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Passive and Active Measurement 12th International Conference PAM 2011 Atlanta GA USA March 20 22 2011 Proceedings 1st Edition by Neil Spring, George F Riley ISBN 9783642192593

  • SKU: BELL-2107762
Passive and Active Measurement 12th International Conference PAM 2011 Atlanta GA USA March 20 22 2011 Proceedings 1st Edition by Neil Spring, George F Riley ISBN 9783642192593
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Passive and Active Measurement 12th International Conference PAM 2011 Atlanta GA USA March 20 22 2011 Proceedings 1st Edition by Neil Spring, George F Riley ISBN 9783642192593 instant download after payment.

Publisher: Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
File Extension: PDF
File size: 5.34 MB
Pages: 246
Author: Changhyun Lee, D. K. Lee, Yung Yi, Sue Moon (auth.), Neil Spring, George F. Riley (eds.)
ISBN: 9783642192593, 3642192599
Language: English
Year: 2011
Edition: 1

Product desciption

Passive and Active Measurement 12th International Conference PAM 2011 Atlanta GA USA March 20 22 2011 Proceedings 1st Edition by Neil Spring, George F Riley ISBN 9783642192593 by Changhyun Lee, D. K. Lee, Yung Yi, Sue Moon (auth.), Neil Spring, George F. Riley (eds.) 9783642192593, 3642192599 instant download after payment.

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ISBN 13: 9783642192593
Author: Neil Spring, George F Riley

This book constitutes the refereed proceedings of the 12th International Conference on Passive and Active Measurement, PAM 2011, held in Atlanta, GA, USA, in March 2011. The 24 revised full papers presented were carefully reviewed and selected from 56 submissions. The papers were arranged into seven sessions covering passive measurement, wireless models, bandwidth, automated bots, route avoidance, interdomain protocols, timing, and diagnosis.

Passive and Active Measurement 12th International Conference PAM 2011 Atlanta GA USA March 20 22 2011 Proceedings 1st Table of contents:

