A Network Connection Proxy to Enable Hosts to Sleep and Save Energy

Billions of dollars of electricity are being used to keep idle or unused network hosts fully powered-on only to maintain their network presence. We investigate how a network connectivity proxy (NCP) could enable significant energy savings by allowing idle hosts to enter a low-power sleep state and s...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in2008 IEEE International Performance, Computing and Communications Conference pp. 101 - 110
Main Authors Jimeno, M., Christensen, K., Nordman, B.
Format Conference Proceeding
LanguageEnglish
Published IEEE 01.12.2008
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ISBN1424433681
9781424433681
ISSN1097-2641
DOI10.1109/PCCC.2008.4745133

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Summary:Billions of dollars of electricity are being used to keep idle or unused network hosts fully powered-on only to maintain their network presence. We investigate how a network connectivity proxy (NCP) could enable significant energy savings by allowing idle hosts to enter a low-power sleep state and still maintain full network presence. An NCP must handle ARP, ICMP, DHCP, and other low-level network presence tasks for a network host. An NCP must also be able to maintain TCP connections and UDP data flows and to respond to application messages. The focus of this paper is on how TCP connections can be kept alive during periods of host sleep by using a SOCKS-based approach called green SOCKS (gSOCKS) as part of an NCP. The gSOCKS includes awareness of the power state of a host. A prototype implementation of gSOCKS in a Linksys router shows that TCP connections can be preserved.
ISBN:1424433681
9781424433681
ISSN:1097-2641
DOI:10.1109/PCCC.2008.4745133