代寫CSCI-GA、代做Java編程語言

            時間:2024-05-15  來源:  作者: 我要糾錯



            New York University
            Computer Science Department
            Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences
            Course Title: Data Communications & Networks Course Number: CSCI-GA.2662-001
            Assignment 8: Final Project
            I. Due
             Friday May 14, 2024 by 11:59 pm ET.

            II. Objectives
            Software-defined networking (SDN) is a recent paradigm for running networks. As
            per the networking layer topics covered in the course, the network is divided into
            the control and data planes. The control plane provides a set of protocols and
            configurations that set up the forwarding elements (hosts, switches, and routers) so
            that they can forward packets. This includes, for example, ARP resolution, DNS,
            DHCP, the Spanning Tree Protocol, MAC learning, NAT and access control
            configuration, as well as all of the routing protocols. Usually, switches and routers
            have to run all of these protocols, detect topology changes, issue heartbeats, manage
            caches, timeouts, etc. Meanwhile, in many cases network administrators achieve
            desired goals with the network indirectly, by tweaking parameters in the routing
            protocols like link weights and local BGP preference. While the data plane is nicely
            organized in the familiar layered scheme, the aggregate structure of the control
            plane is a lot less clean.
            SDN is a radical departure from this organization. The main idea is a separation of
            the control plane from the forwarding elements. SDN switches and routers do not
            run control plane protocols and mostly only forward packets based on matching of
            packet predicates to a set of forwarding rules. They export a simple API to
            configure these rules, as well as some feedback about current and past packets. An
            accepted standard for this API is the OpenFlow protocol, which has been
            implemented by dozens of switch vendors and has fostered a rich software
            ecosystem. The intelligence of the control plane is (logically) centralized in a
            network controller. The controller decides which rules to install based on its
            configuration, and on a global view of the network topology and flows.
            In this project, you will implement the logic in such a controller to manage the
            following:
            1. A layer-3 routing application that installs rules in SDN switches to forward
            traffic to hosts using the shortest, valid path through the network. Your
            application logic will manage the efficient switching of packets among hosts in
            a large LAN with multiple switches and potential loops. You will write the code
            for a SDN controller application that will compute and install shortest path
            routes among all the hosts in your network. SDN as described is suitable for
            networks under a single administrative domain (e.g., the network in a single
            AS), but there are ongoing research projects to use its flexibility across
            domains, integrating with and perhaps even replacing BGP.
            2. A distributed load balancer application that redirect new TCP connections to
            hosts in a round-robin order.
            As always, the NYU and class policy about plagiarism must be followed in this
            project. If you use ANY code in your project that is not of your own creation,
            then you MUST attribute that code to the author, even if you modify it (ANY
            modification).
            III. References

            1. Slides and handouts posted on the course Web site
            2. Textbook chapters as applicable
            3. Mininet network emulator documentation (http://mininet.org/)
            4. Openflow documentation (https://www.opennetworking.org/sdn-resources/onfspecifications/openflow)
            5. Open vSwitch switch software documentation (http://openvswitch.org)
            6. Floodlight Java-based SDN controller documentation
            (https://floodlight.atlassian.net/wiki/spaces/floodlightcontroller/overview)
            7. If you have additional questions about SDN, OpenFlow, or Floodlight you may
            want to consult: openflow-switch-v1.5.1.pdf (opennetworking.org) (sections 2, 3,
            and 5.1 - 5.4 are likely to be the most useful), and Floodlight-plus Javadoc
            8. Additional readings:
             Software Defined Networking Concepts
             The Road to SDN: An Intellectual History of Programmable Networks
             SDN Reading List
            IV. Software Required
            1. Microsoft Word
            2. Win Zip as necessary
            3. Oracle VirtualBox
            4. Virtual Box Image with all necessary software provided
            5. Java Programming language, Eclipse, and other development tools installed in
            Virtual Box Image provided
            6. Additional code for Part 4
            V. Assignment
            This is a final take-home project that can be completed individually or as a team
            (only two students per team).
