380 research outputs found

    Replacing the Ethernet access mechanism with the real-time access mechanism of Twentenet

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    The way in which a Local Area Network access mechanism (Medium Access Control protocol) designed for a specific type of physical service can be used on top of another type of physical service is discussed using a particular example. In the example, an Ethernet physical layer is used to provide service to the Twentenet real-time access mechanism. Relevant Ethernet and Twentenet concepts are explained, the approach taken is introduced, and problems encountered, along with the actual synthesis of both networks, are described

    Self-management of lambda-connections in optical networks

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    This paper presents a new idea for the management of lambda-connections in optical networks. The idea consists of making multi-service optical switches responsible for automatically detecting IP flows at the packet-level, creating lambda-connections for them, and moving them to the optical-level. In addition to that, they are also in charge of tearing down the connections when no longer needed. This new idea is the result of 1 year of research work at the University of Twente (UT) and it is aimed at resulting in a Ph.D. thesis by the end of 4 years of Ph.D. research

    DNS zones revisited

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    Recent research [Pap04b] suggests DNS reliability and performance is not up to the levels it should be due to misconfigurations. This paper checks the configuration of nameserver zones against additional requirements, recommendations and best-practices. It shows that almost one in four domains fails to pass one or more of these checks. During the checks an interesting correlation is established: a higher number of nameservers for a single zone usually decreases reliability and performance instead of increasing both

    Report of the Third Workshop on the Usage of NetFlow/IPFIX in Network Management

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    The Network Management Research Group (NMRG) organized in 2010 the Third Workshop on the Usage of NetFlow/IPFIX in Network Management, as part of the 78th IETF Meeting in Maastricht. Yearly organized since 2007, the workshop is an opportunity for people from both academia and industry to discuss the latest developments of the protocol, possibilities for new applications, and practical experiences. This report summarizes the presentations and the main conclusions of the workshop

    Assessing unknown network traffic

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    Recent measurements have shown that a growing fraction of all Internet traffic is unknown: it is unclear which applications are causing the traffic. Therefore we have developed and applied a novel methodology to find out what applications are running on the network. This methodology is based on the notion of Âżinduced trafficÂż: traffic cannot (wide-scale) be on unknown ports, thus, \ud the hypothesis is that such traffic on unknown ports should be preceeded by traffic on known ports between the same peers. We have developed and implemented an algorithm to test this hypothesis. After applying the algorithm in two case studies we, unfortunately, have to conclude that although some improvement is made, there is still a significant fraction of traffic unidentifiable

    Editorial

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    SNMPv2 at Twente University

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    The management group at Twente University in the Netherlands is currently developing SNMPv2 software. The purpose of this article is to provide an overview of this development and give future plans. It is not the intention to go into to much detail — the last section of this article tells how to obtain more detailed information
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