Expanding the Address space through REBEKAH-IP: An Architectural View
(2002) INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY & APPLICATION, ICITA 2002- Abstract
- The advent of 2.5 and 3G networks mark the
beginning of the mobile Internet. The investments in these
technologies will be the largest in the history of
telecommunication. However, their success will largely depend on
the availability of successful services and initially these will
largely constitute existing services. These services all reside in the
current IPv4 address space which make them inaccessible to
mobile Internet terminals that will reside in the IPv6 address
space.
There have been many proposals in literature for translating
between the two address spaces, but as we will show, they all have
shortcomings that make them unsuitable... (More) - The advent of 2.5 and 3G networks mark the
beginning of the mobile Internet. The investments in these
technologies will be the largest in the history of
telecommunication. However, their success will largely depend on
the availability of successful services and initially these will
largely constitute existing services. These services all reside in the
current IPv4 address space which make them inaccessible to
mobile Internet terminals that will reside in the IPv6 address
space.
There have been many proposals in literature for translating
between the two address spaces, but as we will show, they all have
shortcomings that make them unsuitable for large scale
deployment in the mobile Internet. In this paper, we detail the
algorithms and mechanisms of our proposal for overcoming the
shortcomings of the previous proposals. We also present
experimental results from early experiments that justify our
implementation design decisions. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/3216698
- author
- Landfeldt, Björn LU ; Rattananon, S. and Seneviratne, A.
- publishing date
- 2002
- type
- Contribution to conference
- publication status
- published
- subject
- conference name
- INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY & APPLICATION, ICITA 2002
- conference location
- Bathurst, Australia
- conference dates
- 2002-11-24 - 2002-11-28
- external identifiers
-
- scopus:1842580718
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- no
- id
- 546db73a-4674-4f46-a85d-c5a57bb75999 (old id 3216698)
- alternative location
- http://sydney.edu.au/engineering/it/~bjornl/research/papers/icita_118.pdf
- date added to LUP
- 2016-04-04 13:03:38
- date last changed
- 2022-01-29 23:41:18
@misc{546db73a-4674-4f46-a85d-c5a57bb75999, abstract = {{The advent of 2.5 and 3G networks mark the<br/><br> beginning of the mobile Internet. The investments in these<br/><br> technologies will be the largest in the history of<br/><br> telecommunication. However, their success will largely depend on<br/><br> the availability of successful services and initially these will<br/><br> largely constitute existing services. These services all reside in the<br/><br> current IPv4 address space which make them inaccessible to<br/><br> mobile Internet terminals that will reside in the IPv6 address<br/><br> space.<br/><br> There have been many proposals in literature for translating<br/><br> between the two address spaces, but as we will show, they all have<br/><br> shortcomings that make them unsuitable for large scale<br/><br> deployment in the mobile Internet. In this paper, we detail the<br/><br> algorithms and mechanisms of our proposal for overcoming the<br/><br> shortcomings of the previous proposals. We also present<br/><br> experimental results from early experiments that justify our<br/><br> implementation design decisions.}}, author = {{Landfeldt, Björn and Rattananon, S. and Seneviratne, A.}}, language = {{eng}}, title = {{Expanding the Address space through REBEKAH-IP: An Architectural View}}, url = {{http://sydney.edu.au/engineering/it/~bjornl/research/papers/icita_118.pdf}}, year = {{2002}}, }