| M. Grossglauser and J. Rexford. Passive traffic measurement for IP operations. to appear in The Internet as a Large-Scale Complex System, Oxford Press, 2005. |
....into the network and egress point out of the network, the volume of traffic to over a given time interval. Taken together with network topology, routing and fault data, the traffic matrix can provide a great deal of help in the diagnosis and management of network congestion [1]. On longer time scales, traffic matrices are critical inputs to network design, capacity planning and business planning. Unfortunately, today s production systems for IP network measurement do not provide the inputs needed for direct computation of IP traffic matrices. Instead, these systems ....
M. Grossglauser and J. Rexford, "Passive traffic measurement for IP operations," in The Internet as a Large-Scale Complex System (K.Park and W. Willinger, eds.), Oxford University Press, 2002.
....flow in our load balancing scheme. In other words, the traffic demand is split based on the per destination prefix level of flows. One may use many passive measurement methods, such as monitoring SNMP management information base (MIBs) packet sampling etc. to obtain the traffic demand statistics [12]. A typical BGP routing table consists of thousands of entries for various destination prefixes. It will be very complex and undesirable to work with such a large number of traffic flows. Many measurements [2] 3] have demonstrated that the Internet traffic exhibits the so called elephant and ....
M. Grossglauser and J. Rexford. Passive traffic measurement for ip operations. In The Internet As A Large-scale Complex System. Oxford University Press, 2002.
....i into the network and egress point j out of the network, the volume of traffic T i,j from i to j over a given time interval. Taken together with network topology, routing and fault data, the traffic matrix can provide a great deal of help in the diagnosis and management of network congestion [1]. On longer time scales, traffic matrices are critical inputs to network design, capacity planning and business planning. Unfortunately, today s production systems for IP network measurement do not provide the inputs needed for direct computation of IP traffic matrices. Instead, these systems ....
M. Grossglauser and J. Rexford, "Passive traffic measurement for IP operations," in The Internet as a Large-Scale Complex System (K.Park and W. Willinger, eds.), Oxford University Press, 2002.
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M. Grossglauser and J. Rexford. Passive Traffic Measurement for IP Operations. In The Internet as a Large-Scale Complex System (Kihong Park and Walter Willinger, eds.). Oxford University Press (to appear), 2002.
No context found.
M. Grossglauser and J. Rexford, "Passive traffic measurement for IP operations." To appear in The Internet as a Large-Scale Complex System, http://www.research.att.com/jrex/ papers/sfi.ps, 2002. 17
....of traffic between each pair of routers. In some cases, the estimate may come from past experience or customer subscription information. In other cases, a network wide view of the traffic demands can be gleaned using sophisticated measurement techniques. Four main approaches have been considered [2]. First, the necessary traffic statistics may be available directly from SNMP Management Information Bases (MIBs) depending on the forwarding paradigm employed in the network. For example, Multi Protocol Label Switching (MPLS) MIBs could be used to measure the volume of traffic on the Label ....
M. Grossglauser and J. Rexford, "Passive traffic measurement for IP operations," in The Internet as a Large-Scale Complex System, Oxford University Press. To appear, 2002. http://www. research.att.com/jrex/papers/sfi.ps.
No context found.
M. Grossglauser and J. Rexford. Passive traffic measurement for IP operations. to appear in The Internet as a Large-Scale Complex System, Oxford Press, 2005.
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