            1. Background:
            You will run the code for this project in an emulated network inside of a single
            Linux VM. You will use the Mininet network emulator, which is designed to
            emulate arbitrary topologies of emulated OpenFlow switches and Linux hosts.
            It uses container-based virtualization for very light-weight emulated nodes. The
            switches in your network run the open source Open vSwitch switch software,
            which implements the Openflow protocol. The switches connect to an
            Openflow network controller, and you will use Floodlight, a relatively mature
            Java-based controller. We will use OpenFlow version 1.0 for this project. Your
            SDN applications will be written in Java and run atop the Floodlight OpenFlow
            controller. You will use Mininet to emulate a variety of network topologies
            consisting of OpenFlow switches and hosts.
            Code you run on Mininet is ready to run with no changes in real networks.
            2. Environment Setup:
            a. Install Oracle VirtualBox as necessary.
            b. Download the Virtual Box Image with all necessary software provided. It is
            a .ova image that will enable you to run the necessary software on your
            computer using the latest version of Oracle VirtualBox. To install the .ova
            file go to File and Import Appliance on VirtualBox. This VM uses “mininet”
            as username and password.
            c. To ssh into the VM from your host computer, log in first using the GUI,
            open a terminal, and type ifconfig. This will show you the IP addresses of
            the VM. You will be able to connect to one of them from your host computer
            via ssh. The VM also has Eclipse installed, which you can use inside the
            VirtualBox graphical console or remotely via X. Once you have ssh’d into
            the VM, you can go through the following steps to run your control
            applications.
            d. Optional (see acknowledgement in item 8 below):
            Refactor edu.brown.cs.sdn.apps.sps to edu.nyu.cs.sdn.apps.sps
            e. Compile Floodlight and your applications:
            $ cd ~/project3/
            $ ant
            This will produce a jar file FloodlightWithApps.jar that includes the
            compiled code for Floodlight and your SDN applications.
            f. Start Floodlight and your SDN applications:
            $ java -jar FloodlightWithApps.jar -cf l3routing.prop
            The above command will start Floodlight and only your layer-3 routing
            application. The .prop file configures your application.
            Note: For future reference when working on part 4, you can start both your
            layer-3 routing and load balancer applications by using
            loadbalancer.prop for the -cf (configuration file) argument. The
            loadbalancer application code is provided separately.
            You should always start Floodlight and your SDN applications
            before starting Mininet. Also, we recommend that you restart Floodlight
            and your SDN applications whenever you restart Mininet.
            Note: In the VirtualBox image, it is possible that the system will start an
            openvswitch-controller process by default, which means your
            Floodlight controller will not be able to bind to port 6633. To prevent it
            from starting the next time you boot up, do:
            $ sudo update-rc.d -f openvswitch-controller remove
            When Floodlight starts, you should see output like the following:
            23:18:45.874 INFO [n.f.c.m.FloodlightModuleLoader:main] Loading modules from file shortestPathSwitching.prop
            23:18:46.277 INFO [n.f.c.i.Controller:main] Controller role set to MASTER
            23:18:46.285 INFO [n.f.c.i.Controller:main] Flush switches on reconnect -- Disabled
            23:18:46.302 INFO [ArpServer:main] Initializing ArpServer...
            23:18:46.302 INFO [ShortestPathSwitching:main] Initializing ShortestPathSwitching...
            23:18:48.533 INFO [n.f.l.i.LinkDiscoveryManager:main] Setting autoportfast feature to OFF
            23:18:48.579 INFO [ArpServer:main] Starting ArpServer...
            23:18:48.580 INFO [ShortestPathSwitching:main] Starting ShortestPathSwitching...
