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Conmutación de etiquetas multiprotocolo (MPLS)×Protocolo de Gateway de Borde (BGP)×Servicios Diferenciados (DiffServ)×
CampoTelecomunicacionesTelecomunicacionesTelecomunicaciones
FamiliaProcess / pipelineProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Año de origen200119891998
Autor originalIETF MPLS Working GroupIETF Routing Protocols Working GroupIETF DiffServ Working Group
Tipolabel-based forwarding paradigmpath-vector routing protocolQoS architecture
Fuente seminalRosen, E. C., Viswanathan, A., & Callon, R. (2001). Multiprotocol Label Switching Architecture. RFC 3031. link ↗Rekhter, Y., Li, T., & Hares, S. (2006). A Border Gateway Protocol 4 (BGP-4). RFC 4271. link ↗Blake, S., Black, D., Carlson, M., et al. (1998). An Architecture for Differentiated Services. RFC 2475. link ↗
Aliaslabel switching, traffic engineeringexterior gateway protocol, inter-domain routingquality of service, QoS architecture
Relacionados423
ResumenMultiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS) is a forwarding paradigm that prepends a short label to packets, enabling routers to make forwarding decisions based on the label rather than IP destination address. Introduced by IETF (2001), MPLS was designed to enable traffic engineering, VPN creation, and fast rerouting in IP networks. While MPLS complexity is high, it remains foundational in service provider backbones for traffic engineering and Quality of Service (QoS) provisioning.BGP is the de facto standard routing protocol for interconnecting autonomous systems (ASs) on the Internet. Since its introduction in 1989, BGP has scaled the Internet to millions of routers and trillions of destinations. BGP is path-vector-based, using a flexible policy system to control route propagation and selection. While BGP convergence can be slow and policies complex, it remains the only viable protocol for Internet-scale inter-domain routing.DiffServ is a QoS architecture providing scalable, class-based service differentiation in networks. Introduced by IETF (1998), DiffServ marks packets with a Differentiated Services Code Point (DSCP) in the IP header, enabling routers to apply per-hop-behaviors (PHBs) based on markings. Unlike IntServ (which reserves resources per-flow), DiffServ is stateless and scalable to Internet scale. DiffServ remains the primary QoS mechanism in ISP and enterprise networks.
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ScholarGateComparar métodos: MPLS · BGP · DiffServ. Recuperado el 2026-06-17 de https://scholargate.app/es/compare