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Their Share: Diversity and Disparity in IP Traffic

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Passive and Active Network Measurement (PAM 2004)

Part of the book series: Lecture Notes in Computer Science ((LNCS,volume 3015))

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Abstract

The need to service populations of high diversity in the face of high disparity affects all aspects of network operation: planning, routing, engineering, security, and accounting. We analyze diversity/disparity from the perspective of selecting a boundary between mice and elephants in IP traffic aggregated by route, e.g., destination AS. Our goal is to find a concise quantifier of size disparity for IP addresses, prefixes, policy atoms and ASes, similar to the oft-quoted 80/20 split (e.g., 80% of volume in 20% of sources). We define crossover as the fraction c of total volume contributed by a complementary fraction 1-c of large objects. Studying sources and sinks at two Tier 1 backbones and one university, we find that splits of 90/10 and 95/5 are common for IP traffic. We compare the crossover diversity to common analytic models for size distributions such as Pareto/Zipf. We find that AS traffic volumes (by byte) are top-heavy and can only be approximated by Pareto with α=0.5, and that empirical distributions are often close to Weibull with shape parameter 0.2–0.3. We also find that less than 20 ASes send or receive 50% of all traffic in both backbones’ samples, a disparity that can simplify traffic engineering. Our results are useful for developers of traffic models, generators and simulators, for router testers and operators of high-speed networks.

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Broido, A., Hyun, Y., Gao, R., claffy, k. (2004). Their Share: Diversity and Disparity in IP Traffic. In: Barakat, C., Pratt, I. (eds) Passive and Active Network Measurement. PAM 2004. Lecture Notes in Computer Science, vol 3015. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-24668-8_12

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-24668-8_12

  • Publisher Name: Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg

  • Print ISBN: 978-3-540-21492-2

  • Online ISBN: 978-3-540-24668-8

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