176 research outputs found

    Where’s Waldo? practical searches for stability in iBGP

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    Copyright © 2008 IEEEWhat does a child’s search of a large, complex cartoon for the eponymous character (Waldo) have to do with Internet routing? Network operators also search complex datasets, but Waldo is the least of their worries. Routing oscillation is a much greater concern. Networks can be designed to avoid routing oscillation, but the approaches so far proposed unnecessarily reduce the configuration flexibility. More importantly, apparently minor changes to a configuration can lead to instability. Verification of network stability is therefore an important task, but unlike the child’s search, this problem is NP hard. Until now, no practical method was available for large networks. In this paper, we present an efficient algorithm for proving stability of iBGP, or finding the potential oscillatory modes, and demonstrate its efficacy by applying it to the iBGP configuration of a large Tier-2AS.Ashley Flavel, Matthew Roughan, Nigel Bean and Aman Shaik

    Proceedings of the Nebraska State Bar Association House of Delegates Meeting, 1960

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    Quantitative analysis of incorrectly-configured bogon-filter detection

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    Copyright © 2008 IEEENewly announced IP addresses (from previously unused IP blocks) are often unreachable. It is common for network operators to filter out address space which is known to be unallocated (“bogon” addresses). However, as allocated address space changes over time, these bogons might become legitimately announced prefixes. Unfortunately, some ISPs still do not configure their bogon filters via lists published by the Regional Internet Registries (RIRs). Instead, they choose to manually configure filters. Therefore it would be desirable to test whether filters block legitimate address space before it is allocated to ISPs and/or end users. Previous work has presented a methodology that aims at detecting such wrongly configured filters, so that ISPs can be contacted and asked to update their filters. This paper extends the methodology by providing a more formal algorithm for finding such filters, and the paper quantitatively assesses the performance of this methodology.Jon Arnold, Olaf Maennel, Ashley Flavel, Jeremy McMahon, Matthew Rougha

    CleanBGP: Verifying the consistency of BGP data

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    Copyright © 2008 IEEEBGP data contains artifacts introduced by the measurement infrastructure which can substantially affect analysis. This is especially important in operational systems where "crying wolf" will result in an operator ignoring alarms. In this paper, we investigate the causes of measurement artifacts in BGP data - cross-checking and using properties of the data to infer the presence of an artifact and minimize its impact. We have developed a prototype tool, CleanBGP, which detects and corrects the effects of artifacts in BGP data, which we believe should be used prior to the analysis of such data. CleanBGP provides the user with an understanding of the artifacts present, a mechanism to remove their effects, and consequently the limitations of results can be fully quantified.Ashley Flavel, Olaf Maennely, Belinda Chiera, Matthew Roughan and Nigel Bea

    Taming Anycast in a Wild Internet

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    Anycast is a popular tool for deploying global, widely available systems, including DNS infrastructure and content delivery networks (CDNs). The optimization of these networks often focuses on the deployment and management of anycast sites. However, such approaches fail to consider one of the primary configurations of a large anycast network: the set of networks that receive anycast announcements at each site (i.e., an announcement configuration). Altering these configurations, even without the deployment of additional sites, can have profound impacts on both anycast site selection and round-trip times. In this study, we explore the operation and optimization of any-cast networks through the lens of deployments that have a large number of upstream service providers. We demonstrate that these many-provider anycast networks exhibit fundamentally different properties when interacting with the Internet, having a greater number of single AS hop paths and reduced dependency on each provider, compared with few-provider networks. We further examine the impact of announcement configuration changes, demonstrating that in nearly 30% of vantage point groups, round-trip time performance can be improved by more than 25%, solely by manipulating which providers receive anycast announcements. Finally, we propose DailyCatch, an empirical measurement methodology for testing and validating announcement configuration changes, and demonstrate its ability to influence user-experienced performance on a global anycast CDN

    The care and support needs of residential care home residents with comorbid cancer and dementia: A qualitative review and ethnographic study.

