On 06/15/99 10:13:44 AM Vadim Antonov wrote:
Please. Caching is _at least_ as efficient as multicasting (multicasting _is_ caching, with zero retention time) - w/o associated security and scalability problems. Presenting L2/L3 multicasting as the best or the
only
or even a meaningful way to reduce transmission duplication is quite wrong.
The benefits are obivous though and router vendors are definitely
research or data to support these assertions? and how does caching magically negate security and scalability concerns? what tools are you using to do content replication/management that scale to thousands of hosts/caches? even if i assume caching is as efficient, or more so, than multicast, i'm still just trading one set of security/scalability concerns for others. caching is no more a silver bullet than multicast. progressing,
but as with any technology, debugging and getting the protocols to a usable state, one to which SLA/SLGs can be assoicated, takes time.
The benefits of mining cheap cheese on the Moon are quite obvious. If you're willing to overlook the small fact that the Moon isn't made from cheese.
well, i can't deny this assertion, although i've never been to the moon.
_No_ technological advances can help the fact that L2/L3 multicasts cannot be routed in a scalable fashion. Think what happens when there is 1mil multicast trees in the network.
I think blaming vendors for inability to build products which run faster than the proven lower boundaries for the required kind of algorithms is, er, strange.
i won't deny the potential scalability problems but i think your generalizing/oversimplifying to say caching just works and has no security or scalability concerns. -brett