DocumentCode :
2284243
Title :
Network-wide inference of end-to-end path intersections
Author :
Karacali, Bengi ; Karol, Mark
Author_Institution :
Avaya Labs., Basking Ridge, NJ
fYear :
2008
fDate :
7-11 April 2008
Firstpage :
168
Lastpage :
175
Abstract :
Network topology information has many uses for networked applications including the design of reliability and performance enhancing schemes. This information is often acquired by network discovery techniques that rely on ICMP and/or SNMP support from the infrastructure. Unfortunately, network infrastructure may support such services at varying levels. In cases where such support is limited, techniques based on strictly end-to-end measurements have been proposed in the literature to infer a logical topology. In this paper, we propose an end-to-end measurement technique that is complimentary to the earlier techniques and relies on multiple-source multiple-destination probing to collect network wide measurements faster. Our technique relies on the interaction between streams of packets at various nodes in the network. Specifically, we aim to measure the reaction of end-to-end probes to a short burst of concentrated traffic (signal) injected to the network. The key assumption is that probes traversing paths that physically intersect with the path of the bursty traffic (signal path) will exhibit extra jitter. The occurrence of extra jitter in the probe packet inter-arrival times matching the signal bursts indicates that the paths of the probe and signal intersect. We conducted an empirical study on an actual production network to evaluate the ability of the technique to detect end-to-end path intersections. Our empirical results indicate that in the network we considered the technique successfully detected path intersections.
Keywords :
telecommunication network reliability; telecommunication network topology; telecommunication traffic; ICMP; SNMP; bursty traffic; concentrated traffic; end-to-end measurement technique; end-to-end path intersections; extra jitter; logical topology; multiple-source multiple-destination probing; network discovery techniques; network topology information; network-wide inference; probe packet inter-arrival times; reliability design; Data mining; Delay; IP networks; Jitter; Measurement techniques; Network topology; Probes; Production; Telecommunication traffic; Testing;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Network Operations and Management Symposium, 2008. NOMS 2008. IEEE
Conference_Location :
Salvador, Bahia
ISSN :
1542-1201
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-2065-0
Electronic_ISBN :
1542-1201
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/NOMS.2008.4575131
Filename :
4575131
Link To Document :
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