The Click modular router has been one of the most popular software router platforms for rapid prototyping and new protocol development. Unfortunately, its internal architecture has not caught up with recent hardware advancements, and the performance remains sub-optimal in high-speed networks despite its benefit of flexible module composition.In this work, we identify the performance bottlenecks of the existing Click router and extend it to scale with modern computer systems. Our improvements focus on both I/O and computation batching, and include various optimizations for multi-core systems and multi-queue network cards. We find that these techniques improve the performance by almost a factor of 10, and the maximum throughput reaches 28 Gbps of minimum-sized IPv4 packet forwarding speed on a single machine.
The current architecture supporting data services to mobile devices is built below the network layer (IP) and users receive the payload at the application layer. Between them is the transport layer that can cause data consumption inflation due to the retransmission mechanism that provides reliable delivery. In this paper, we examine the accounting policies of five large cellular ISPs in the U.S. and South Korea. We look at their policies regarding the transport layer reliability mechanism with TCP's retransmission and show that the current implementation of accounting policies either fails to meet the billing fairness or is vulnerable to charge evasions. Three of the ISPs surveyed charge for all IP packets regardless of retransmission, allowing attackers to inflate a victim's bill by intentionally retransmitting packets. The other two ISPs deduct the retransmitted amount from the user's bill thus allowing tunneling through TCP retransmissions. We show that a "free-riding" attack is viable with these ISPs and discuss some of the mitigation techniques.
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