  1. Operating a Network Link at 100%
  2. Introduction
  3. When and Where Do We See 100% Utilization?
  4. Traffic Mix
  5. Impact of Congestion on Packet Loss and Delay
  6. Packet Loss
  7. Delay
  8. Impact of Congestion on Application Performance
  9. Web Flows
  10. Bulk Transfer Flows
  11. Related Work
  12. Conclusions
  13. References
  14. Dynamics of Prefix Usage at an Edge Router
  15. Introduction
  16. Related Work
  17. Data Description
  18. Data Sources and Trace Statistics
  19. Traffic Distribution
  20. Results
  21. Duty Cycle
  22. Mean Rank Difference
  23. Conclusion and Future Work
  24. References
  25. Evolution of Cache Replacement Policies to Track Heavy-Hitter Flows
  26. Introduction
  27. Background
  28. Datasets
  29. Approach
  30. Evaluation
  31. Replacement Policy Extension
  32. Conclusions
  33. References
  34. NAT Usage in Residential Broadband Networks
  35. Introduction
  36. Data Sets
  37. Methodology
  38. Detecting the Presence of NAT
  39. Number of Hosts Per DSL Line
  40. A NAT Analysis Tool
  41. NAT Analysis for Different Data Set Types
  42. NAT Usage/Hosts Per DSL Line
  43. NAT Usage
  44. Number of Hosts Per Line
  45. NAT Analysis with Different Data Set Types
  46. Impact of Shorter Time-Scales
  47. Analysis Approach
  48. Results
  49. Discussion
  50. Conclusion
  51. References
  52. The Efficacy of Path Loss Models for Fixed Rural Wireless Links
  53. Introduction
  54. Related Work
  55. Measurement
  56. Models
  57. Results
  58. Conclusion
  59. References
  60. Dissecting 3G Uplink Delay by Measuring in an Operational HSPA Network
  61. Introduction
  62. Measurement Setup
  63. Traffic Generation
  64. Measurement Devices
  65. Results
  66. Single Components
  67. Accumulated Delay
  68. Conclusion and Outlook
  69. References
  70. On the Potential of Fixed-Beam 60 GHz Network Interfaces in Mobile Devices
  71. Introduction
  72. Background on 60 GHz Radios
  73. Measurement Setup and Methodology
  74. Results
  75. Discussion and Limitations
  76. Conclusion and Future Directions
  77. References
  78. On the Feasibility of Prefetching and Caching for Online TV Services: A Measurement Study on Hulu
  79. Introduction
  80. Methodology
  81. Dataset
  82. Trace Details
  83. Popular Video List Details
  84. Simulation and Results
  85. Evaluation Metrics
  86. Performance of Caching without Storage Limit
  87. Performance of Caching With Storage Limit
  88. Performance of Prefetching Popular Videos List
  89. Combining Caching and Prefetching
  90. Conclusion
  91. References
  92. On the Feasibility of Bandwidth Detouring
  93. Introduction
  94. Related Work
  95. Detour Properties
  96. Bandwidth Measurement
  97. Bandwidth Detouring
  98. Bandwidth Detour Properties
  99. Exploiting Detours
  100. Detouring Mechanisms
  101. Analysis of IP and TCP Detouring
  102. Detouring Overlay Performance
  103. Detour Transferability
  104. Conclusions
  105. References
  106. Can Network Characteristics Detect Spam Effectively in a Stand-Alone Enterprise?
  107. Introduction
  108. Data and Features
  109. Empirical Evaluation
  110. Packet-Level Features at the Enterprise
  111. Effect of Flow-Level Features
  112. Utility of Individual Features
  113. Summary
  114. References
  115. Detecting and Analyzing Automated Activity on Twitter
  116. Introduction
  117. Background and Measurement Data
  118. Detecting Tweet Automation
  119. Evaluating the Test
  120. Analyzing Twitter's Landscape
  121. Summary
  122. References
  123. A Practical Approach to Portscan Detection in Very High-Speed Links
  124. Introduction and Related Work
  125. Detection Algorithm
  126. Detecting Failed Connections
  127. Identifying Scanners
  128. Results
  129. Evaluation
  130. Conclusions and Future Work
  131. References
  132. Omnify: Investigating the Visibility and Effectiveness of Copyright Monitors
  133. Introduction
  134. Methodology
  135. Data Collection
  136. Building the Reverse Infohash Database
  137. Identifying Activity Patterns
  138. Generating Blacklists
  139. Evaluation
  140. Related Work
  141. Conclusions
  142. References
  143. Internet Censorship in China: Where Does the Filtering Occur?
  144. Introduction
  145. Related Work
  146. China's AS-Level Topology
  147. Methodology
  148. Results
  149. Discussion
  150. Locating Filtering Devices
  151. Statefulness of the Firewall
  152. Websites Probed
  153. Algorithm
  154. Results
  155. Conclusion
  156. References
  157. Route Flap Damping Made Usable
  158. Introduction
  159. Background
  160. Measurement Setup
  161. Results
  162. Other Feeds
  163. Conclusion
  164. References
  165. On Reducing the Impact of Interdomain Route Changes
  166. Introduction
  167. Related Work
  168. Dataset
  169. Stick-To-Egress Route Selection
  170. Route Boosting
  171. Route Boosting Algorithm
  172. Route Boosting Emulation
  173. Conclusions
  174. References
  175. Inferring the Origin of Routing Changes Based on Preferred Path Changes
  176. Introduction
  177. Effect of Path Exploration on Origin Inference
  178. Path Exploration of BGP
  179. Effect of Path Exploration on Measurement
  180. Detecting Candidate Origins
  181. Selection of Measurement Prefixes for Each Link
  182. Detecting Links as Candidate Origins
  183. The Origin Inference Scheme
  184. Evaluation
  185. Evaluation Using Operational Tickets
  186. Comparing the Number of Inferred Origins
  187. Discussion
  188. Conclusion and Future Work
  189. References
  190. A Comparative Study of Handheld and Non-handheld Traffic in Campus Wi-Fi Networks
  191. Introduction
  192. Methodology
  193. Protocols and Services
  194. Protocols
  195. TCP Flow Characteristics
  196. Web Traffic
  197. Hosts
  198. Content Type and Length
  199. Streaming Video
  200. Content Similarity
  201. Related Work
  202. Conclusion
  203. References
  204. Unveiling the BitTorrent Performance in Mobile WiMAX Networks
  205. Introduction
  206. Experiment Description
  207. Measurement Settings
  208. Test Routes
  209. Impacts of Handovers
  210. BitTorrent Dynamics for Mobility in WiMAX
  211. Peer Connectivity
  212. Download Stability
  213. Download Traffic
  214. Upload Stability and Traffic
  215. Protocol Control Behaviors
  216. Conclusion
  217. References
  218. Peeling Away Timing Error in NetFlow Data
  219. Introduction
  220. Characterizing Timing Error in NetFlow Version 9
  221. Quantifying Timing Errors in NetFlow v9
  222. Correcting Cyclic Timing Error
  223. Evaluation
  224. Related Work
  225. Conclusions
  226. References
  227. Clockscalpel: Understanding Root Causes of Internet Clock Synchronization Inaccuracy
  228. Introduction
  229. Background
  230. Methodology and Data Sets
  231. Synchronization Accuracy in the Internet
  232. Understanding Underlying Factors
  233. Software Stack Delay Asymmetry
  234. Queueing Delay Asymmetry
  235. Transmission Delay Asymmetry
  236. Propagation Delay Asymmetry
  237. Discussion
  238. Conclusions
  239. References
  240. FACT: Flow-Based Approach for Connectivity Tracking
  241. Introduction
  242. Methodology
  243. Data Sets
  244. Connectivity Analysis
  245. Data Collection and Preprocessing
  246. 5-Tuple Cache
  247. Analyzer
  248. Case Studies
  249. Related Work
  250. Conclusion
  251. References
  252. Non-cooperative Diagnosis of Submarine Cable Faults
  253. Introduction
  254. Measurement Methodology
  255. Measurement Setup
  256. Measurement Scheduling and Traffic
  257. Metrics
  258. The SEA-ME-WE 4 Cable Fault
  259. Impacts of the Cable Fault
  260. Impacts of the Cable Repair
  261. Related Work
  262. Conclusion and Future Work
  263. References
  264. Measuring and Characterizing End-to-End Route Dynamics in the Presence of Load Balancing
  265. Introduction
  266. Definitions
  267. Route Dynamics: Fast vs. Complete Measurements
  268. Measurement Method and Datasets
  269. Analysis
  270. Measuring Route Dynamics under Load Balancing
  271. Analysis of Load Balancer Dynamics
  272. Probing Strategy
  273. Dataset
  274. Route Prevalence and Persistence
  275. Related Work
  276. Conclusion

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Tags: Neil Spring, George F Riley, Passive, Measurement

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