            23:18:48.700 INFO [o.s.s.i.c.FallbackCCProvider:main] Cluster not yet configured; using fallback local configuration
            23:18:48.701 INFO [o.s.s.i.SyncManager:main] [32767] Updating sync configuration ClusterConfig
            [allNodes={32767=Node [hostname=localhost, port=6642, nodeId=32767, domainId=32767]},
            authScheme=NO_AUTH, keyStorePath=null, keyStorePassword is unset]
            23:18:48.790 INFO [o.s.s.i.r.RPCService:main] Listening for internal floodlight RPC on localhost/127.0.0.1:6642
            23:18:48.978 INFO [n.f.c.i.Controller:main] Listening for switch connections on 0.0.0.0/0.0.0.0:6633
            Keep the terminal with Floodlight open, as you will need to see the output
            for debugging. Use another terminal for the next step.
            g. Start Mininet:
            $ sudo ./run_mininet.py single,3
            The above command will create a topology with a single SDN switch (s1)
            and three hosts (h1 - h3) directly connected to the switch:
            You can change the number of hosts by changing the numeric value
            included in the arguments to the run_mininet.sh script. You can also start
            Mininet with four other topologies:
             linear,n: a chain of n switches with one host connected to each
            switch; for example, linear,3 produces the following topology:
             tree,n: a tree of depth n with a single root switch (s1) and two hosts
            connected to each leaf switch; for example tree,2 produces the
            following topology:
             assign1: creates the following topology (the name is this way for
            historical reasons):
             triangle: creates the following topology:
             mesh,n: a complete graph with n switches and one host attached to
            each switch; for example, mesh,5 produces the following topology:
             someloops: creates the following topology:
            Once mininet has started, you should see Floodlight produce output like the
            following:
            23:24:10.304 INFO [n.f.c.i.OFChannelHandler:New I/O server worker #2-1] New switch connection from /127.0.0.1:58911
            23:24:10.329 INFO [n.f.c.i.OFChannelHandler:New I/O server worker #2-1] Disconnected switch [/127.0.0.1:58911 DPID[?]]
            23:24:11.016 INFO [n.f.c.i.OFChannelHandler:New I/O server worker #2-2] New switch connection from /127.0.0.1:58912
            23:24:11.101 INFO [n.f.c.i.OFChannelHandler:New I/O server worker #2-2] Switch OFSwitchBase
            [/127.0.0.1:58912 DPID[00:00:00:00:00:00:00:01]] bound to class class
            net.floodlightcontroller.core.internal.OFSwitchImpl, writeThrottle=false,
            description OFDescriptionStatistics [Vendor: Nicira, Inc., Model: Open vSwitch,
            Make: None, Version: 2.0.2, S/N: None]
            23:24:11.104 INFO [n.f.c.OFSwitchBase:New I/O server worker #2-2] Clearing all flows on switch
            OFSwitchBase [/127.0.0.1:58912 DPID[00:00:00:00:00:00:00:01]]
            23:24:11.107 WARN [n.f.c.i.C.s.notification:main] Switch 00:00:00:00:00:00:00:01 connected.
            23:24:11.108 INFO [ShortestPathSwitching:main] Switch s1 added
            23:24:11.138 INFO [ShortestPathSwitching:Topology Updates] Link s1:0 -> host updated
            23:24:11.211 INFO [ShortestPathSwitching:Topology Updates] Link s1:1 -> host updated
            23:24:11.212 INFO [ShortestPathSwitching:Topology Updates] Link s1:3 -> host updated
            for debugging. Use another terminal for the next step.
            h. You can now run commands (e.g., ping) and the like in Mininet. Note that
            initially ping will not work, as your switches do not know how to do
            anything. After your controller installs the correct rules, things should work.
            3. Layer-3 “Shortest-Path Switching” Routing Application Implementation:
            Your first SDN controller application consists of code that will run in an SDN
            controller to compute, install, and maintain shortest paths on a large local area
            subnet. Given a packet destined to an MAC address, your network will use a
            shortest path among the switches to deliver it to the host. The hosts in the project
            will not be changed in any way, it is only the switches in the network that will
            behave differently. While all the hosts in this project will be in the same subnet,
            we will not use any broadcasts, including for ARP. When a host wants to send
            a packet to the IP address of another host in the network, it will first, as it usually
            does, issue an ARP request. When this reaches the first switch, though, the
            switch will send the ARP request to the controller instead of flooding the
            request. The controller, who knows the topology, will respond to the ARP
            request, through the same switch, to the original sender, with the MAC address
            of the destination. The controller will also have installed rules on the switches
            for forwarding to each destination MAC.
