| W. Zhu: \Characterizing Wide Area Conversations on the Internet", Master of Science thesis, Dep. of Computer Science, Univ. of Saskatchewan, Canada (1994) 34 |
.... from data, text, voice and video communications [22, 26] User behaviour is highly dynamic, new services are created and a large variety of application oriented services may be used (e.g. more than 400 application protocols were observed in a 4 day measurement at the University of Saskatchewan [38]) User behaviour and therefore also the load generated by end users is not always observable, e.g. the e ort of observation may be too high (as just too many users and endsystems exist) or security mechanisms may restrict observability of system components (a lot of black box subsystems exist ....
.... Internet we could, in particular, choose the following interfaces for load characterization: an application oriented interface (e.g. interface to services protocols such as FTP, Telnet, HTTP, SMTP, 4, 21] interface to the transport services, based on TCP or UDP, within the endsystems [38]; the packet interface to IP; the LLC interface, e.g. in an Ethernet based Intranet (i.e. LAN with IP protocol hierarchy) For most of the Internet interfaces mentioned, a large number of publications exist presenting load measurements for these interfaces. In particular, load measurements ....
[Article contains additional citation context not shown here]
W. Zhu: \Characterizing Wide Area Conversations on the Internet", Master of Science thesis, Dep. of Computer Science, Univ. of Saskatchewan, Canada (1994) 34
.... from data, text, voice and video communications [22, 25] User behaviour is highly dynamic, new services are created and a large variety of applicationoriented services may be used (e.g. more than 400 application protocols were observed in a 4 day measurement at the University of Saskatchewan [37]) User behaviour and therefore also the load generated by end users is not always observable, e.g. the e ort of observation may be too high (as just too many users and endsystems exist) or security mechanisms may restrict observability of system components (a lot of black box subsystems ....
.... Internet we could, in particular, choose the following interfaces for load characterization: an application oriented interface (e.g. interface to services protocols such as FTP, Telnet, HTTP, SMTP, 4, 21] interface to the transport services, based on TCP or UDP, within the endsystems [37]; the packet interface to IP; the LLC interface, e.g. in an Ethernet based Intranet (i.e. LAN with TCP IP protocol hierarchy) For most of the Internet interfaces mentioned, a large number of publications exist presenting load measurements for these interfaces. In particular, load ....
[Article contains additional citation context not shown here]
W. Zhu: \Characterizing Wide Area Conversations on the Internet", Master of Science thesis, Dep. of Computer Science, Univ. of Saskatchewan, Canada (1994) 24
....studies focus on characterizing Web clients, rather than Web servers. It is precisely this void that this work is intended to fill. The first part of this thesis presents a detailed workload characterization study of World Wide Web servers, similar to earlier studies of wide area TCP IP traffic [14, 15, 17, 74]. Access logs from six different Web servers are used: three from academic (i.e. university) environments, two from scientific research organizations, and one from a commercial Internet provider. The data sets represent three different orders of magnitude in server activity (ranging from 776 ....
W. Zhu, "Characterizing Wide Area Conversations on the Internet", M.Sc. Thesis, Department of Computational Science, University of Saskatchewan, July 1994. Available at URL: ftp://ftp.cs.usask.ca/pub/discus/ thesis-wanning.ps.Z
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Zhu, W., "Characterizing Wide Area Conversations on the Internet", M.Sc. Thesis, Department of Computer Science, University of Saskatchewan, July 1994.
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