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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
41

End-to-end delay margin based traffic engineering

Ashour, Mohammed January 2007 (has links)
No description available.
42

Design and implementation of a network controller for a local area network

Chatterjee, Aditya Narayan January 1986 (has links)
Resource Management is an extremely important concern for the network manager. Of the bus, ring and the star network topologies, usually employed in a local area network, the bus topology provides the highest reliability. However, peer-to-peer protocols usually followed in such a topology, make it extremely difficult to incorporate resource management features at a lower level of network architecture. This thesis presents design considerations for a session-level network controller, to be implemented on a local area network with a bus topology. The controller, will provide essential resource management, and attempt to improve the throughput of the network. The design is based on a single-board computer, and a streamlined operating system is also included in the design. It is claimed that such an environment will be ideal for networking tasks, like the controller presented. The design is software-oriented, though device selection is discussed, both for the controller and its network interface. The local area network used for the development of this project is a sixteen hundred node campus network at Virginia Tech ( using LocalNet 20) supplied by SYTEK, Inc. / M.S.
43

Easy Net Admin: Inventory tool for network administrators

Reddy, Rohini Mopu 01 January 2004 (has links)
The purpose of this project was to develop a tool / utility for network administrators to maintain information about all the systems operated by the College of Natural Sciences at California State University, San Bernardino.
44

Governance of virtual private networks using COBIT as framework

Sherry, Zaida 04 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MAcc (Accountancy))--University of Stellenbosch, 2007. / The purpose of this assignment is to ascertain whether the COBIT framework is an adequate framework to assist in the governance of virtual private networks. The assignment focuses on whether the framework can ensure the identification of virtual private network-related risks and address IT compliance with policies and statutory regulations. A brief summary of the risks and issues pertaining to the pre-implementation, implementation and post-implementation phases of virtual private networks is included in the assignment. These risks and issues are then individually mapped onto a relevant COBIT control objective. The scope of the assignment does not include the intricacies of how these networks operate, the different types of network topologies or the different technologies used in virtual private networks. It was found that the COBIT framework can be implemented to manage and/or mitigate virtual private network risks.
45

Technoeconomic aspects of next-generation telecommunications including the Internet service

Unknown Date (has links)
This research is concerned with the technoeconomic aspects of modern and next-generation telecommunications including the Internet service. The goal of this study thereof is tailored to address the following: (i) Reviewing the technoeconomic considerations prevailing in telecommunication (telco) systems and their implicating futures; (ii) studying relevant considerations by depicting the modern/next-generation telecommunications as a digital ecosystem viewed in terms of underlying complex system evolution (akin to biological systems); (iii) pursuant to the digital ecosystem concept, co-evolution modeling of competitive business structures in the technoeconomics of telco services using dichotomous (flip-flop) states as seen in prey-predator evolution; (iv) specific to Internet pricing economics, deducing the profile of consumer surplus versus pricing model under DiffServ QoS architecture pertinent to dynamic- , smart- and static-markets; (v) developing and exemplifying decision-making pursuits in telco business under non-competitive and competitive markets (via gametheoretic approach); (vi) and modeling forecasting issues in telco services addressed in terms of a simplified ARIMA-based time-series approach, (which includes seasonal and non-seasonal data plus goodness-fit estimations in time- and frequency-domains). Commensurate with the topics indicated above, necessary analytical derivations/models are proposed and computational exercises are performed (with MatLabTM R2006b and other software as needed). Extensive data gathered from open literature are used thereof and, ad hoc model verifications are performed. Lastly, results are discussed, inferences are made and open-questions for further research are identified. / by Renata Cristina Tourinho Sardenberg. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--Florida Atlantic University, 2010. / Includes bibliography. / Electronic reproduction. Boca Raton, Fla., 2010. Mode of access: World Wide Web.
46

Network-layer reservation TDM for ad-hoc 802.11 networks

Duff, Kevin Craig January 2008 (has links)
Ad-Hoc mesh networks offer great promise. Low-cost ad-hoc mesh networks can be built using popular IEEE 802.11 equipment, but such networks are unable to guarantee each node a fair share of bandwidth. Furthermore, hidden node problems cause collisions which can cripple the throughput of a network. This research proposes a novel mechanism which is able to overcome hidden node problems and provide fair bandwidth sharing among nodes on ad-hoc 802.11 networks, and can be implemented on existing network devices. The scheme uses TDM (time division multiplexing) with slot reservation. A distributed beacon packet latency measurement mechanism is used to achieve node synchronisation. The distributed nature of the mechanism makes it applicable to ad-hoc 802.11 networks, which can either grow or fragment dynamically.
47

Detecção de anomalias em redes de computadores / Anomaly detection in computer networks

