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<b>URL:</b>
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<a href="http://www.caida.org/publications/papers/1999/manta/">http://www.caida.org/publications/papers/1999/manta/</a>
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<b>Entry Date:</b>
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2003-10-02


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<b>Abstract:</b>
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<p>
For the last several years, the Internet multicast backbone has been a
growing part of the Internet infrastructure, and of strategic interest to
the network research community experimenting with multicast technologies.
In particular, the MBONE has been a deployment testbed for scalable
distribution of group audio and video streams. Rapid growth in topology and
traffic volume of the multicast infrastructure has brought inevitable
scaling problems, not the least of which is the increased negative impact
incurred by accidental misconfiguration of MBONE nodes. In pursuit of
insight into the MBONE topology, its growth characteristics, and the extent
of the transition from the tunnel-based architecture to the deployment of
native multicast, we developed and applied visualization tools to the
database of connectivity information collected with the mwatch [MWAT]
utility from University College London. We have used two separate
visualization tools for this task: MantaRay [MANTA], for geographic-map
based depiction of MBONE data collected by mrinfo queries; and otter
[OTTER], for topological visualizations of the same data.
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MantaRay and Otter are part of the fleet of tools from the Cooperative
Association for Internet Data Analysis (CAIDA) for visualizing various sets
of Internet data. Both tools are Java-based and allow users to select parts
of the data, focus or zoom in on particular areas, color by various
parameters, and generally explore multicast topologies. 
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