Srinivas Narayana will present his FPO, "Declarative Network Path Queries" on Friday, 5/13/2016 in CS 302 at 2pm.

Srinivas Narayana will present his FPO, "Declarative Network Path Queries" on Friday, 5/13/2016 in CS 302 at 2pm. The members of his committee are Jennifer Rexford (adviser), Readers: Davis Walker and Sanjay Rao (Purdue University); Nonreaders: Nick Feamster and Aarti Gupta. A copy of his thesis is available in Room 310. Everyone is invited to attend his talk. The talk abstract follow below. Effective management of computer networks is crucial to ensure the availability and performance of “always online” Internet services that we depend on. Towards this goal, programmatic tools can remove slow and expensive human involvement in management. Recently, Software-Defined Networking (SDN) technology has eased programmatic control of networks, but there has been little attention on programmatic measurement of networks. This thesis focuses on a broad class of measurement questions that analyze the flow of traffic along network paths. Today, network operators measure traffic flow by “synthesizing” multiple data streams— including updates to forwarding, traffic observations from packet samples, and changes in network topology. However, this approach has significant limitations: it makes measurements indirect for operators to express, and forces operators to make a difficult trade-off between measurement accuracy and overhead. In this thesis, we approach network path measurement with two key principles: (1) Enable operators to specify the measurements they need in a declarative query language; and (2) Drive network measurement according to operator-specified queries. We realize these principles in three parts, as follows. First, we present a declarative query language, that enables paths to be specified as regular expressions over predicates on packet locations and header values. The language also has SQL-like “groupby” constructs for aggregating results anywhere along a path. We show several realistic measurement queries corresponding to resource management, policy enforcement, and troubleshooting. Second, we present a query run-time system that translates path queries into accurate measurement that runs on commodity switch hardware. The run-time first compiles queries into a deterministic finite automaton. The automaton’s transition function is then partitioned, compiled into ‘match-action’ rules (that run on commodity hardware), and distributed over the switches. Storing the automaton state requires only a small amount of extra space (2-4 bytes) on packets. Third, we present optimizations which address fundamental bottlenecks in compilation, caused by queries and forwarding policies requiring different actions on overlapping sets of packets. Experiments indicate that our run-time system can enable “interactive debugging,” allowing an operator to compile multiple queries in a few seconds. Further, the generated switch rules fit comfortably in modern switch rule memories.
participants (1)
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Nicki Gotsis