1,161 research outputs found
SDN as Active Measurement Infrastructure
Active measurements are integral to the operation and management of networks,
and invaluable to supporting empirical network research. Unfortunately, it is
often cost-prohibitive and logistically difficult to widely deploy measurement
nodes, especially in the core. In this work, we consider the feasibility of
tightly integrating measurement within the infrastructure by using Software
Defined Networks (SDNs). We introduce "SDN as Active Measurement
Infrastructure" (SAAMI) to enable measurements to originate from any location
where SDN is deployed, removing the need for dedicated measurement nodes and
increasing vantage point diversity. We implement ping and traceroute using
SAAMI, as well as a proof-of-concept custom measurement protocol to demonstrate
the power and ease of SAAMI's open framework. Via a large-scale measurement
campaign using SDN switches as vantage points, we show that SAAMI is accurate,
scalable, and extensible
An Internet Heartbeat
Obtaining sound inferences over remote networks via active or passive
measurements is difficult. Active measurement campaigns face challenges of
load, coverage, and visibility. Passive measurements require a privileged
vantage point. Even networks under our own control too often remain poorly
understood and hard to diagnose. As a step toward the democratization of
Internet measurement, we consider the inferential power possible were the
network to include a constant and predictable stream of dedicated lightweight
measurement traffic. We posit an Internet "heartbeat," which nodes periodically
send to random destinations, and show how aggregating heartbeats facilitates
introspection into parts of the network that are today generally obtuse. We
explore the design space of an Internet heartbeat, potential use cases,
incentives, and paths to deployment
Yarrp’ing the Internet
Active Internet Measurements (AIMS) Worksho
Robert Beverly to Alexander Donald, October 17, 1785
Robert Beverly wrote from Blandford, VA to Alexander Donald, addressed to Richmond. He wrote about Mr. Barton was tutoring his children and that he hoped their friend in Glasgow benefited from his lessons as well. He also wrote about the commerce of Mr. Gist in July and a sheriff from Rockingham County might procure some horses for over 100 pounds as asked Donald to discuss it with him.https://digitalcommons.kean.edu/lhc_1780s/1336/thumbnail.jp
Toward Anonymity in Delay Tolerant Networks: Threshold Pivot Scheme
Proceedings of the Military Communications Conference (MILCOM 2010), San Jose, CA, October 2010.Delay Tolerant Networks (DTNs) remove traditional assumptions of end-to-end connectivity, extending network communication to intermittently connected mobile, ad-hoc, and vehicular environments. This work considers anonymity as a vital security primitive for viable military and civilian DTNs. DTNs present new and unique anonymity challenges since we must protect physical location information as mobile nodes with limited topology knowledge naturally mix. We develop a novel Threshold Pivot Scheme (TPS) for DTNs to address these challenges and provide resistance to traffic analysis, source anonymity, and sender-receiver unlinkability. Reply techniques adapted from mix-nets allow for anonymous DTN communication, while secret sharing provides a configurable level of anonymity that enables a balance between security and efficiency. We evaluate TPS via simulation on real-world DTN scenarios to understand its feasibility, performance, and overhead while comparing the provided anonymity against an analytically optimal model
Children\u27s Development Accounts: The Oregon Story
Children\u27s Development Accounts: The Oregon Stor
Recommendations From the Field: Individual Development Accounts as Part of a Universal Asset-Building System
Recommendations From the Field: Individual Development Accounts as Part of a Universal Asset-Building Syste
Measuring the State of ECN Readiness in Servers, Clients, and Routers
Proceedings of the Eleventh ACM SIGCOMM/USENIX Internet Measurement Conference (IMC 2011), Berlin, DE, November 2011.Better exposing congestion can improve traffic management in the wide-area, at peering points, among residential broadband connections, and in the data center. TCP's network utilization and efficiency depends on congestion information, while recent research proposes economic and policy models based on congestion. Such motivations have driven widespread support of Explicit Congestion Notification (ECN) in modern operating systems. We reappraise the Internet's ECN readiness, updating and extending previous measurements. Across large and diverse server populations, we find a three-fold increase in ECN support over prior studies. Using new methods, we characterize ECN within mobile infrastructure and at the client-side, populations previously unmeasured. Via large-scale path measurements, we find the ECN feedback loop failing in the core of the network 40\% of the time, typically at AS boundaries. Finally, we discover new examples of infrastructure violating ECN Internet standards, and discuss remaining impediments to running ECN while suggesting mechanisms to aid adoption
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