Michael Menth
University of Tübingen
265 Papers
1.5K Citations
Michael Menth is an academic researcher from University of Tübingen. The author has contributed to research in topics: Computer science & Network packet. The author has an hindex of 26, co-authored 245 publications. Previous affiliations of Michael Menth include Siemens & Nokia Networks.
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Papers
Software-Defined Networking Using OpenFlow: Protocols, Applications and Architectural Design Choices
Wolfgang Braun,Michael Menth +1 more
TL;DR: The notion of software-defined networking (SDN), whose southbound interface may be implemented by the OpenFlow protocol, is explained and architectural design choices for SDN using OpenFlow are pointed out.
300
•Posted Content
A Survey on Data Plane Programming with P4: Fundamentals, Advances, and Applied Research.
Frederik Hauser,Marco Häberle,Daniel Merling,Steffen Lindner,Vladimir Gurevich,Florian Zeiger,Reinhard Frank,Michael Menth +7 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors give a tutorial of data plane programming models, the P4 programming language, architectures, compilers, targets, and data plane APIs, and discuss potential next steps based on their findings.
105
Software-defined wireless sensor networks: A survey
Habib Mostafaei,Michael Menth +1 more
TL;DR: This survey explains basics of WSN and SDN, describes fundamentals of SD-WSNs and how SDN can improve the operation of W SN, and outlines the open challenges that need to be investigated in more detail.
101
Network resilience through multi-topology routing
Michael Menth,Rüdiger Martin +1 more
- 27 Dec 2005
TL;DR: The proposed multi-topology (MT) routing is still a pure IP-based solution that retains the scalability and the robustness of IP routing, and can be compared to fast rerouting mechanisms in MPLS, which reduce packet drops to a minimum.
86
Pre-Congestion Notification (PCN) Architecture
Philip Eardley,Jozef Babiarz,K. Chan,Anna Charny,Ruediger Geib,Georgios Karagiannis,Michael Menth,Tina Tsou +7 more
- 01 Jun 2009
TL;DR: The purpose of this document is to describe a general architecture for flow admission and termination based on aggregated (pre-) congestion information in order to protect the quality of service of established inelastic flows within a single DiffServ domain.