<?xml version="1.0" standalone="no"?>
                    <!DOCTYPE div SYSTEM "/www/backend/www-xml-443/dtd/caidaML.dtd">
                    <!-- do NOT ERASE the DOCTYPE declaration! --><div>


<tr bgcolor="#f4f4f4">
  <td>
<font face="helvetica,arial" size="2">
<b>URL:</b>
</font>
</td>
  <td>
<font face="helvetica,arial" size="2">
<a href="http://www.pamconf.org/2005/PDF/34310328.pdf">http://www.pamconf.org/2005/PDF/34310328.pdf</a>
</font>
  </td>
</tr>


<tr bgcolor="#e9e9e9">
  <td>
<font face="helvetica,arial" size="2">
<b>Entry Dates:</b>
</font>
</td>
  <td>
<font face="helvetica,arial" size="2">
2009-02-11


</font>
  </td>
</tr>


<tr bgcolor="#f4f4f4">
  <td>
<font face="helvetica,arial" size="2">
<b>Abstract:</b>
</font>
</td>
  <td>
<font face="helvetica,arial" size="2">
A number of key areas in IP network engineering, management and surveillance greatly benefit from the ability to dynamically identify traffic flows according to the applications responsible for their creation. Currently such classifications rely on selected packet header fields (e.g. destination port) or application layer protocol decoding. These methods have a number of shortfalls e.g. many applications can use unpredictable port numbers and protocol decoding requires high resource usage or is simply infeasible in case protocols are unknown or encrypted. We propose a framework for application classification using an unsupervised machine learning (ML) technique. Flows are automatically classified based on their statistical characteristics. We also propose a systematic approach to identify an optimal set of flow attributes to use and evaluate the effectiveness of our approach using captured traffic traces. 


</font>
  </td>
</tr>


<tr bgcolor="#e9e9e9">
  <td>
<font face="helvetica,arial" size="2">
<b>Results:</b>
</font>
</td>
  <td>
<font face="helvetica,arial" size="2">
<ul>
<li>
datasets: Aucklan-VI, NZIX-II and Leipzig-II traces from NLANR; 
</li>
<li>
propose a framework for application classification using an unsupervised machine learning technique; 
</li>
<li>
use autoclass, an implementation of the Expectation Maximization (EM) algorithm; 
</li>
</ul>



</font>
  </td>
</tr>
</div>

