98 research outputs found

    Geographic location of PlanetLab servers

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    Táto práca sa zaoberá presnosťou polohy staníc v experimentálnej sieti PlanetLab. Práca je rozdelená na teoretickú a praktickú časť. V teoretickej časti je opísaná sieť PlanetLab, jej stručná história a prebiehajúce projekty. Taktiež je v nej opísané vývojové prostredie Google Maps, ktoré využívam v praktickej časti. Praktická časť opisuje funkčnosť programu na overenie presnosti pozície, ale tiež program na meranie odozvy stanice na SSH, či mapu, na ktorej sú zobrazené stanice PlanetLab v Európe. Programy a namerané dáta sú priložené na CD.This thesis deals with accuracy of location of nodes in experimental network PlanetLab. Thesis is devided into a theoretical and a practical part. Theoretical part consists of the description of network PlanetLab, its brief history and current projects. At the same time, Google Maps framework, which is later employed in the practical part, is described. Practical part describes the functionality of the application aimed at validation of location accuracy. Nextly, the application measuring latency of node to SSH is also described, as well as the map which contains PlanetLab nodes located in Europe. Applications and obtained data are attached on CD disk.

    Smartphone-based geolocation of Internet hosts

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    The location of Internet hosts is frequently used in distributed applications and networking services. Examples include customized advertising, distribution of content, and position-based security. Unfortunately the relationship between an IP address and its position is in general very weak. This motivates the study of measurement-based IP geolocation techniques, where the position of the target host is actively estimated using the delays between a number of landmarks and the target itself. This paper discusses an IP geolocation method based on crowdsourcing where the smartphones of users operate as landmarks. Since smartphones rely on wireless connections, a specific delay-distance model was derived to capture the characteristics of this novel operating scenario

    An Architecture for Global Distributed SIP Network Using IPv4 Anycast

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    Tato diplomová práce se zabývá metodami pro výběr nejbližší RTP proxy k VoIP klientům s použitím IP anycastu. RTP proxy servery jsou umístěny v síti Internetu a přeposílají RTP data pro VoIP klienty za síťovými překladači adres(NAT). Bez zeměpisně rozmístěných RTP proxy serverů a metod pro nalezení nejbližšího RTP proxy serveru by došlo ke zbytečnému poklesu kvality přenosu médialních dat a velkému zpoždení. Tento dokument navrhuje 4 metody a jejich porovnání s podrobnějšími rozbory metod s využitím DNS resolvování a přímo SIP protokolu. Tento dokument také obsahuje měření chování IP anycastu v porovnání mezi metrikami směrování a metrikami časovými. Nakonec dokumentu je také uvedena implemetace na SIP Express Router platformě.This thesis is about using IP anycast-based methods for locating RTP proxy servers close to VoIP clients. The RTP proxy servers are hosts on the public Internet that relay RTP media between VoIP clients in a way that accomplishes traversal over Network Address Translators (NATs). Without geographically-dispersed RTP proxy servers and methods to find one in client's proximity, voice latency may be unbearably long and dramatically reduce perceived voice quality. This document proposes four methods their comparison with further design of DNS-based and SIP-based methods. It includes IP anycast measurements that provides an overview of IP anycast behaviour in terms of routing metrics and latency metrics. It also includes implementation on SIP Express Router platform.

    Using Internet Geometry to Improve End-to-End Communication Performance

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    The Internet has been designed as a best-effort communication medium between its users, providing connectivity but optimizing little else. It does not guarantee good paths between two users: packets may take longer or more congested routes than necessary, they may be delayed by slow reaction to failures, there may even be no path between users. To obtain better paths, users can form routing overlay networks, which improve the performance of packet delivery by forwarding packets along links in self-constructed graphs. Routing overlays delegate the task of selecting paths to users, who can choose among a diversity of routes which are more reliable, less loaded, shorter or have higher bandwidth than those chosen by the underlying infrastructure. Although they offer improved communication performance, existing routing overlay networks are neither scalable nor fair: the cost of measuring and computing path performance metrics between participants is high (which limits the number of participants) and they lack robustness to misbehavior and selfishness (which could discourage the participation of nodes that are more likely to offer than to receive service). In this dissertation, I focus on finding low-latency paths using routing overlay networks. I support the following thesis: it is possible to make end-to-end communication between Internet users simultaneously faster, scalable, and fair, by relying solely on inherent properties of the Internet latency space. To prove this thesis, I take two complementary approaches. First, I perform an extensive measurement study in which I analyze, using real latency data sets, properties of the Internet latency space: the existence of triangle inequality violations (TIVs) (which expose detour paths: ''indirect'' one-hop paths that have lower round-trip latency than the ''direct'' default paths), the interaction between TIVs and network coordinate systems (which leads to scalable detour discovery), and the presence of mutual advantage (which makes fairness possible). Then, using the results of the measurement study, I design and build PeerWise, the first routing overlay network that reduces end-to-end latency between its participants and is both scalable and fair. I evaluate PeerWise using simulation and through a wide-area deployment on the PlanetLab testbed