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    Background: Prevalence of cancer and dementia are strongly related to age. In the UK, 70% of care home residents have dementia. By 2040, older people (aged 65+) will account for 77% of all people living with cancer. Residents with only one of these conditions may have complex care needs. Having comorbid cancer and dementia (CCD) is likely to bring further challenges. This is the first research project to examine the care and support needs of people with CCD living in residential care homes and areas for improvement. Aims: To explore: (1) The care and support needs of people with CCD living in residential care homes. (2) What constitutes good care for people with CCD, their family/supporters, and residential care home staff. (3) Potential barriers and facilitators to providing good care for people with CCD. Methods: (1) Literature review to examine implications for cancerrelated care for people with dementia living in residential care homes. (2) Interviews with 5‐10 men and women with CCD, their family members/ supporters, and residential care home staff. (3) Ethnographic observations of 5‐10 people with CCD to further explore barriers and facilitators to good care. Results: Emergent findings from the literature review will be presented, and their implications for supporting people with CCD living in residential care homes discussed. Conclusions: Findings from this study will help improve the care and support of people with CCD and will contribute to a wider programme of research exploring the cancer care needs of people with dementia across a variety of care settings

    Efficient Inner-to-Outer Wall Energy Transfer in Highly Pure Double-Wall Carbon Nanotubes Revealed by Detailed Spectroscopy

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    The coaxial stacking of two single-wall carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs) into a double-wall carbon nanotube (DWCNT), forming a so-called one-dimensional van der Waals structure, leads to synergetic effects that dramatically affect the optical and electronic properties of both layers. In this work, we explore these effects in purified DWCNT samples by combining absorption, wavelength-dependent infrared fluorescence–excitation (PLE), and wavelength-dependent resonant Raman scattering (RRS) spectroscopy. Purified DWCNTs are obtained by careful solubilization that strictly avoids ultrasonication or by electronic-type sorting, both followed by a density gradient ultracentrifugation to remove unwanted SWCNTs that could obscure the DWCNT characterization. Chirality-dependent shifts of the radial breathing mode vibrational frequencies and transition energies of the inner and outer DWCNT walls with respect to their SWCNT analogues are determined by advanced two-dimensional fitting of RRS and PLE data of DWCNT and their reference SWCNT samples. This exhaustive data set verifies that fluorescence from the inner DWCNT walls of well-purified samples is severely quenched through efficient energy transfer from the inner to the outer DWCNT walls. Combined analysis of the PLE and RRS results further reveals that this transfer is dependent on the inner and outer wall chirality, and we identify the specific combinations dominant in our DWCNT samples. These obtained results demonstrate the necessity and value of a combined structural characterization approach including PLE and RRS spectroscopy for bulk DWCNT samples

    The Impact of Carbon Nanotube Length and Diameter on their Global Alignment by Dead‐End Filtration

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    Dead-end filtration has proven to effectively prepare macroscopically (3.8 cm2^2) aligned thin films from solutionbased single-wall carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs). However, to make this technique broadly applicable, the role of SWCNT length and diameter must be understood. To date, most groups report the alignment of unsorted, large diameter (≈1.4 nm) SWCNTs, but systematic studies on their small diameter are rare (≈0.78 nm). In this work, films with an area of A = 3.81 cm2^2 and a thickness of ≈40 nm are prepared from length-sorted fractions comprising of small and large diameter SWCNTs, respectively. The alignment is characterized by cross-polarized microscopy, scanning electron microscopy, absorption and Raman spectroscopy. For the longest fractions (Lavg_{avg} = 952 nm ± 431 nm, Δ = 1.58 and Lavg_{avg} = 667 nm ± 246 nm, Δ = 1.55), the 2D order parameter, S2D, values of ≈0.6 and ≈0.76 are reported for the small and large diameter SWCNTs over an area of A = 625 ”m2^2, respectively. A comparison of Derjaguin, Landau, Verwey, and Overbeek (DLVO) theory calculations with the aligned domain size is then used to propose a law identifying the required length of a carbon nanotube with a given diameter and zeta potential
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