            Your task is therefore to build a global shortest-path switching table and install
            forwarding rules on the switches to implement these paths. You will build this
            table on the controller based on global topology information the controller
            gathers. Your application will construct route tables based on a global view of
            the network topology. The appropriate route table will then be installed in each
            SDN switch, and each SDN switch will forward packets according to the route
            table installed by your application.
            Differently from regular L2 switches or L3 routers, SDN switches do not hold
            MAC learning tables or routing tables (used in traditional layer-3 routers).
            Rather, they use a more general flow table structure, which can replace these,
            as well as MAC learning tables (used in traditional layer-2 switches), and many
            other constructs. Each entry, or rule, in a flow table has match criteria that
            defines (on the basis of fields in Ethernet, IP, TCP, UDP, and other headers)
            which packets the rule applies to. Each entry also has one or more
            instructions/actions which should be taken for each packet that matches the
            rule. There is no concept of a “gateway” in SDN flow tables, but that is okay—
            your router only uses the gateway to determine how to rewrite a packet’s
            destination MAC address to ensure correct layer-2 forwarding, and we are not
            using traditional layer-2 forwarding in SDN.
            Your layer-3 “Shortest-Path Switching” routing application will install entries
            that match packets based on their destination IP address (and Ethernet type),
            and execute an output action to send the packet out a specific port on the SDN
            switch. (You will use other match criteria and additional instructions/actions
            for the other SDN application you will write, which is described in Part 4 of
            this project.) The match criteria serve the same purpose as the destination and
            mask fields in a traditional route table, and the output action servers the same
            purpose as the interface field in a traditional route table. In the aggregate, your
            network will resemble a network in which all switches have converged with the
            spanning tree protocol and MAC learning, with one important difference: your
            topology is not constrained to a tree, as you are installing paths individually and
            loops should not be a problem. In fact, you must test that your solution works
            on topologies with loops.
            After the rules are all installed, the process a host will go through to send an
            IP packet to a destination IP address is as follows:
            a. Host OS determines that the node is in the same subnet (will always
            be true in this assignment). This means the node will send the packet
            to the IP destination as an Ethernet frame destined to the MAC
            address of the destination (as opposed to the MAC address of a
            gateway or router).
            b. Host OS issues an ARP request to determine the destination MAC
            address (if not already cached at the OS).
            c. The first switch to see the ARP request, rather than broadcasting it,
            sends it to the controller as a PacketIn message.
            d. The Floodlight module ArpServer (which we provide, see the util
            package) will respond with the if this host has sent any Ethernet
            frames before.
            e. The host OS will send the IP packet to the destination’s MAC
            address.
            f. At each switch along the path to the destination (as determined
            previously by your code), the packet will match on the destination
            MAC address and be forwarded on the correct port.
            3.1 Code Overview
            You will complete the implementation of a Floodlight module in the file
            ShortestPathSwitching.java in edu.brown.cs.sdn.apps.sps (or
            edu.nyu.cs.sdn.apps.sps if you refactored that package earlier).
            The file we provided already contains code to:
             Access host and topology information from other modules (or
            applications) included with Floodlight – see the getHosts(),
            getSwitches(), and getLinks()methods.
             Receive notifications about changes in the network: see the
            deviceAdded(), deviceRemoved(), deviceMoved(),
            switchAdded(), switchRemoved(), and
            linkDiscoveryUpdate() methods
            We have also provided code in the edu.brown.cs.sdn.apps.util
            package (or edu.nyu.cs.sdn.apps.util) if you refactored that package
            earlier) for:
             A Floodlight module that responds to ARP requests from hosts – see
            ArpServer.java
             Telling a switch to install a rule in the flow table, remove rules from
            the flow table, and send a packet – see SwitchCommands.java.
            In this project we will install rules to reach all hosts we know about. In the
            launch script for Mininet we have added instructions for all hosts to issue
            an arping, which allows the controller to learn about the hosts’ presence
            and populate its ARP cache.
            3.2 To-Do’s
            You need to complete the To-Do’s in ShortestPathSwitching.java to
            install and remove flow table entries from SDN switches such that traffic is
            forwarded to a host using the shortest path.