Zarpelão, Bruno Bogaz 16 August 2018 (has links)
Orientadores: Leonardo de Souza Mendes, Mario Lemes Proença Junior / Tese (doutorado) - Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Faculdade de Engenharia Elétrica e de Computação / Made available in DSpace on 2018-08-16T19:18:19Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 Zarpelao_BrunoBogaz_D.pdf: 5089650 bytes, checksum: 281e7d926aae4a7e05a2e94347a06179 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2010 / Resumo: Anomalias em redes de computadores são desvios súbitos e acentuados que ocorrem no tráfego em consequência de diversas situações como defeitos em softwares, uso abusivo de recursos da rede, falhas em equipamentos, erros em configurações e ataques. Nesta tese, é proposto um sistema de detecção de anomalias em redes de computadores baseado em três níveis de análise. O primeiro nível de análise é responsável por comparar os dados coletados em um objeto SNMP (Simple Network Management Protocol) com o perfil de operações normais da rede. O segundo nível de análise correlaciona os alarmes gerados no primeiro nível de análise utilizando um grafo de dependências que representa as relações entre os objetos SNMP monitorados. O terceiro nível de análise reúne os alarmes de segundo nível utilizando informações sobre a topologia de rede e gera um alarme de terceiro nível que reporta a propagação da anomalia pela rede. Os testes foram realizados na rede da Universidade Estadual de Londrina, utilizando situações reais. Os resultados mostraram que a proposta apresentou baixas taxas de falsos positivos combinadas a altas taxas de detecção. Além disso, o sistema foi capaz de correlacionar alarmes gerados para diferentes objetos SNMP em toda a rede, produzindo conjuntos menores de alarmes que ofereceram ao administrador de redes uma visão panorâmica do problema / Abstract: Anomalies in computer networks are unexpected and significant deviations that occur in network traffic due to different situations such as software bugs, unfair resource usage, failures, misconfiguration and attacks. In this work, it is proposed an anomaly detection system based on three levels of analysis. The first level of analysis is responsible for comparing the data collected from SNMP (Simple Network Management Protocol) objects with the profile of network normal behavior. The second level of analysis correlates the alarms generated by the first level of analysis by using a dependency graph, which represents the relationships between the SNMP objects. The third level of analysis correlates the second level alarms by using network topology information. The third level generates a third level alarm that presents the anomaly propagation path through the network. Tests were performed in the State University of Londrina network, exploring real situations. Results showed that the proposal presents low false positive rates and high detection rates. Moreover, the proposed system is able to correlate alarms that were generated for SNMP objects at different places of the network, producing smaller sets of alarms that offer a wide-view of the problem to the network administrator / Doutorado / Telecomunicações e Telemática / Doutor em Engenharia Elétrica
48

An investigation into the control of audio streaming across networks having diverse quality of service mechanisms

Foulkes, Philip James January 2012 (has links)
The transmission of realtime audio data across digital networks is subject to strict quality of service requirements. These networks need to be able to guarantee network resources (e.g., bandwidth), ensure timely and deterministic data delivery, and provide time synchronisation mechanisms to ensure successful transmission of this data. Two open standards-based networking technologies, namely IEEE 1394 and the recently standardised Ethernet AVB, provide distinct methods for achieving these goals. Audio devices that are compatible with IEEE 1394 networks exist, and audio devices that are compatible with Ethernet AVB networks are starting to come onto the market. There is a need for mechanisms to provide compatibility between the audio devices that reside on these disparate networks such that existing IEEE 1394 audio devices are able to communicate with Ethernet AVB audio devices, and vice versa. The audio devices that reside on these networks may be remotely controlled by a diverse set of incompatible command and control protocols. It is desirable to have a common network-neutral method of control over the various parameters of the devices that reside on these networks. As part of this study, two Ethernet AVB systems were developed. One system acts as an Ethernet AVB audio endpoint device and another system acts as an audio gateway between IEEE 1394 and Ethernet AVB networks. These systems, along with existing IEEE 1394 audio devices, were used to demonstrate the ability to transfer audio data between the networking technologies. Each of the devices is remotely controllable via a network neutral command and control protocol, XFN. The IEEE 1394 and Ethernet AVB devices are used to demonstrate the use of the XFN protocol to allow for network neutral connection management to take place between IEEE 1394 and Ethernet AVB networks. User control over these diverse devices is achieved via the use of a graphical patchbay application, which aims to provide a consistent user interface to a diverse range of devices.
49

WebSAT: Web-based systems administration tool

Jeong, Juyong 01 January 2005 (has links)
Discusses the development of WebSAT (Web-based systems administration tool), a computer network tool that allows systems administrators to create and delete accounts, disable and enable existing accounts, manage disk space conveniently, monitor the status of all network printers, and monitor network security. The WebSAT application was implemented using PHP, a server-side embedded scripting language, with a MySQL database.
50

Applying PRINCE2 project management disciplines to address key risks in ERP System Implementation Projects

Plotnikova, Svetlana 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MAcc (Accountancy))--University of Stellenbosch, 2007. / The successful implementation of an Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) System can help an organisation to redefine its business processes and enhance its competitive advantage. An ERP System Implementation is a transformation project, which changes the way an organisation thinks and acts about its business. An ERP System implementation is also a complex endeavour, and as such, it requires rigorous risk management. The understanding and management of risks relevant to ERP System Implementation Projects are critical in order to ensure that the project delivers on its objectives within the specified budget and timelines, and eventually realises the envisaged business benefits. The purpose of this study is to discuss how key risks relevant to ERP System Implementation Projects could be addressed by applying project management disciplines derived from the PRINCE2 (PRojects IN Controlled Environment) project management methodology. This methodology was developed by the Office of Government Commerce in the United Kingdom. This study also provides a framework that could be applied at the outset and during an ERP System Implementation Project by business management, to understand the risks (“what could go wrong?”) and project management disciplines that should be applied to address these risks (“what must go right?”). This framework was derived by: • Identifying key risks relevant to ERP System Implementation Projects; • Mapping these key risks onto SAP Implementation phases to highlight where these risks could materialise in the SAP Implementation process; • Then mapping these key risks across PRINCE2 project management processes and SAP Implementation phases by creating the SAP Implementation Key Risks Map; and finally • Providing a detailed description of how to apply PRINCE2 project management disciplines to address each risk in the SAP Implementation Key Risks Map.

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