Incentivizing Stable Path Selection in Future Internet Architectures
Abstract
By delegating path control to end-hosts, future Internet architectures offer flexibility for path selection. However, there is a concern that the distributed routing decisions by end-hosts, in particular load-adaptive routing, can lead to oscillations if path selection is performed without coordination or accurate load information. Prior research has addressed this problem by devising path-selection policies that lead to stability. However, little is known about the viability of these policies in the Internet context, where selfish end-hosts can deviate from a prescribed policy if such a deviation is beneficial fromtheir individual perspective. In order to achieve network stability in future Internet architectures, it is essential that end-hosts have an incentive to adopt a stability-oriented path-selection policy. In this work, we perform the first incentive analysis of the stability-inducing path-selection policies proposed in the literature. Building on a game-theoretic model of end-host path selection, we show that these policies are in fact incompatible with the self-interest of end-hosts, as these strategies make it worthwhile to pursue an oscillatory path-selection strategy. Therefore, stability in networks with selfish end-hosts must be enforced by incentive-compatible mechanisms. We present two such mechanisms and formally prove their incentive compatibility.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2009.12105,
title = {Incentivizing Stable Path Selection in Future Internet Architectures},
author = {Simon Scherrer and Markus Legner and Adrian Perrig and Stefan Schmid},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2009.12105},
year = {2020}
}
Comments
38th International Symposium on Computer Performance, Modeling, Measurements and Evaluation (PERFORMANCE 2020)