Network management using Internet technologies
Proceedings of the fifth IFIP/IEEE international symposium on Integrated network management V : integrated management in a virtual world: integrated management in a virtual world
Using the World Wide Web and Java for network service management
Proceedings of the fifth IFIP/IEEE international symposium on Integrated network management V : integrated management in a virtual world: integrated management in a virtual world
SNMP,SNMPV2,Snmpv3,and RMON 1 and 2
SNMP,SNMPV2,Snmpv3,and RMON 1 and 2
Practical Planning for Network Growth
Practical Planning for Network Growth
Broadband Communications
The Java Programming Language
An Architecture for Building Scalable, Web-BasedManagement Services
Journal of Network and Systems Management
Web-based intranet services and network management
IEEE Communications Magazine
Thresholds: Workflow Oriented Network Management: A Web/Java Approach
Journal of Network and Systems Management
A Survey of Fault Management in Wireless Sensor Networks
Journal of Network and Systems Management
Enterprise distributed service platforms: an approach to the architecture and topology optimization
Proceedings of the 7th International Conference on Advances in Mobile Computing and Multimedia
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Today's enterprise networks are composed of multiple types of interconnected networks. Furthermore, organizations use a variety of systems and applications on these networks. Operations and management staff must provide an efficient, reliable and secure operating environment to support an organization's daily activities. Enterprise networks must be monitored for performance, configuration, security, accounting and fault management. Current management practices typically involve the use of complex, hard-to-learn and hard-to-use tools. What is needed desperately is a set of simple, uniform, ubiquitous tools for managing networks. Web-based management promises to provide such solutions. This paper focuses on the use of Web technology and the Multi-Router Traffic Grapher (MRTG) for the purposes of enterprise network traffic monitoring and reporting. In this paper, we first examine the requirements for enterprise network traffic monitoring, analysis and reporting, and then present the design and implementation of a Web-based network traffic monitoring and reporting system that satisfies those requirements. We also present guidelines we have formulated and used for analyzing enterprise network traffic. We then discuss our experiences in using such a system for traffic monitoring on two large enterprise networks.