Computer networks: a systems approach
Computer networks: a systems approach
Geospatial mapping and navigation of the web
Proceedings of the 10th international conference on World Wide Web
An investigation of geographic mapping techniques for internet hosts
Proceedings of the 2001 conference on Applications, technologies, architectures, and protocols for computer communications
GridMapper: A Tool for Visualizing the Behavior of Large-Scale Distributed Systems
HPDC '02 Proceedings of the 11th IEEE International Symposium on High Performance Distributed Computing
Identifying IPv6 network problems in the dual-stack world
Proceedings of the ACM SIGCOMM workshop on Network troubleshooting: research, theory and operations practice meet malfunctioning reality
A scalable framework for wireless network monitoring
Proceedings of the 2nd ACM international workshop on Wireless mobile applications and services on WLAN hotspots
Characterizing a national community web
ACM Transactions on Internet Technology (TOIT)
Geographical partition for distributed web crawling
Proceedings of the 2005 workshop on Geographic information retrieval
Internet geolocation: Evasion and counterevasion
ACM Computing Surveys (CSUR)
Estimating geographical position of nodes in the internet
IMSA '07 Proceedings of the Eleventh IASTED International Conference on Internet and Multimedia Systems and Applications
Octant: a comprehensive framework for the geolocalization of internet hosts
NSDI'07 Proceedings of the 4th USENIX conference on Networked systems design & implementation
Geographic Information Retrieval and Text Mining on Chinese Tourism Web Pages
International Journal of Information Technology and Web Engineering
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Traceroute [Jacobson88], originally written by Van Jacobson in 1988, has become a classic tool for determining the routes that packets take from a source host to a destination host. It does not provide any information regarding the physical location of each node along the route, which makes it difficult to effectively identify geographically circuitous unicast routing. Indeed, there are examples of paths between hosts just a few miles apart that cross the entire United States and back, phenomena not immediately evident from the textual output of traceroute. While such path information may not be of much interest to many end users, it can provide valuable insight to system administrators, network engineers, operators and analysts. We present a tool that depicts geographically the IP path information that traceroute provides, drawing the nodes on a world map according to their latitude/longitude coordinates.