            You should use either the Bellman-Ford or Djikstra algorithms to compute
            the shortest paths to reach a host h from every other host h’ ∈ H, h ≠
            h’ (H is the set of all hosts). You can use the getHosts(), getSwitches(),
            and getLinks() methods to get the topology information that you need to
            provide as input to the Bellman-Ford algorithm.
            Once you have determined the shortest path to reach host h from h’, you
            must install a rule in the flow table in every switch in the path. The rule
            should match IP packets (i.e., Ethernet type is IPv4) whose destination
            MAC is the MAC address assigned to host h. You can specify this in
            Floodlight by creating a new OFMatch object and calling the set methods for
            the appropriate fields. The rule’s action should be to output packets on the
            appropriate port in order to reach the next switch in the path. You can
            specify this in Floodlight by creating an
            OFInstructionApplyActions object whose set of actions consists of a
            single OFActionOutput object with the appropriate port number.
            SDN switches have multiple flow tables (we discuss this more in Part 4
            below). For now, you should install rules in the table specified in the
            table class variable in the ShortestPathSwitching class. Also, your
            rules should never timeout and have a default priority (both defined as
            constants in the SwitchCommands class). When the topology changes you
            will have to recompute a subset of the paths. For this assignment you may
            choose to recompute all of the topology or be more efficient and only
            remove and install the rules that need to change.
            Part 3 Extra Credit:
             Implement flooding without loops (essentially calculate and install
            a spanning tree for broadcasts).
             Implement ECMP on networks with multiple paths (determine the
            number of paths between two nodes) and install rules that match on,
            say, even and odd TCP ports!
            3.3 Testing and Debugging
            You should test your code by sending traffic between various hosts in the
            network topology—Mininet’s built-in pingall command is very useful for
            this. While you MUST handle loops in the topology correctly, you can
            assume that the topology is connected (i.e., we will not test your code with
            topologies where a host is unreachable from other hosts.)
            To help you debug, you can view the contents of an SDN switchs flow tables
            by running the following command in your mininet VM (not in Mininet
            itself):
            $ sudo ovs-ofctl -O OpenFlow13 dump-flows s1
            This will output the contents of s1’s flow tables. Change the last argument
            to output the flow tables from a different switch.
            Triggering Event Handlers:
             You can trigger the linkDiscoveryUpdate(...) event handler by
            running any of the following commands in Mininet (substituting switch
            and host names as desired):
            o link s1 s2 down — takes down the link between s1 and s2;
            you can assume the network is a connected graph, so you should
            never take down a link that would result in a disconnected graph
            o link s1 s2 up — brings up the link between s1 and s2
            o link s1 h1 down — takes down the link between s1 and h1;
            this will also result in a deviceRemoved(...) event and the
            isAttachedToSwitch() method for the Host object for h1 will
            now return false
            o link s1 h1 up — brings up the link between s1 and h1; this
            will also result in a deviceMoved(...) event and the
            isAttachedToSwitch() method for the Host object for h1 will
            now return true
             You can trigger the deviceRemoved(...) event handler by taking down a
            link between a switch and a host, as described above
             You can trigger the deviceMoved(...) event handler by bringing up a
            link between a switch and a host, as described above
             You can trigger the switchRemoved(...) event handler by running the
            following command in a regular terminal window (not in mininet):
            $ sudo ovs-vsctl del-br s1
            Note that once a switch is removed, you cannot easily add it back without
            restarting mininet. You can assume the network is a connected graph, so
            you should never remove a switch that would result in a disconnected graph.
            Known Issue: when you issue a link ... down command, sometimes we
            have seen mininet ressurect the link. This seems to be a problem with
            Mininet. In case this happens, bringing the link down a second time seems
            to kill it for good.
            4. Distributed Load Balance Routing Application Implementation:
            Networks employ load balancing to distribute client requests among a
            collection of hosts running a specific service (e.g., a web server). In class, we
            briefly discussed how DNS could be used to implement load balancing. Load
            balancing is also commonly implemented using a special piece of hardware.
