Fast Local Internet Protocol
This article needs additional citations for verification. (February 2013) |
The Fast Local Internet Protocol (FLIP) is a communication protocol for LAN and WAN, conceived for distributed applications. FLIP was designed at the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam to support remote procedure call (RPC) in the Amoeba distributed operating system.[1]
Comparison to TCP/IP
[edit]In the OSI model, FLIP occupies the network layer (3), thus replacing IP, but it also obviates the need for a transport layer (4) protocol like TCP.
Layer | OSI | TCP/IP | FLIP |
---|---|---|---|
7 | Application | User-defined | User-defined |
6 | Presentation | User-defined | Amoeba Interface Language (AIL) |
5 | Session | Not used | RPC and Group communication |
4 | Transport | TCP or UDP | Not needed |
3 | Network | IP | FLIP |
2 | Data Link | E.g., Ethernet | E.g., Ethernet |
1 | Physical | E.g., Coaxial cable | E.g., Coaxial cable |
Properties
[edit]FLIP is a connectionless protocol designed to support transparency (with respect to the underlying network layers of the OSI model: 2. data link and 1. physical), efficient RPC, group communication, secure communication and easy network management. The following FLIP properties helps to achieve the requirements of distributed computing:[1]
- FLIP identifies entities with a location-independent 64-bit identifier called Network Service Access Points (NSAPs). An entity can, for example, be a process; contrary to the IP protocol where an IP address identifies a host.
- FLIP uses a one-way mapping between the “private” address, used to register an endpoint of a network connection, and the “public” address used to advertise the endpoint.
- FLIP routes messages based on NSAP (transparency).
- FLIP discovers routes on demand.
- FLIP uses a bit in the message header to request transmission of sensitive messages across trusted networks.
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b c M. Frans Kaashoek, Robbert van Renesse, Hans van Staveren, and Andrew S. Tanenbaum. 1993. FLIP: an internetwork protocol for supporting distributed systems. ACM Trans. Comput. Syst. 11, 1 (Feb. 1993), 73–106. https://doi.org/10.1145/151250.151253