CAIDA has been actively involved in active and passive measurements of the Internet
since 1998. We have accumulated comprehensive sets of data characterizing the Internet
topology, performance, workload, and security.
Results of our analyses of these
data have been published in scientific journals and conference proceedings.
One of the tasks of
Trends project (NSF ANI-0137121) is to
systematize and catalog our data in order to enable a multivariant
cross-correlational analysis of heterogeneous data and to search for underlying
trends and interdependencies. We offer access to the following data sets for
CAIDA members and the research community.
-
Active Measurements
-
raw topology traces
A traceroute-like tool skitter captures forward IP paths
and round-trip times from a skitter host to a specified list of
destinations. These measurements are ongoing.
-
Adjacency matrix of the Internet AS-level graph
AS-level graph of the Internet can be constructed from raw traces by converting
observed IP addresses to routed prefixes and then to origin ASes. Daily
snapshots of links making up such an AS-level graph are available for download.
These data are unrestricted, there is no AUP.
-
Internet Topology Data Kit (ITDK)
In order to provide the research community with a comprehensive input enabling
macroscopic Internet topology studies, we create special data kits and release
them annually. Each kit represents a set of coordinated simultaneous
measurements of the Internet connectivity and latency by various
CAIDA tools and includes parsing scripts
and other relevant information.
-
Passive measurements
-
backbone packet header traces (OC48, OC12)
CAIDA does not conduct regular monitoring of backbone links, but targets
its collection for specific projects of CAIDA staff members and collaborators.
Timing and duration of measurements vary depending on
project needs.
-
backscatter data from the UCSD network telescope
A team of CAIDA and UCSD researchers monitors traffic arriving to a portion
of routed IPv4 space where no legitimate traffic is expected. From these data
they can observe DoS attacks, follow the spread of Internet worms, and
detect network scanning. These measurements are ongoing.
-
project details
-
how to get the data *
* - currently, we offer to external researchers only
three weeks of DOS attacks data from January 2001. We expect to have more recent
and diverse data available soon.
-
Miscellaneous data
Note: access to these data is restricted. Please contact
data-info@caida.org for further
information.
-
DNS data
CAIDA is actively involved in monitoring and research of the Domain Name System.
We collect data in support of our DNS related projects.