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Trailing-Edge - PDP-10 Archives - BB-BT99V-BB_1990 - 10,7/anf10/anf10a.rno
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.lm 0;.rm 72;.page size 59,72
.left;Doc #: EJW-78-011-00-S
.s
.literal
+---------------+
! D I G I T A L !   I N T E R O F F I C E   M E M O R A N D U M
+---------------+
  
To:  TOPS-10 network group        Date:  20 July 78
                                  From:  Ric Werme
cc:  Jared Aaronson               Dept:  LCG Communication
     George Conant                       Software Engineering
     Ralph Dement                 Ext:   6059  Loc: MR1-2/E89
     Dave Kirschen
     Tony Lauck
     Arnie Miller
     Marty Palmieri
     Rob Ryan
     Retrieval system (2)  ML2-5/B39
     SWE Tech Archive
  
Subj:  Hierarchiacal routing in the TOPS-10 networks
-------------------
.end literal
.s2
.hl1 INTRODUCTION
.S
A serious problem in the TOPS-10 network architecture is its
limitation of only 63 nodes in a network.  To date, the most seriously
affected customer is IPC, the inhouse timesharing group which now has
responsibility for more than that many nodes.  The largest customer
network I know of is Western Electric with some 20-30 nodes.
.s
The reason for the limitation is two-fold.  First, the TOPS-10 network
architecture demands that each node know about the existance of every
other node in the network.  The database required per node is large
enough to become a significant fraction of the memory available to
many of our network systems.  (For example, the DN82 remote station
and DN87 front end have 16K for both program and database.)  Second,
the lack of a system filespec parser has forced TOPS-10 to squeeze the
node number into device names as part of the unit number (e.g. LPT220
is LPT0 on node 22.  This inherently implies a limit of 63 nodes and
why we document the limit to be 63.
.s
This paper discusses a mechanism to build an arbitraty size network
with the database requirements proportional to log(n) instead of n.
It will not address the device naming changes required to allow
TOPS-10 programs to access other devices on nodes whose addresses are
bigger than 63.
.s
.hl1 THE HIERARCHY AND ASSOCIATED JARGON
.s
In today's TOPS-10 networks, each node must know about the existance
of up to 62 other nodes.  To spread routing information, each node
sends a list of its neighbors to each other node in the net.
Associated with each neighbor is the cost of reaching it.  The routing
algorithm uses that information to determine the best neighbor to send
messages to every node in the network.  The optimal path may be
determined solely because of the total knowledge base a node has of
the network.
.s
To build large networks, I propose a hierarchy build of areas whose 
number of nodes grow exponentially.  Let's define a level 0 area to be
a single node.  A level 1 area would be analogous to today's network
and would be a group of up to x level 0 areas, or x nodes.  A level 2
area would be a group of up to x level 1 areas, or in general, a level
n area would be a group of up to x level (n-1) areas.  The maximum
number of nodes in a level n area would then be x**n, so we can see
that x has a lower bound of 2.  Just what x should be seems to be a
matter of personal choice.  Something like making x equal the highest
area level needed may be attractive mathematically, but I will leave
that to the computer scientists.  There are benefits of keeping x
small and large.  If it is kept small, the routing database will be
smallest, becoming minimal at x=2, but the larger the routing database
is the better we can route messages.
.s
From an administrative point of view, it would be attractive to assign
level numbers to individual administrators.  Therefore, at a level one
area, the Marlboro development systems could have their own area and
we could assign node numbers within our area as we see fit.  Maynard
could do the same and make PK1 be a level 1 area and could assign node
numbers as they wish.  For the two groups to be able to communicate,
we would simply have to agree on different level 1 area numbers.  I
suggest that something like 31 subareas per area would be manageable,
both from administrative and memory availability information.  I will
not attempt to access the routing efficiency of various values of x in
variable sized networks.
.s
The following table shows the maximum size of networks varying both x
and the highest level.  A standard practice in MACRO-10 is to only
fill a listing page of code 2/3s full to allow room to grow but still
be reasonably compact.  The column for x=20 is interesting because it
is what one would get if he filled his x=31 areas only 2/3s full.
.s
.tp8
.literal
                        X values
           2      10       20       31         63
         ----------------------------------------
      0 !  1       1        1        1          1
      1 !  2      10       20       31         63
Level 2 !  4     100      400      961       3969
      3 !  8    1000     8000    29791     250047
      4 ! 16   10000   160000   923521   15752961
.end literal
.s
Another definition that will be useful later is the term "routing
level".  This is a characteristic of a node and is the smallest level
number needed to encompass a node and its neighbors.  In the text
below, the phrase 'level x node' will be an abbreviation for 'node
whose routing level is x'.
.s2
.hl1 SAMPLE NETWORK
.s
On the next page is a diagram of a hierarchical network which I will
use to disucss the mechanics of hierarchical routing.  Each ring in
the drawing surrounds an area.  These rings are associated with the
various levels, the level number being equivalent to the number of
rings that must be crossed to get to a particular node number (or
level 0 number).  A node address may be formed by summing the numbers
associated with each ring over all the levels.  For example, the node
closest to the upper right corner has the address 10223.  It is 
located in the level 1 area with the address 10200, and therefore is
in level 2 address 10000.  If any level 1 area stood alone, like area
10200, what would be left would be the sort of network we can support
today.  It is the connections between areas of order greater than 1
that this paper defines.
.s
For expositional purposes, the top level area covers the entire
network.  It needs no address since messages are never routed outside.
Therefore, I will call it area 0 when I need to refer to the highest
level area.  Also, if I am discussing some area, its address is
unnecessary to describe areas below it and will usually be omitted.
For example, area 4400 in area 10000 is area 14400 and node 4411 is
node 14411.
.s
The drawing also demonstrates the routing level concept.  Node 14411's
routing level is 1 since it and its neighbors are within area 4400.
Likewise, node 14422 is level 2 and nodes 10520 and 70707 level 3.
Incidentally, area 10500 isn't a star network.
.s2
.hl1 HIGH ORDER ROUTING
.s
Message routing involves moving a message from one area toward
another.  Routing is done on the level of the lowest order level that
encompasses both the node presently holding the message (the source
node or an intermediate) and destination.  A message will never be
routed out of that area.  To be able to route between any two nodes in
a network, a node must be able to route to all areas (except its own)
one level below each level of its hierarchy.  For example, node 14411
must be able to route to areas 60000 and 70000 within area 0, areas
100, 200, 300, and 500 within area 10000, and nodes 22 and 33 within
area 4400.
.s
One might ask if a node only needed to know how to route to a level
one higher than its routing level.  Could nodes pass messages to nodes
with successively higher routing levels to approach the destination?
The answer is no.  While this works in a tree structured hierarchy, it fails
.page
.literal