            A hardware load balancer is placed in the network and configured with an IP
            address (e.g., 10.0.100.1) and a set of hosts among which it should distribute
            requests (e.g., 10.0.0.2 and 10.0.0.3). Clients wanting to communicate with
            a service (e.g., a web server) running on those hosts are provided with the IP
            address of the load balancer, not the IP address of a specific host. Clients initiate
            a TCP connection to the IP address of the load balancer (10.0.100.1) and the
            TCP port associated with the service (e.g., port 80).
            For each new TCP connection, the load balancer selects one of the specified
            hosts (usually in round robin order). The load balancer maintains a mapping of
            active connections—identified by the client’s IP and TCP port—to the assigned
            hosts.
            For all packets sent from clients to the load balancer, the load balancer rewrites
            the destination IP and MAC addresses to the IP and MAC addresses of the
            selected host. The mapping information stored by the load balancer is used to
            determine the appropriate host IP and MAC addresses that should be written
            into a packet arriving from a client. For all packets sent from servers to clients,
            the load balancer rewrites the source IP and MAC addresses to the IP and MAC
            addresses of the load balancer.
            Your second SDN application will implement the same functionality as a set of
            hardware load balancers. Your application will be provided with a list of
            virtual IPs and a set of hosts among which connections to the virtual IPs
            should be load balanced. (We use the term virtual IP because the IP address
            is not actually assigned to any node in the network.) When clients initiate TCP
            connections with a specific virtual IP, SDN switches will send the TCP SYN
            packet to the SDN controller. Your SDN application will select a host from a
            pre-defined set, and install rules in an SDN switch to rewrite the IP and MAC
            addresses of packets associated with the connection. You will also instruct the
            SDN switch to match the modified packets against the flow rules installed by
            your layer-3 routing application and apply the appropriate actions (i.e., send the
            packets out the appropriate ports).
            4.1 Code Overview
            The code for your load balancer application will reside in the
            LoadBalancer.java source file provided in finalproject-part4-
            code.zip (see edu.wisc.cs.sdn.apps.loadbalancer package). The file
            provided already contains code to:
            • Receive a notification when a switch joins the network— switchAdded(...)
            • Receive a packet from a switch when the packet did not match any
            entries in the switch’s flow table—receive(...)
            The LoadBalancerInstance class represents a single distributed load
            balancer. (We use the term distributed because the load balancing is
            performed at many switches, rather than at a single hardware load balancer.)
            Each load balancer instance has a virtual IP address, virtual MAC address,
            and set of hosts among which TCP connections should be distributed. The
            instances class variable in the LoadBalancer class maps a virtual IP address
            to a specific load balancer instance.
            4.2 To-Do’s
            It is recommended to refactor the package provided in finalproject-part4-
            code.zip to edu.nyu.cs.sdn.apps.loadbalancer (see acknowledgment
            in item 8). Also note that edu.wisc.cs.sdn.apps.l3routing is not used
            in this project.
            You need to complete the To-Do’s in LoadBalancer.java to:
            • Install rules in every switch to:
            o Notify the controller when a client initiates a TCP
            connection with a virtual IP—we cannot specify TCP
            flags in match criteria, so the SDN switch will notify the
            controller of each TCP packet sent to a virtual IP which
            did not match a connection-specific rule (described
            below)
            o Notify the controller when a client issues an ARP request
            for the MAC address associated with a virtual IP
            o Match all other packets against the rules in the next table
            in the switch (described below)
            These rules should be installed when a switch joins the network.
            • Install connection-specific rules for each new connection to a
            virtual IP to:
            o Rewrite the destination IP and MAC address of TCP
            packets sent from a client to the virtual IP
            o Rewrite the source IP and MAC address of TCP packets
            sent from server to client
            Connection-specific rules should match packets on the basis of
            Ethernet type, source IP address, destination IP address, protocol,
            TCP source port, and TCP destination port. Connection-specific
            rules should take precedence over the rules that send TCP packets
            to the controller, otherwise every TCP packet would be sent to the
            controller. Therefore, these rules should have a higher priority than
            the rules installed when a switch joins the network. Also, we want
            connection-specific rules to be removed when a TCP connection
            ends, so connection-specific rules should have an idle timeout of 20
            seconds.
