Programming perl
Communications of the ACM
World Wide Web network traffic patterns
COMPCON '95 Proceedings of the 40th IEEE Computer Society International Conference
A scalable framework for wireless network monitoring
Proceedings of the 2nd ACM international workshop on Wireless mobile applications and services on WLAN hotspots
Extensible, Scalable Monitoring for Clusters of Computers
LISA '97 Proceedings of the 11th USENIX conference on System administration
NETA'99 Proceedings of the 1st conference on Conference on Network Administration - Volume 1
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Internet access is increasingly critical to organizations and individuals [1]. With the current boom in Internet Service Providers (ISPs), how does one judge one vendor from another? LACHESIS* is a tool that provides a way to benchmark ISPs. LACHESIS takes a list of prominent Internet Landmarks and determines the packet loss and network latency involved in reaching those landmarks. Throughput was rejected as a factor. Several studies indicate that network latency is a critical factor in World Wide Web (WWW) performance [2-5]. The default set of LACHESIS landmarks (landmarks used are customizable) includes the Domain Name Service (DNS) root servers, well known FTP servers, and popular WWW servers. LACHESIS is implemented as a PERL script wrapped around FPING. The LACHESIS tool encourages ISPs to have good interconnectivity with other ISPs. It also encourages ISPs to have plenty of capacity and not to drop packets. LACHESIS has the potential to swamp landmarks with ICMP packets (used by FPING), but this can be dealt with by filtering out ICMP from abusive hosts. ISPs can cheat by favoring ICMP packets. Future plans include a Winsock implementation so that individual SLIP/PPP Internet subscribers can run their own benchmarks.