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Towards Ideal Network Traffic Measurement: A Statistical Algorithmic Approach

With the emergence of computer networks as one of the primary platforms of communication,
and with their adoption for an increasingly broad range of applications, there is a growing need for high-quality network traffic measurements to better understand, characterize and engineer the network behaviors. Due to the inherent lack of fine-grained measurement capabilities in the original design of the Internet, it does not have enough data or information to compute or even approximate
some traffic statistics such as traffic matrices and per-link delay. While it is possible to infer these statistics from indirect aggregate measurements that are widely supported by network measurement devices (e.g., routers), how to obtain the best possible inferences is often a challenging research problem. We name this as "too little data" problem after its root cause. Interestingly, while "too little data" is clearly a problem, "too much data" is not a blessing either. With the rapid increase
of network link speeds, even to keep sampled summarized network traffic (for inferring various
network statistics) at low sample rates results in too much data to be stored, processed, and transmitted over measurement devices. In summary high-quality measurements in today's Internet is
very challenging due to resource limitations and lack of built-in support, manifested as either "too little data" or "too much data".

We present some new practices and proposals to alleviate these two problems.The contribution is four fold: i) designing universal methodologies towards ideal network traffic measurements; ii) providing accurate estimations for several critical traffic statistics guided
by the proposed methodologies; iii) offering multiple useful and extensible building blocks which can be used to construct a universal network measurement system in the future; iv) leading to some notable mathematical results such as a new large deviation theorem that finds applications in various areas.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:GATECH/oai:smartech.gatech.edu:1853/19821
Date03 October 2007
CreatorsZhao, Qi
PublisherGeorgia Institute of Technology
Source SetsGeorgia Tech Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Archive
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeDissertation

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