            • Construct and send an ARP reply packet when a client requests
            the MAC address associated with a virtual IP
            • Construct and send a TCP reset packet if the controller receives
            a TCP packet that is not a TCP SYN
            Multiple Tables
            Your load balancer application should work in tandem with your layer-3
            “Shortest-Path Switching” routing application. To achieve this, you will
            need to leverage the multiple tables feature of OpenFlow switches. When
            packets first arrive at an OpenFlow switch, they are matched against the
            rules in table 0. The actions for these rules can specify that the packets be
            modified, output, sent to the controller, and/or matched against the rules in
            a different table.
            Your load balancer application should install rules in the table specified in
            the table class variable in the LoadBalancer class—set to table 0 in the
            loadbalancer.prop configuration file. The connection-specific rules that
            modify IP and MAC addresses should include an instruction (see Rule
            Instructions/Action paragraph below) to match the modified packets against
            the rules installed by your layer-3 routing application. Since your layer-3
            routing application will install rules in the table class variable in the
            ShortestPathSwitching class, this instruction should direct packets to the
            table defined in this class variable. The modified packet will then be
            matched against these rules and forwarded out the appropriate port.
            All packets which are not TCP packets destined for a virtual IP, or packets
            associated with a connection that has already been assigned to a specific
            host, should be send directly the table used by your layer-3 routing
            application.
            Sending TCP Resets
            Once a particular connection has been assigned to a particular host, all
            packets for that connection should be directed to that host. However, if no
            packets are transmitted for more than 20 seconds (specified by the
            IDLE_TIMEOUT constant in the LoadBalancer class), then we want to
            remove the rules that perform the rewriting for that particular connection.
            Ideally, the 20 second idle period should only occur once a flow has
            ended. However, it’s possible that an active TCP flow could also go idle
            for some time. If this happens, an entry could timeout prematurely, and the
            SDN switch will receive TCP packets destined for the virtual IP for which
            it has no connection-specific flow table entry that matches. These packets
            will instead match the lower priority rule that sends any TCP packets
            destined for the virtual IP to the controller. When the controller receives
            these TCP packets, which are not TCP SYN packets, it should construct and
            send a TCP reset. You can construct the packet using the classes in the
            net.floodlightcontroller.packet package. You can use the
            sendPacket(...) method in the SwitchCommands class to send the packet.
            Sending ARP Packets
            When a client wants to initiate a connection with the virtual IP, it will need
            to determine the MAC address associated with the virtual IP using
            ARP. The client does not know the IP is virtual, and since it’s not actually
            assigned to any host, your SDN application must take responsibility for
            replying to these requests.
            You can construct an ARP reply packet using the classes in the
            net.floodlightcontroller.packet package. You can use the
            sendPacket(...) method in the SwitchCommands class to send the
            packet.
            Rule Instructions/Actions
            When a rule should send a packet to the controller, the rule should include
            an OFInstructionApplyActions whose set of actions consists of a single
            OFActionOutput with OFPort.OFPP_CONTROLLER as the port number.
            When a rule should rewrite the destination IP and MAC addresses of a
            packet, the rule should include an OFInstructionApplyActions whose
            set of actions consists of:
            • An OFActionSetField with a field type of
            OFOXMFieldType.ETH_DST and the desired MAC address as the
            value
            • An OFActionSetField with a field type of
            OFOXMFieldType.IPV4_DST and the desired IP address as the value
            The actions for rewriting the source IP and MAC addresses of a packet are
            similar.
            When a packet should be processed by the SDN switch based on the rules
            installed by your layer-3 routing application, a rule should include an
            OFInstructionGotoTable whose table number is the value specified in
            the table class variable in the ShortestPathSwitching class.
            4.3 Testing and Debugging
            You should test your code by issuing web requests (using curl) from a client
            host to the virtual IPs.
            You can add or remove virtual IPs and hosts by modifying the
            loadbalancer.prop file.
            To see which packets a host is sending/recieving run:
            $ tcpdump -v -n -i hN-eth0
            replacing N with the host’s number.
