The design and development of a complex system requires an adequate
methodology and efficient instrumental support in order to early detect and
correct anomalies in the functional and non-functional properties of the tested
protocols. Among the various tools used to provide experimental support for
such developments, network emulation relies on real-time production of
impairments on real traffic according to a communication model, either
realistically or not.
This paper aims at simply presenting to newcomers in network emulation
(students, engineers, ...) basic principles and practices illustrated with a
few commonly used tools. The motivation behind is to fill a gap in terms of
introductory and pragmatic papers in this domain.
The study particularly considers centralized approaches, allowing cheap and
easy implementation in the context of research labs or industrial developments.
In addition, an architectural model for emulation systems is proposed, defining
three complementary levels, namely hardware, impairment and model levels. With
the help of this architectural framework, various existing tools are situated
and described. Various approaches for modeling the emulation actions are
studied, such as impairment-based scenarios and virtual architectures,
real-time discrete simulation and trace-based systems. Those modeling
approaches are described and compared in terms of services and we study their
ability to respond to various designer needs to assess when emulation is
needed