                                    0
    
    
             100                   1000                   200
    
         1                                              3
                3                                             23
    
           2                                          10
     
                                                          6
    
    
    
                                  4400
    
                                      11     33
    
                                      22
    
    
                500                                    300
             
             5                                       1      2
       
        25      10                    
    
         20   15                                     3      4
    
    
    
    
          6000
    
    
            600                   3000                    700
                 
                 6                 100                      7
    
            
           5      7                 3                    7000
    
.end literal
.page
badly in an arbitrary topology network because messages between
nodes with high routing levels must pass through nodes with low
routing levels.  For example, if we assigned equal cost to all lines
in the network and node 14411 wanted to send a message to 60606, it
might send it to node 33 since it interfaces to a higher level.
However, node 33 knows that the minimum cost path to area 60000 is via
500 and since the minimum cost path to 500 is via 11, it will send the
message back.  This could repeat indefinitely and hence is not a
viable design.
.s2
.hl1 IMPLEMENTATION
.s
.hl2 Neighbors
.s
As mentioned before, the NEIGHBORS message is used in NCL to learn the
topology of today's level 1 networks.  This message contains data the
network cannot afford to lose since it is sent only to nodes when they
come up or when the local topology changes.  To guarantee delivery it
is a numbered message which means that NCL must have gone through its
end to end startup sequence before NEIGHBORS messages are exchanged.
To extend this mechanism to hierarchical networks, two rules will have
to be changed.  First, nodes will have to start NCL with a node in
each area one level below all areas in a node's hierarchy between
level 1 and the node's routing level.  Therefore, node 10520 will have
to start NCL with nodes 5, 10, 15, 20, 25, 102, 203, 303, 4422, 30103,
60606, 70707.  Note that for a level 1 node, NCL startup will occur
exactly as it does today.  Second, NEIGHBORS messages will have to be
sent between nodes in contact, which is the same as today's rules.
However, the content will become a list generated by the following
algorithm:
.s
.ls 0
.le;Let YS be the routing level of the node sending a NEIGHBORS
message and YD be the routing level of the destination.
.s
.le;If YD is greater than or equal to YS then the NEIGHBORS 
messages will contain a list of neighbors of level YS-1
adjacent to the sender's area of level YS-1.
.s
.le;If YD is less than YS then the NEIGHBORS message will contain
the list of a node from areas of level YD-1 that are adjacent 
to the sender's area of level YD-1 and the list of a node
from all areas one level below each level higher than YD+1 in
the sender's hierarchy.
.els
.s
For example, a NEIGHBORS message from node 14411 (YS=1) to 14422
(YD=1) will contain nodes 22 and 33.  From node 10102 (YS=2) to 10505
(YD=3) it will contain nodes 505, 525, and 203 and will not contain
nodes 1 or 3.  In the opposite direction it will contain nodes 10102,
14422, 10303, 30103, 60606, and 70707.  The area 10000 nodes enables
node 102 to learn about the level 1 areas within area 10000 and the
rest enable it to gain information about routing to higher levels.  It
is node 10102's responsiblity to pass this information onward to
nodes 10101 and 10103.  Note that in today's network (a topology where
all nodes have a routing level of one) NEIGHBORS messages will contain
the same data they do now.
.s
.hl2 Line Costs
.s
NEIGHBORS messages include link costs in addition to nodes it
interfaces with.  When doing level Y routing, should a node be
concerned with costs of sending messages between levels less than Y?
If it did, that information would allow more accurate routing but
would require NCL in a node of level Y with  all nodes of level  Y or
higher in an area of level Y+1.  For example, node 14422 would have to
start with nodes 10101 and 10102 since they may provide different
costs about interfacing to area 10200.  If it only started with 
one node, routing would be based on inconsistant costs and message
looping might occur.  To maintain a database size proportional to
log(n), a node must not have to start NCL with more than one node in
high level areas.  Therefore, I specify here that a node need only
start with one node in areas outside of its level 1 area and that