            5. Evaluation:
            This project is worth 100 points (extra credit not included). You will be graded
            on both the completeness and accuracy of your program, as follows:
            • Part 3 functionality [70 points].
            • Part 4 functionality [25 points]
            • Style [5 points]:
            1. Coding Style: Well-structured, well documented, clean code, with well
            defined interfaces between components. Appropriate use of comments,
            clearly identified variables, constants, function names, etc.
            2. Assignment Report Layout:
            o Assignment report is neatly assembled on 8 1/2 by 11 layout
            o Cover page with your name (last name first followed by a comma
            then first name), username and section number with a signed
            statement of independent effort is included (note: provide a single
            report with all team members’ last/first name if your worked on the
            project as a team)
            o Program and documentation submitted for Assignment #8 are
            satisfactory
            o File name is correct.
            • Part 3 extra credit questions [20 points (10 each)]:
            6. What to Submit
            a. All of your source code files for part 3 (apps/sps directory) and part 4
            (apps/loadbalancer directory).
            b. tests.txt/doc - file containing a brief description of your testing and
            debugging methods for part 2 and part 4.
            c. vulnerabilities.txt/doc – file identifying at least one vulnerability in your
            current implementation for each of part 3 and part 4.
            d. readme.txt: file containing a thorough description of your design and
            implementation for part 3 and 4. Please note that all code that you do not
            freshly write for this assignment must be clearly documented in this
            readme.txt file.
            e. Report document that describes your project briefly, explains your design,
            outlines some of the implementation details, and provides as assessment of
            what went well and not so well in your project. Problems should be clearly
            stated and solution approaches should be clearly documented (i.e., both
            current and new features that you implemented). You should also clearly
            document any simulation or modeling used in your approach and any
            evaluation metrics you used for comparative analysis of the current and new
            solutions. The format for your final project report should be similar to the
            standard conference paper formats/layouts and should include (at the very
            least) sections on Introduction, Related Work, Proposed
            Solution/Architecture/Algorithms, Simulation/Implementation, Results,
            and Conclusion.
            Submissions that partially cover the scope of the examination specification or will
            not compile, link, or run once submitted on May 14, 2024 at 11:59 pm ET will be
            deemed incomplete and may still receive partial credit.
            7. Upload your final project deliverables via NYU Brightspace.
            8. Acknowledgements
            The code and instructions for this project is partially based on software
            packages developed at University of Wisconsin and at Brown University.
            Note that the original software packages provided are as follows:
            edu.wisc.cs.sdn.apps.loadbalancer and edu.brown.cs.sdn.apps.sps
            It is fine to refactor these packages as follows for the purpose of this project:
            edu.nyu.cs.sdn.apps.loadbalancer and edu.nyu.cs.sdn.apps.sps
            Also note that edu.wisc.cs.sdn.apps.l3routing is not used in this project.
            VI. Deliverables
            1. Electronic Archive:
            Your project submission archive file must be uploaded via NYU Brightspace. The
            file must be created and sent by the deadline. After the deadline, the project is late.
            The email clock is the official clock.
            Your project submission archive file should contain your report file as well as your
            program source code packaged as a .jar file. Your report file should include
            screenshots that demonstrate that you implemented your own working solutions for
            the various parts of the final project. The various documentation files submitted
            should be placed in the .jar file in a separate directory called “project
            documentation”.
            To create the .jar file containing your Java source code (please do not include the
            class files), change your working directory to the directory where your Java files
            are located and execute the command:
            jar cvf DCN-Spring2024-FinalProject-xxx.jar *
            where xxx is YOUR FULL STUDENT ID (note: append dash followed by
            additional student ID if you worked on the project as a team)
            Include the jar file in your project zip file and send the zip file as an email
            attachment to the instructor.
            You may send questions to the project discussion list ONLY.
            2. Report File (to be included in the electronic archive):
            PDF of your project report.
            The cover page supplied on the next page must be the first page of your project
            report. Please fill in the blank area for each field.
            NOTE:
            The sequence of the electronic report submission is:
            1. Cover sheet
            2. Assignment Answer Sheet(s)


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