有没有人挂断你的电话?

Lan Wei, J. Heidemann
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引用次数: 30

摘要

如今,基于任意广播的服务在商业上被广泛使用,有几家主要的提供商为数千个重要的网站提供服务。然而,据我们所知,由于路由更改中断了用户与其当前anycast站点之间的连接,对anycast失败的频率进行了有限的研究。虽然任播cdn的商业成功意味着任播通常运行良好,但是否有一些用户最终被排除在任播之外?在本文中,我们研究了来自9000多个地理分布的有利位置(vp)到11个任意播服务的数据来评估这个问题。我们的贡献是对这些数据的分析,提供了这个问题的第一个量化,并探索它发生的地方和原因。我们发现大约1%的副总裁是不稳定的,经常访问不同的任播网站(有时每个查询)。在给定服务和副总裁的选定实验中,观察到在10秒内两个站点之间来回翻转。此外,我们还表明,对一些副总裁来说,任意播送的不稳定性是持续存在的——一些副总裁在一周甚至更长时间内从未看到与某些任意播送服务的稳定连接。绝大多数副总裁只看到了指向一两个服务的不稳定路由,而不是指向所有服务的不稳定路由,这表明不稳定的原因存在于到任意播送站点的路径中。最后,我们指出,对于高度不稳定的vp,他们到达给定站点的概率是恒定的,这意味着翻转是在每个数据包级别的细粒度上发生的,这表明负载平衡可能是任播路由翻转的原因。我们的发现证实了一种普遍的看法,即任意广播几乎总是运行良好,但也提供了证据表明,在互联网上的一小部分地方,特定的任意广播服务从来都不稳定。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Does anycast hang up on you?
Anycast-based services today are widely used commercially, with several major providers serving thousands of important websites. However, to our knowledge, there has been only limited study of how often anycast fails because routing changes interrupt connections between users and their current anycast site. While the commercial success of anycast CDNs means anycast usually works well, do some users end up shut out of anycast? In this paper we examine data from more than 9000 geographically distributed vantage points (VPs) to 11 anycast services to evaluate this question. Our contribution is the analysis of this data to provide the first quantification of this problem, and to explore where and why it occurs. We see that about 1% of VPs are anycast unstable, reaching a different anycast site frequently (sometimes every query). Flips back and forth between two sites in 10 seconds are observed in selected experiments for given service and VPs. Moreover, we show that anycast instability is persistent for some VPs — a few VPs never see a stable connections to certain anycast services during a week or even longer. The vast majority of VPs only saw unstable routing towards one or two services instead of instability with all services, suggesting the cause of the instability lies somewhere in the path to the anycast sites. Finally, we point out that for highly-unstable VPs, their probability to hit a given site is constant, which means the flipping are happening at a fine granularity — per packet level, suggesting load balancing might be the cause to anycast routing flipping. Our findings confirm the common wisdom that anycast almost always works well, but provide evidence that a small number of locations in the Internet where specific anycast services are never stable.
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