Characteristics of wide-area TCP/IP conversations
SIGCOMM '91 Proceedings of the conference on Communications architecture & protocols
Empirically derived analytic models of wide-area TCP connections
IEEE/ACM Transactions on Networking (TON)
Wide area traffic: the failure of Poisson modeling
IEEE/ACM Transactions on Networking (TON)
End-to-end routing behavior in the Internet
IEEE/ACM Transactions on Networking (TON)
Self-similarity in World Wide Web traffic: evidence and possible causes
IEEE/ACM Transactions on Networking (TON)
Summary cache: a scalable wide-area Web cache sharing protocol
Proceedings of the ACM SIGCOMM '98 conference on Applications, technologies, architectures, and protocols for computer communication
IP packet generation: statistical models for TCP start times based on connection-rate superposition
Proceedings of the 2000 ACM SIGMETRICS international conference on Measurement and modeling of computer systems
What TCP/IP protocol headers can tell us about the web
Proceedings of the 2001 ACM SIGMETRICS international conference on Measurement and modeling of computer systems
Monitoring very high speed links
IMW '01 Proceedings of the 1st ACM SIGCOMM Workshop on Internet Measurement
An Empirical Model of HTTP Network Traffic
INFOCOM '97 Proceedings of the INFOCOM '97. Sixteenth Annual Joint Conference of the IEEE Computer and Communications Societies. Driving the Information Revolution
The measured access characteristics of world-wide-web client proxy caches
USITS'97 Proceedings of the USENIX Symposium on Internet Technologies and Systems on USENIX Symposium on Internet Technologies and Systems
Effective traffic measurement using ntop
IEEE Communications Magazine
On using virtual circuits for GridFTP transfers
SC '12 Proceedings of the International Conference on High Performance Computing, Networking, Storage and Analysis
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Internet traffic analysis is one of the core topics of research in the evolution and planning of the next generation integrated networks. In spite of this fact, standard, open source tools for the collection and, most of all, the elaboration of traffic data are very few and far from comprehensive and easy to use. This paper present a new tool named Tstat, that allows the collection of traffic data and is able to reconstruct the traffic characteristics at several different logical level, from the packet level up to the application level. Tstat is made available to the scientific and industrial community [1] and, as of today, offer more than 80 different types of measurements, starting from classical traffic volume measurements, up to sophisticated analysis regarding the round trip times measured by TCP or the loss probability and correlation of each flow.One of the key characteristics of Tstat is that, though it is capable of analyzing the traffic at the flow level, it is an entirely passive tool, that does not alter in any way the traffic pattern at the network interface where its data collection module is installed.