master-thesis/doc/Problem.tex

100 lines
3 KiB
TeX
Raw Normal View History

2019-08-04 07:04:01 +00:00
\chapter{\label{chapter2}Problem}
2019-07-29 17:13:47 +00:00
%** Problem.tex: Documentation in own words of the problem to
% be addressed in this document:
% What is the challenge, why is it useful what you
% plan to do.
2019-08-04 07:04:01 +00:00
%% In \ref{introduction} we start with our introduction to the problem that we
%% are going to address. Since we do not want to waste the readers time we
%% go and show the essential issues of latex in section
%% \ref{chapter2:essentials}.
\section{\label{chapter2:linespeed}Line Speed NAT64}
NAT64 in software is CPU bound. Hardware can potentially do this at
line speed.
\section{\label{chapter2:transitition}Simplify IPv6 deployments}
Currently network operators have to focus on two network stacks when
designing networks: IPv6 and IPv4. As To simplify network setups
%% Well this section can be further subdivided into subsection. We present
%% this in subsection \ref{chapter2:essentials:subsections}.
%% \subsection{\label{chapter2:essentials:subsections}Subsections}
%% \paragraph{\label{introduction:essentials:subsections:paragraph}Paragraphs}
%% can be specially referenced as well.
%% Of further importance is the understanding of the following environments:
%% %*** itemized lists
%% \begin{itemize}
%% \item This shows an itemized bullet list
%% \begin{itemize}
%% \item Which can be used for several levels\ldots
%% \end{itemize}
%% \end{itemize}
%% %*** enumerated lists
%% \begin{enumerate}
%% \item The same applies to enumerated lists.
%% \end{enumerate}
%% %** figures
%% \begin{figure}[!hbt]
%% \begin{center}
%% % \includegraphics[width=\textwidth, angle=90]{file_name.eps}
%% \caption{This is a figure to be printed in a float}
%% \label{file_name}
%% \end{center}
%% \end{figure}
%% By figure \ref{file_name}, we show some funny figures.
%% Table with caption and footnotes below the table.
%% \begin{table}[htbp]
%% \begin{center}\begin{minipage}{\textwidth}
%% \begin{tabular}{| c | p{130pt} | l |}
%% \hline
%% Column 1 & Column 2 \newline (additional line) & Column 3 \\
%% \hline
%% C1,R2 & C2,R2 & C2,R3 \\
%% \hline
%% C1,R3 & \multicolumn{2}{| c |}{C2\&C3,R3} \\
%% \hline
%% C1,R4 & C2,R4\footnote{Footnote to table~\ref{tab:table1}} & C3,R4\\
%% \hline
%% \end{tabular}
%% \end{minipage}
%% \caption{Table 1}
%% \label{tab:table1}
%% \end{center}
%% \end{table}
%% Examples of different text sizes:
%% \small Small \\
%% \scriptsize Script size \\
%% \normalsize Normal \\
%% \large Large \\
%% \huge Huge \\
%% \normalsize
%% \CHECK
%% If we reference to another document, we cite the document \cite{Lamport:LaTeX}.
%% %** landscape
%% \NEW
%% \begin{landscape}
%% Of some interest is also the landscape environment:
%% \end{landscape}
%% \verbatiminput{filename.txt}
%% Even though we don't think full listings are useful in documents,
%% you can easily insert complete files by the verbatiminput{}-command.