On dominant characteristics of residential broadband internet traffic

  • Authors:
  • Gregor Maier;Anja Feldmann;Vern Paxson;Mark Allman

  • Affiliations:
  • TU Berlin and T-Labs, Berlin, Germany;TU Berlin and T-Labs, Berlin, Germany;University of Ccalifornia Berkeley and ICSI, Berkeley, CA, USA;ICSI, Berkeley, CA, USA

  • Venue:
  • Proceedings of the 9th ACM SIGCOMM conference on Internet measurement conference
  • Year:
  • 2009

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Abstract

While residential broadband Internet access is popular in many parts of the world, only a few studies have examined the characteristics of such traffic. In this paper we describe observations from monitoring the network activity for more than 20,000 residential DSL customers in an urban area. To ensure privacy, all data is immediately anonymized. We augment the anonymized packet traces with information about DSL-level sessions, IP (re-)assignments, and DSL link bandwidth. Our analysis reveals a number of surprises in terms of the mental models we developed from the measurement literature. For example, we find that HTTP - not peer-to-peer - traffic dominates by a significant margin; that more often than not the home user's immediate ISP connectivity contributes more to the round-trip times the user experiences than the WAN portion of the path; and that the DSL lines are frequently not the bottleneck in bulk-transfer performance.