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An Empirical Evaluation of Wide-Area Internet Bottlenecks

URL: https://doi.org/10.1145/781027.781075

Bibtex Entry:

@inproceedings{2003-Akella-sigmetrics, author = “Akella, Aditya and Seshan, Srinivasan and Shaikh, Anees”, title = “An Empirical Evaluation of Wide-Area Internet Bottlenecks”, year = “2003”, isbn = “1581136641”, publisher = “Association for Computing Machinery”, address = “New York, NY, USA”, url = “https://doi.org/10.1145/781027.781075”, doi = “10.1145/781027.781075”, abstract = “Performance limitations in the current Internet are thought to lie at the edges of the network – i.e last mile connectivity to users, or access links of stub ASes. As these links are upgraded, however, it is important to consider where new bottlenecks and hot-spots are likely to arise. Through an extensive measurement study, we discover, classify and characterize non-access bottleneck links in terms of their location, latency and available capacity. We find that nearly half of the paths explored have a non-access bottleneck with available capacity less than 50 Mbps. The bottlenecks identified are roughly equally split between intra-ISP links and links between ISPs. These results have implications on issues such as the choice of access providers and route optimization.”, booktitle = “ACM SIGMETRICS”, pages = “316–317”, note = “Short Paper”, numpages = “2”, keywords = “network measurement, bottleneck links”, location = “San Diego, CA, USA”, series = “SIGMETRICS ‘03”, category = “[Measurement, Multipath]”, month = “June” }

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