Off topic - research query

Howdy from Australia. I am in the process of doing some research for an article on our present bandwidth difficulties in Oz. As a side issue, I wanted to cover the "overhead" factor inherent in the TCP/IP (v4?) protocol which I understand is reduced under the proposed IPv.6 protocol. I'd also like to discuss the "unfriendly" manner in which web browsers such as Netscape hog resources by sending multiple port access requests. Can anyone point me towards recent papers which deal with these issues? TIA Mark ___ Mark Neely - accessnt@ozemail.com.au Lawyer, Professional Cynic Author: Australian Beginner's Guide to the Internet Work-in-Progress: Australian Business Guide to the Internet WWW: http://www.ozemail.com.au/~accessnt

Mark Neely wrote: | As a side issue, I wanted to cover the "overhead" | factor inherent in the TCP/IP (v4?) protocol | which I understand is reduced under the proposed IPv.6 protocol. Comer is the best text on IP, his third edition talks about IPv6 as well as v4. Essentally, there was a some unneeded stuff in IPv4 headers, which routers had to look at. The IPv6 headers are much cleaner. | I'd also like to discuss the "unfriendly" manner in which | web browsers such as Netscape hog resources by sending multiple | port access requests. Our own Simon Spero has a paper entitled something like 'Optimizations for HTTP.' Its on the w3.org web server. Speaking of HTTP-ng, I was thinking the other day about a scheme for further optimization. It only works in the presense of dnssec, which is moving forward. When getting a URL, add a meta tag, which gives the web server's idea of what the referenced hosts IP address (or its primary NS) is. This could be a win because we need fewer calls to the root name servers. Those calls tend to be short, (1 or 2 udp packets each way), which need to be routed in a way that few other packets would need to be. By eliminating them, we push all of the traffic regarding a web host to its network. This only works under DNSsec because otherwise I could say http://www.microsoft.com/ meta-dns-A=140.174.1.3 Adam -- "It is seldom that liberty of any kind is lost all at once." -Hume
participants (2)
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Adam Shostack
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Mark Neely