Exploiting the power of multiplicity: a holistic survey of network-layer multipath
Junaid Qadir, Anwaar Ali, Kok-Lim Alvin Yau, Arjuna Sathiaseelan, Jon, Crowcroft

TL;DR
This paper provides a comprehensive survey of network-layer multipath routing, discussing its importance, design challenges, and future research directions to enhance Internet performance and reliability.
Contribution
It systematically articulates key design issues in network-layer multipath routing and surveys extensive literature, highlighting open problems and future research avenues.
Findings
Multipath routing can significantly improve throughput and reliability.
Emerging trends indicate a shift towards multipath solutions across various networks.
Open issues include route computation and flow splitting challenges.
Abstract
The Internet is inherently a multipath network---for an underlying network with only a single path connecting various nodes would have been debilitatingly fragile. Unfortunately, traditional Internet technologies have been designed around the restrictive assumption of a single working path between a source and a destination. The lack of native multipath support constrains network performance even as the underlying network is richly connected and has redundant multiple paths. Computer networks can exploit the power of multiplicity to unlock the inherent redundancy of the Internet. This opens up a new vista of opportunities promising increased throughput (through concurrent usage of multiple paths) and increased reliability and fault-tolerance (through the use of multiple paths in backup/ redundant arrangements). There are many emerging trends in networking that signify that the…
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