Author :
Li, Zhichun ; Goyal, Anup ; Chen, Yan ; Kuzmanovic, Aleksandar
Abstract :
Through measurement study, we discover an interesting phenomenon, P2P address misconfiguration, in which a large number of peers send P2P file downloading requests to a "random" target on the Internet. Through measuring three large datasets spanning four years and across five different /8 networks, we find address-misconfigured P2P traffic on average contributes 38.9 percent of Internet background radiation, increasing by more than 100 percent every year. To detect and diagnose such unwanted traffic, we design the P2PScope, a measurement tool. After analyzing about 2 Tbytes of data and tracking millions of peers, we found that in all the P2P systems, address misconfiguration is caused by resource mapping contamination: the sources returned for a given file ID through P2P indexing are not valid. Different P2P systems have different reasons for such contamination. For eMule, we find that the root cause is mainly a network byte-order problem in the eMule Source Exchange protocol. For BitTorrent misconfiguration, one reason is that anti-P2P companies actively inject bogus peers into the P2P system. Another reason is that the KTorrent implementation has a byte-order problem.
Keywords :
Internet; computer network performance evaluation; peer-to-peer computing; telecommunication congestion control; transport protocols; BitTorrent misconfiguration; Internet background radiation; P2P address misconfiguration; P2P file downloading request; P2P indexing; P2P system; P2PScope; address misconfigured P2P traffic; eMule source exchange protocol; network byte-order problem; resource mapping contamination; IP networks; Internet; Measurement; Network architecture; Peer to peer computing; Telecommunication traffic;