    Elastic Resource Management in Distributed Clouds

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    The ubiquitous nature of computing devices and their increasing reliance on remote resources have driven and shaped public cloud platforms into unprecedented large-scale, distributed data centers. Concurrently, a plethora of cloud-based applications are experiencing multi-dimensional workload dynamics---workload volumes that vary along both time and space axes and with higher frequency. The interplay of diverse workload characteristics and distributed clouds raises several key challenges for efficiently and dynamically managing server resources. First, current cloud platforms impose certain restrictions that might hinder some resource management tasks. Second, an application-agnostic approach might not entail appropriate performance goals, therefore, requires numerous specific methods. Third, provisioning resources outside LAN boundary might incur huge delay which would impact the desired agility. In this dissertation, I investigate the above challenges and present the design of automated systems that manage resources for various applications in distributed clouds. The intermediate goal of these automated systems is to fully exploit potential benefits such as reduced network latency offered by increasingly distributed server resources. The ultimate goal is to improve end-to-end user response time with novel resource management approaches, within a certain cost budget. Centered around these two goals, I first investigate how to optimize the location and performance of virtual machines in distributed clouds. I use virtual desktops, mostly serving a single user, as an example use case for developing a black-box approach that ranks virtual machines based on their dynamic latency requirements. Those with high latency sensitivities have a higher priority of being placed or migrated to a cloud location closest to their users. Next, I relax the assumption of well-provisioned virtual machines and look at how to provision enough resources for applications that exhibit both temporal and spatial workload fluctuations. I propose an application-agnostic queueing model that captures the resource utilization and server response time. Building upon this model, I present a geo-elastic provisioning approach---referred as geo-elasticity---for replicable multi-tier applications that can spin up an appropriate amount of server resources in any cloud locations. Last, I explore the benefits of providing geo-elasticity for database clouds, a popular platform for hosting application backends. Performing geo-elastic provisioning for backend database servers entails several challenges that are specific to database workload, and therefore requires tailored solutions. In addition, cloud platforms offer resources at various prices for different locations. Towards this end, I propose a cost-aware geo-elasticity that combines a regression-based workload model and a queueing network capacity model for database clouds. In summary, hosting a diverse set of applications in an increasingly distributed cloud makes it interesting and necessary to develop new, efficient and dynamic resource management approaches

    On the network geography of the Internet

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    Abstract—The geographic layout of the physical Internet inherently determines important network properties and traffic characteristics. To give insight into the geography of the Internet, we examine the spatial properties of the topology and routing. To represent the network we conducted a geographically dispersed traceroute campaign, and embedded the extracted topology into the geographic space by applying a novel IP geolocalization service, called Spotter. In this paper we present the frequency analysis of link lengths, quantify path circuitousness and explore the symmetry of end-to-end Internet routes. I

    The Use of European Internet Communication Properties for IP Geolocation

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    IP Geolocation is a term used for finding the geographical location of an IP node. In this paper, we study the Internet communication properties and their use for client-independent Geolocation - finding the location without assistance of the node being located. We present and discuss the communication properties dependence on geographical aspects such as the geographical distance, differences between the source and destination country, and country population density and country ICT development index. For the study, we used a large set of data captured between the nodes geographically distributed across Europe. Based on the results, we propose an algorithm for a final location estimation within the delimited geographical area. The proposed algorithm improves the location accuracy when compared with the current techniques
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