Abstract:
High-throughput regular expression matching (REM) over a single packet flow for deep packet inspection in routers has been well studied. In many real-world cases, however...Show MoreMetadata
Abstract:
High-throughput regular expression matching (REM) over a single packet flow for deep packet inspection in routers has been well studied. In many real-world cases, however, the packet processing operations are performed on a large number of packet flows, each supported by many run-time states. To handle a large number of flows, the architecture should support a mechanism to perform rapid context switch without adversely affecting the throughput. As the number of flows increases, large-capacity memory is needed to store per flow states of the matching. In this paper, we propose a hardware-accelerated context switch mechanism for managing a large number of states on memory efficiently. With sufficiently large off-chip memory, a state-of-the-art FPGA device can be multiplexed by millions of packet flows with negligible throughput degradation for large-size packets. Post-place-and-route results show that when 8 characters are matched per cycle, our design can achieve 180 MHz clock rate, leading to a throughput of 11.8 Gbps.
Date of Conference: 24-27 June 2012
Date Added to IEEE Xplore: 06 August 2012
ISBN Information: