10,018 research outputs found

    Characterization of ISP Traffic: Trends, User Habits, and Access Technology Impact

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    In the recent years, the research community has increased its focus on network monitoring which is seen as a key tool to understand the Internet and the Internet users. Several studies have presented a deep characterization of a particular application, or a particular network, considering the point of view of either the ISP, or the Internet user. In this paper, we take a different perspective. We focus on three European countries where we have been collecting traffic for more than a year and a half through 5 vantage points with different access technologies. This humongous amount of information allows us not only to provide precise, multiple, and quantitative measurements of "What the user do with the Internet" in each country but also to identify common/uncommon patterns and habits across different countries and nations. Considering different time scales, we start presenting the trend of application popularity; then we focus our attention to a one-month long period, and further drill into a typical daily characterization of users activity. Results depict an evolving scenario due to the consolidation of new services as Video Streaming and File Hosting and to the adoption of new P2P technologies. Despite the heterogeneity of the users, some common tendencies emerge that can be leveraged by the ISPs to improve their servic

    Ethernet - a survey on its fields of application

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    During the last decades, Ethernet progressively became the most widely used local area networking (LAN) technology. Apart from LAN installations, Ethernet became also attractive for many other fields of application, ranging from industry to avionics, telecommunication, and multimedia. The expanded application of this technology is mainly due to its significant assets like reduced cost, backward-compatibility, flexibility, and expandability. However, this new trend raises some problems concerning the services of the protocol and the requirements for each application. Therefore, specific adaptations prove essential to integrate this communication technology in each field of application. Our primary objective is to show how Ethernet has been enhanced to comply with the specific requirements of several application fields, particularly in transport, embedded and multimedia contexts. The paper first describes the common Ethernet LAN technology and highlights its main features. It reviews the most important specific Ethernet versions with respect to each application field’s requirements. Finally, we compare these different fields of application and we particularly focus on the fundamental concepts and the quality of service capabilities of each proposal

    Scale-Free Phenomena in Communication Networks: A Cross-Atlantic Comparison

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    ?Small-world networks? have a high degree of local clustering or cliqueness, like a regular lattice and a relatively short average minimum path, like a completely random network. The huge appeal of ?small-world networks? lies in the impact they are said to have on dynamical systems. In a transportation network, ?small-world? topology could improve the flow of people or goods through the network, which has important implications for the design of such networks. Preliminary research has shown that ?small-world network? phenomenon can arise in traffic networks possessing ?small-world? network topology (i.e., in a network that has a structure somewhere in between a regular lattice and random graph) and that, at least under certain circumstances, traffic appears to flow more efficiently through a network with such topology (Schintler and Kulkarni, 2000). This paper will explore this further through simulation under varying assumptions regarding the size of the network (i.e., in terms of number of nodes and edges), the level of traffic in the network, the uniformity of nodes and edges and the information levels of travelers in the network. The simulations will be done using the random rewiring process introduced by Watts and Strogatz (1998), where each time the network is rewired, the distribution of traffic and congestion through the network, and the ?small-world? network parameters, shortest average minimum path and clustering coefficient, will be examined. Traffic flow will be estimated using a gravity model framework and a route choice optimization program. The simulations will also be used to reveal whether or not there are certain nodes or links that suffer at the expense of the entire network becoming more efficient. In addition, the possibility of a self-organised criticality (SOC) structure will be examined. The concept, introduced by Bak et al.,(1987), gained a great deal of attention in past decades for its capability to explore the significant and structural transformation of a dynamic system. SOC sets out how prominent exogenous forces together with strong localized interactions at the micro level lead a system to a critical state at the macro-level. A further step in our analysis is the investigation of whether a power-law distribution, characteristic of the SOC state, evolves in the traffic network. While ?small-world? network topology may be shown to improve the efficiency of traffic flow through a network, it should be recognized that ?small-world? networks are sparse by nature. The shut down or major disruption of any link in such a network, particularly one with heavy congestion, could provoke significant disorder. This paper will also explore the effect that disruptions of this nature have on networks designed with a high degree of local clustering and a short average minimum path. The fact that a ?small-world? network is sparse also raises other issues for the transportation planner. If ?small-world? topology is in fact a desirable property for transportation networks, how do we transform existing networks to produce these results? Unlike other networks, such as those for telecommunications or socialization, a transportation network cannot be rewired to achieve a more efficient network structure. This issue will also be addressed in the paper. REFERENCES Bak, P., C. Tang, and K. Wiesenfeld (1987), ?Self-Organised Criticality?, Physical Review Letters, Vol. 59 (4), pp. 381-384. Watts, D.J. and S.H. Strogatz (1998). ?Collective Dynamics of ?Small-World? Networks? Nature, Vol 393, 4, pp. 440-442. Schintler, L.A. and R. Kulkarni (2000). ?The Emergence of Small-World Phenonmenon in Urban Transportation Networks? in Reggiani, A. (ed.), Spatial Economic Science: New Frontiers in Theory and Methodology, Springer-Verlag, Berlin-NewYork, pp. 419-434.

    The Dynamics of Internet Traffic: Self-Similarity, Self-Organization, and Complex Phenomena

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    The Internet is the most complex system ever created in human history. Therefore, its dynamics and traffic unsurprisingly take on a rich variety of complex dynamics, self-organization, and other phenomena that have been researched for years. This paper is a review of the complex dynamics of Internet traffic. Departing from normal treatises, we will take a view from both the network engineering and physics perspectives showing the strengths and weaknesses as well as insights of both. In addition, many less covered phenomena such as traffic oscillations, large-scale effects of worm traffic, and comparisons of the Internet and biological models will be covered.Comment: 63 pages, 7 figures, 7 tables, submitted to Advances in Complex System

    A Broadband Access Market Framework: Towards Consumer Service Level Agreements

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    Ubiquitous broadband access is considered by many to be necessary for the Internet to realize its full potential. But there is no generally accepted definition of what constitutes broadband access. Furthermore, there is only limited understanding of how the quality of end-to-end broadband Internet services might be assured in today?s nascent multi-service, multi-provider environment. The absence of generally accepted and standardized service definitions and mechanisms for assuring service quality is a significant barrier to competitive broadband access markets. In the business data services market and in the core of the Internet, this problem has been addressed, in part, by increased reliance on Service Level Agreements (SLAs). These SLAs provide a mechanism for service providers and customers to flexibly specify the quality of service (QoS) that will be delivered. When used in conjunction with the new standards-based technical solutions for implementing QoS, these SLAs are helping to facilitate the development of robust wholesale markets for backbone transport services and content delivery services for commercial customers. The emergence of bandwidth traders, brokers, and exchanges provide an institutional and market-based framework to support effective competition

    Show Me the Money: Contracts and Agents in the Service Level Agreement Markets

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    Delivering real-time services (Internet telephony, video conferencing, and streaming media as well as business-critical data applications) across the Internet requires end-to-end quality of service (QoS) guarantees, which requires a hierarchy of contracts. These standardized contracts may be referred to as Service Level Agreements (SLAs). SLAs provide a mechanism for service providers and customers to flexibly specify the service to be delivered. The emergence of bandwidth and service agents, traders, brokers, exchanges and contracts can provide an institutional and business framework to support effective competition. This article identifies issues that must be addressed by SLAs for consumer applications. We introduce a simple taxonomy for classifying SLAs based on the identity of the contracting parties. We conclude by discussing implications for public policy, Internet architecture, and competition

    The Diffusion of the Internet and the Geography of the Digital Divide in the United States

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    This paper analyses the rapid diffusion of the Internet across the United States over the past decade for both households and firms. We put the Internet's diffusion into the context of economic diffusion theory where we consider costs and benefits on the demand and supply side. We also discuss several pictures of the Internet's physical presence using some of the current main techniques for Internet measurement. We highlight different economic perspectives and explanations for the digital divide, that is, unequal availability and use of the Internet.
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