Plutarch: An Argument for Network Pluralism

  • J. Crowcroft ,
  • S. Hand ,
  • R. Mortier ,
  • T. Roscoe ,
  • A. Warfield

Proceedings of SIGCOMM Future Directions in Network Architecture Workshop (FDNA'03) |

Published by ACM SIGCOMM

It is widely accepted that the current Internet architecture is insufficient for the future: problems such as address space scarcity, mobility and non-universal connectivity are already with us, and stand to be exacerbated by the explosion of wireless, ad-hoc and sensor networks. Furthermore, it is far from clear that the ubiquitous use of standard transport and name resolution protocols will remain practicable or even desirable. In this paper we propose Plutarch, a new inter-networking architecture. It subsumes existing architectures such as that determined by the Internet Protocol suite, but makes explicit the heterogeneity that contemporary inter-networking schemes attempt to mask. To handle this heterogeneity, we introduce the notions of context and interstitial function