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<b>URL:</b>
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<a href="http://www.isi.edu/ant/lander/minenet.pdf">http://www.isi.edu/ant/lander/minenet.pdf</a>
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<b>ENTRY DATE:</b>
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2008-06-16


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<b>ABSTRACT:</b>
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One of the most pressing problems in network research is the lack of
long-term trace data from ISPs. The Internet carries an enormous volume
and variety of data; mining this data can provide valuable insight into
the design and development of new protocols and applications. Although
capture cards for high-speed links exist today, actually making the
network traffic available for analysis involves more than just getting
the packets off the wire, but also handling large and variable traffic
loads, sanitizing and anonymizing the data, and coordinating access by
multiple users. In this paper we discuss the requirements, challenges,
and design of an effective traffic monitoring infrastructure for network
research. We describe our experience in deploying and maintaining a
multi-user system for continuous trace collection at a large regional
ISP. We evaluate the performance of our system and show that it can
support sustained collection and processing rates of over
160-300Mbits/s.





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