Renaissance: A self-stabilizing distributed SDN control plane
Paper in proceeding, 2018

By introducing programmability, automated verification, and innovative debugging tools, Software-Defined Networks (SDNs) are poised to meet the increasingly stringent dependability requirements of today's communication networks. However, the design of fault-tolerant SDNs remains an open challenge. This paper considers the design of dependable SDNs through the lenses of self-stabilization - a very strong notion of fault-tolerance. In particular, we develop algorithms for an in-band and distributed control plane for SDNs, called Renaissance, which tolerates a wide range of (concurrent) controller, link, and communication failures. Our self-stabilizing algorithms ensure that after the occurrence of an arbitrary combination of failures, (i) every non-faulty SDN controller can eventually reach any switch in the network within a bounded communication delay (in the presence of a bounded number of concurrent failures) and (ii) every switch is managed by at least one non-faulty controller. We evaluate Renaissance through a rigorous worst-case analysis as well as a prototype implementation (based on OVS and Floodlight), and we report on our experiments using Mininet.

Software Defined Networks

Fault tolerance

Self stabilization

Author

M. Canini

Universite catholique de Louvain

Iosif Salem

Chalmers, Computer Science and Engineering (Chalmers), Networks and Systems (Chalmers)

L. Schiff

GuardiCore Labs

Elad Schiller

Chalmers, Computer Science and Engineering (Chalmers), Networks and Systems (Chalmers)

Stefan Schmid

University of Vienna

Proceedings - International Conference on Distributed Computing Systems

Vol. 2018-July 233-243
978-1-5386-6871-9 (ISBN)

38th IEEE International Conference on Distributed Computing Systems, ICDCS 2018
Vienna, Austria,

Subject Categories

Telecommunications

Communication Systems

Control Engineering

DOI

10.1109/ICDCS.2018.00032

More information

Latest update

4/21/2023