routing on level Y will be based on the costs for routing between
level Y-1 areas.
.s2
.hl1 ACCESSING NODES IN MULTILEVEL NETWORK.
.s
NCL will require changes in areas other than routing to permit a node
to access all others outside its level 1 area.  In level 2 and higher
areas, a node will not know of the existance of all the nodes in the
network, but will be able to route a message far enough to reach a
node that knows about the desired destination.  Before any significant
information between NCL nodes can begin, NCL between the two must be
started.  Therefore, we will need a mechanism to do this in multilevel
networks.  If node A wishes to communicate with node B but level 2 or
higher routing is required to do that, no new problems will occur if
node B exists.  If node B does not exist and node A sends a NCL START
to it, some intermediate node will discover that the message is
undeliverable.  Instead of simply discarding the message as the
current NCL specifies, I propose a more responsive mechanism, i.e.
the intermediate must return a new unnumbered message, which I will
call STOP, back to node A claiming node B as the source.
.s
Once NCL is running, nodes A and B may exchange any numbered messages
including CONNECTs, DISCONNECTs, and DATA.  After all the connections
are broken, the two ends will probably want to terminate NCL to reduce
their database.  This could be done immediately after the last
connection is broken, but I would prefer to see it happen after some
time delay since it is very common for a user to break a connection
and try another immediately.  To terminate NCL, a node will send a
STOP message.  Since STOP messages are unnumbered, it may be lost,
however that case will be handled as a side effect of the next
section.
.s
Another problem exists if node B should go down since that information
will not be transmitted outside its level 1 area.  I propose that
three mechanisms be used to detect and service this case:
.s
.ls 0
.le;If a node receives a message that cannot be delivered, it
will return a STOP message to the sender on the behalf of the
nonexistant destination, but only if the message received is
not a STOP message. (Replying to STOP messages loses big if
both nodes go down while there is traffic in the net for
them ....).  This generalizes the paragraph that introduced the
STOP message.
.s
.le;If no messages have been sent recently, a node will send a
REP (NCL REP, not DDCMP REP) and expect an ACK or STOP
message in return.
.s
.le;To catch nodes that restart NCL faster than the REP mechanism
can catch, nodes that receive messages in states that do not
allow that message (like receiving a REP when NCL isn't
running) will reply with STOP messages to provide fast
response to letting the sender know that he has to restart
NCL.
.els;
.s2
.hl1 FRAGMENTED AREAS
.s
To this point I have ignored area 10300 which is broken in two pieces.
This is an invalid configuration and offers some of the problems seen
when two nodes in a network claim to have the same node address.  This
situation can be detected by the high level routing nodes in that area
when they receive NEIGHBORS messages from nodes outside of area 10300
that claim nodes in area 10300 to be neighbors that the receiver
doesn't know about.  For example, node 10302 will receive a NEIGHBORS
message from area 10500 listing node 10303 as a neighbor.  Node 10302
can notice that it has never heard of that node but can't really do
much except notify the operator.  (Note that if the area was properly
connected and node 10303 went down, node 10302 would probably learn
that before area 10500 tells it of the event.  This means that if a
node tries to detect fragmented areas it must be able to handle that.)
.s
The effect of a fragmented area is not too severe.  Message routing
that does not try to route through that area will not be impacted, and
routing at levels lower than the fragmented area will never be
impacted.  Of course, the maintainer of that area should never let it
fragment, but I can offer no good cure.
.s2
.hl1 CONCLUSIONS
.s
Ancient Greek philosophers got themselves into all sorts of trouble by
thinking about problems without bothering to perform experiments to
test their results.  I have done no better.  This proposal contains
the results of a couple days active thought and a year's worth of idle
contemplation.  No simulations have been run, no algorithms have been
proven, no experiments done, and I may be claiming that a heavy node
falls faster than a light one.  It is, however, a start.  One problem
that I'm sure this proposal exacerbates is network congestion.  I
believe we already have a significant number of problems, and reducing
the information used to route messages cannot improve matters.  The
goal of this memo has been merely to record what I know on the subject
before I leave DEC.  It's up to you guys to make it work!