Cleanup theses doc, write abstract
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%****************************************************************************
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%** Copyright 2002 by Lukas Ruf, ruf@topsy.net
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%** Information is provided under the terms of the
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%** GNU Free Documentation License http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html
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%** Fairness: Cite the source of information, visit http://www.topsy.net
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%****************************************************************************
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%** Last Modification: 2005-07-11 1600
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%** 2005-07-11 Bernhard Tellenbach
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%** Inserted new content
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%****************************************************************************
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\clearpage
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\null
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\vfil % or it might be \null
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\thispagestyle{plain}
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%** Abstract.tex: Contains a brief description
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% of what the reader may expect
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\begin{center}\textbf{Abstract}\end{center}
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In journal articles, research papers, published patent applications and patents, an abstract is a short summary placed prior to the introduction, often with different line justification (blockquote) from the rest of the article, used to help readers determine the purpose of the paper. While the length of the abstract varies by field of study, it is typically a paragraph in length (3-5 sentences), and never more than a page. See
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\url{en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abstract(summary)} for details
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Due to the lack of IPv4 addresses, IPv6 deployements have recently
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gained in importance in the Internet. However even IPv6 only network
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deployments usually need connectivity towards the legacy IP (IPv4)
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networks. To allow legacy IP and IPv6 devices to communicate with each
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other a transition mechanism named ``NAT64'' is usually
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deployed. However NAT64 solutions in software often don't reach line
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rate. Programmable switches offer a possibility to implement NAT64 in
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the network. This master thesis shows the design, feasibility and
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scalability of NAT64 on programmable switches.
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\vfil
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\clearpage
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