Generation of High Bandwidth Network Traffic Traces. Kamath, P., Lan, K., Heidemann, J., Bannister, J., & Touch, J. In Proceedings of the International Symposium on Modeling, Analysis and Simulation of Computer and Telecommunication Systems, pages 401–410, Fort Worth, Texas, USA, October, 2002. IEEE.
Generation of High Bandwidth Network Traffic Traces [link]Paper  abstract   bibtex   
High bandwidth network traffic traces are needed to understand the behavior of high speed networks (such as the Internet backbone). However, the implementation of a mechanism to collect such traces is difficult in practice. In the absence of real traces, tools to generate high bandwidth traces would aid the study of high speed network behavior. We describe three methods of generating high bandwidth network traces: scaling low bandwidth network traffic traces, merging multiple low bandwidth traces and generating traces through simulation by scaling a structural model of real world traces. We evaluate the generated traces and discuss the advantages and disadvantages of each method. We also discuss some of the issues involved in generating traces by the structural model method.
@InProceedings{Kamath02a,
	author = 	"Purushotham Kamath and Kun-chan Lan and John Heidemann and Joe Bannister and Joe Touch",
	title = 	"Generation of High Bandwidth Network Traffic Traces",
	booktitle = 	"Proceedings of the " # " International Symposium on Modeling, Analysis and Simulation of Computer and Telecommunication Systems",
	year = 		2002,
	sortdate = 		"2002-10-01", 
	project = "ant, saman, conser",
	jsubject = "traffic_modeling",
	publisher =	"IEEE",
	address =	"Fort Worth, Texas, USA",
	month =		oct,
	pages =		"401--410",
	jlocation =	"johnh: folder: xxx",
	jlocation =	"johnh: pafile",
	keywords =	"RAMP, trace generation",
	copyrightterms = "	Personal use of this material is permitted.  However, 	permission to reprint/republish this material for advertising 	or promotional purposes or for creating new collective works         for resale or redistribution to servers or lists, 	or to reuse any copyrighted component of this work in other works 	must be obtained from the IEEE. ",
	url =		"https://ant.isi.edu/%7ejohnh/PAPERS/Kamath02a.html",
	pdfurl =	"https://ant.isi.edu/%7ejohnh/PAPERS/Kamath02a.pdf",
	psurl =	"https://ant.isi.edu/%7ejohnh/PAPERS/Kamath02a.ps.gz",
	myorganization =	"USC/Information Sciences Institute",
	usessoftware = "stream_merger",
	abstract = "
High bandwidth network traffic traces are needed to understand the
behavior of high speed networks (such as the Internet
backbone). However, the implementation of a mechanism to collect such
traces is difficult in practice.  In the absence of real traces, tools
to generate high bandwidth traces would aid the study of high speed
network behavior.  We describe three methods of generating high
bandwidth network traces: scaling low bandwidth network traffic
traces, merging multiple low bandwidth traces and generating traces
through simulation by scaling a structural model of real world traces.
We evaluate the generated traces and discuss the advantages and
disadvantages of each method. We also discuss some of the issues
involved in generating traces by the structural model method.",
}

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