TY - GEN
T1 - Estimating topological distances based on end-to-end path sharing
AU - Karacali, Bengi
AU - Karol, Mark
PY - 2009
Y1 - 2009
N2 - Quality of Service (QoS) of large-scale distributed systems depends on the properties of the network connecting the nodes/hosts of the system. Topological information about the underlying network is beneficial for improving the performance, devising reliability schemes, ensuring low overhead, and enhancing the scalability of such systems. Topology information is often obtained with the support of the network infrastructure. Unfortunately, this support is often limited and sometimes not reliable. Various techniques have been proposed to infer useful information about the structure of the IP topology using strictly end-to-end measurements. In this paper, we rely on path sharing information between the nodes of a distributed system collected using end-to-end measurements and explore how much of the logical topology can be inferred using only this information. We propose an algorithm to construct such an inferred graph and evaluate this algorithm by simulations. In the synthetic topologies we considered, error in the estimated distances between the end nodes is on average a negligible fraction of the diameter for the tree topologies and less than 20% of the diameter for denser graphs.
AB - Quality of Service (QoS) of large-scale distributed systems depends on the properties of the network connecting the nodes/hosts of the system. Topological information about the underlying network is beneficial for improving the performance, devising reliability schemes, ensuring low overhead, and enhancing the scalability of such systems. Topology information is often obtained with the support of the network infrastructure. Unfortunately, this support is often limited and sometimes not reliable. Various techniques have been proposed to infer useful information about the structure of the IP topology using strictly end-to-end measurements. In this paper, we rely on path sharing information between the nodes of a distributed system collected using end-to-end measurements and explore how much of the logical topology can be inferred using only this information. We propose an algorithm to construct such an inferred graph and evaluate this algorithm by simulations. In the synthetic topologies we considered, error in the estimated distances between the end nodes is on average a negligible fraction of the diameter for the tree topologies and less than 20% of the diameter for denser graphs.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=67650682732&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1109/SARNOF.2009.4850296
DO - 10.1109/SARNOF.2009.4850296
M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:67650682732
SN - 9781424433827
T3 - 2009 IEEE Sarnoff Symposium, SARNOFF 2009 - Conference Proceedings
BT - 2009 IEEE Sarnoff Symposium, SARNOFF 2009 - Conference Proceedings
T2 - 2009 IEEE Sarnoff Symposium, SARNOFF 2009
Y2 - 30 March 2009 through 1 April 2009
ER -