
- OSPF version 2 - RFC2328 - 1998
- UTF-8, a transformation format of ISO 10646 - RFC3629 - 2003
- A border gateway protocol 4 (BGP-4)...
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