A Geometric Approach to Improving
Active
Packet Loss
Measurement
Abstract:
Measurement
and estimation of packet loss characteristics are challenging due to the
relatively rare occurrence and typically short duration of packet loss
episodes. While active probe tools are commonly used to measure packet loss on
end-to-end paths, there has been little analysis of the accuracy of these tools
or their impact on the network. The objective of our study is to understand how
to measure packet loss episodes accurately with end-to-end probes. We begin by
testing the capability of standard Poisson- modulated end-to-end measurements
of loss in a controlled laboratory environment using IP routers and commodity
end hosts. Our tests show that loss characteristics reported from such
Poisson-modulated probe tools can be quite inaccurate over a range of traffic
conditions. Motivated by these observations, we introduce a new algorithm for
packet loss measurement that is designed to overcome the deficiencies in
standard Poisson-based tools. Specifically, our method entails probe
experiments that follow a geometric distribution to 1) enable an explicit
trade-off between accuracy and impact on the network, and 2) enable more
accurate measurements than standard Poisson probing at the same rate. We
evaluate the capabilities of our methodology experimentally by developing and
implementing a prototype tool, called BADABING. The experiments demonstrate the
trade-offs between impact on the network and measurement accuracy. We show that
BADABING reports loss characteristics far more accurately than traditional loss
measurement tools.
Existing System:
- In an
Existing System, they analyze the usefulness of Poisson Arrivals
See Time Averages in the networking context. Of particular relevance to
our work is Paxson’s recommendation and use of Poisson- modulated active
probe streams to reduce bias in delay and loss measurements.
- Several
studies include the use of loss measurements to estimate network
properties such as bottleneck buffer size and cross traffic intensity, which
is not accurate.
- Network
tomography based on using both multicast and unicast probes has also been
demonstrated to be in-effective (in some cases) for inferring loss rates
on internal links on end-to-end paths.
Proposed System:
- The
purpose of our study was to understand how to measure end-to-end packet
loss characteristics accurately with probes and in a way that enables us
to specify the impact on the bottleneck queue.
- The
goal of our study is to understand how to accurately measure loss
characteristics on end-to-end paths with probes.
- Specifically, our method entails probe
experiments that follow a geometric distribution to 1) enable an explicit
trade-off between accuracy and impact on the network, and 2) enable more
accurate measurements than standard Poisson probing at the same rate.
- Our
study consists of three parts: (i) empirical evaluation of the
currently prevailing approach, (ii) development of estimation
techniques that are based on novel experimental design, novel probing
techniques, and simple validation tests, and (iii) empirical
evaluation of this new methodology.
System
Requirements
Hardware:
PROCESSOR :
PENTIUM IV 2.6 GHz
RAM : 512
MB
MONITOR
: 15”
HARD DISK : 20
GB
CDDRIVE
: 52X
KEYBOARD : STANDARD
102 KEYS
MOUSE
: 3 BUTTONS
Software:
FRONT END :
JAVA, SWING
TOOLS USED : JFRAME BUILDER
OPERATING SYSTEM :
WINDOWS XP
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