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Steven McCanne et al. UCB/LBNL/VINT Network Simulator - ns (version 2). http://wwwmash. cs.berkeley.edu/ns/.

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This paper is cited in the following contexts:
Enabling Large-scale Simulations: Selective Abstraction.. - Huang, Estrin, Heidemann (1998)   (26 citations)  (Correct)

....often intractable with today s large networks and complex traffic patterns, so researchers have turned increasingly to simulation. In order to evaluate wide area protocols with thousands of nodes, we must be able to perform large scale simulations. General purpose network simulators (such as ns 2 [11]) make simulation easier by capturing characteristics of real network components and providing a modular programming environment, often composed by links, nodes and existing protocol suites. For instance, a link may contain transmission and propagation delay modules, and a node may contain routing ....

S. McCanne and S. Floyd. UCB/LBNL/VINT Network Simulator - ns (version 2). http://wwwmash. CS.Berkeley.EDU/ns/


GloMoSim: A Scalable Network Simulation Environment - Bajaj, Takai, Ahuja, Tang, ..   (46 citations)  (Correct)

....of real world applications TCP performance over MAC layer protocols and replicated file systems in a wireless environment. This is followed by the conclusion. 2. Related Work A number of sequential network simulators, both commercial and university research projects, have been developed [4, 11]. Well known commercial simulators include Bones from Cadence, COMNET from CACI, and Opnet from Mil3 [1] None of these tools have been used for the large scale simulations described in this paper. Widely used public domain simulators include NS developed at LBNL and is being used to develop an ....

....include Bones from Cadence, COMNET from CACI, and Opnet from Mil3 [1] None of these tools have been used for the large scale simulations described in this paper. Widely used public domain simulators include NS developed at LBNL and is being used to develop an Internet simulator called VINT at ISI [11]. NS is basically a transport level simulator that supports several flavors of TCP (include SACK, Tahoe and Reno) and router scheduling algorithms. Models can be described using a variation of the Tool Command Language, Tcl. The VINT effort is a recent start that aims to develop a comprehensive ....

S. McCanne and S. Floyd, UCB/LBNL/VINT Network Simulator -- NS (version 2), http://wwwmash. cs.berkeley.edu/ns/


Enabling Large-scale Simulations: Selective Abstraction.. - Huang, Estrin, Heidemann (1998)   (26 citations)  (Correct)

....often intractable with today s large networks and complex traffic patterns, so researchers have turned increasingly to simulation. In order to evaluate wide area protocols with thousands of nodes, we must be able to perform large scale simulations. General purpose network simulators (such as ns 2 [25]) make simulation easier by capturing characteristics of real network components and providing a modular programming environment, often composed by links, nodes and existing protocol suites. For instance, a link may contain transmission and propagation delay modules, and a node may contain routing ....

Steven McCanne and Sally Floyd, UCB/LBNL/VINT Network Simulator - ns (version 2), http://wwwmash. CS.Berkeley.EDU/ns/


A Framework for Interactive Multicast Data Transport in the Internet - Raman (2000)   Self-citation (Mccanne)   (Correct)

....at higher levels of the namespace tree, the receiver maintains the most up to date signature for the root of the don t care subtree. 4. 5 SNAP: Performance Evaluation To evaluate the performance of SNAP within the SRM framework, we conducted a simulation study using the network simulator ns [81]. We used a multicast group with one source and up to 55 receivers 5 . Background traffic in the simulations was generated using TCP connections, which induced packet losses. The topology used was a tree of degree 4, with the source at the root. A constant bit rate data source was used with a ....

Steven McCanne et al. UCB/LBNL/VINT Network Simulator - ns (version 2). http://wwwmash. cs.berkeley.edu/ns/.


Scalable Data Naming for Application Level Framing in.. - Raman, McCanne (1998)   (29 citations)  Self-citation (Mccanne)   (Correct)

....at higher levels of the namespace tree, the receiver maintains the most up to date signature for the root of the don t care subtree. 5 SNAP: Performance Evaluation To evaluate the performance of SNAP within the SRM framework, we conducted a simulation study using the network simulator ns [16]. We used a multicast group with one source and up to 55 receivers 6 . Background traffic in the simulations was generated using TCP connections, which induced packet losses. The topology used was a tree of degree 4, 5 Alternatively, unnamed data may be passed up to the application and the ....

McCanne, S., et al. UCB/LBNL/VINT Network Simulator - ns (version 2). http://wwwmash. cs.berkeley.edu/ns/.

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