This poster has been developed with support from the CATIIS project Program doctoral interregional...
-
Upload
cornelius-miles-watkins -
Category
Documents
-
view
212 -
download
0
Transcript of This poster has been developed with support from the CATIIS project Program doctoral interregional...
This poster has been developed with support from the CATIIS project
Program doctoral interregional și transnațional de excelență în domeniile“Calculatoare și tehnologia informației” și “Ingineria sistemelor” pentru o economie
bazată pe cunoaștere
Automating Testing and Evalution of Peer-to-Peer Protocols and Applications
Răzvan [email protected]
Automatic Control and Computers FacultyUniversity Politehnica of Bucharest
infrastructure, Peer-to-Peer Systems, BitTorrent, swarm, automation, instrumentation, logging, monitoring, performance
Retrieve Parse
Store Analyze
Message processing and analysis framework
Rendering Engine
Download speed evolution using MonALISA
Infrastructure Software framework Collection and analysis
Evaluation of Peer-to-Peer protocols and swarms requires a hardware and networking infrastructure able to provide necessary context for experimentation and test scenarios. We chose a virtualization solution to accommodate a close-to-real-world testing environment for BitTorrent application at a fraction of the cost (number of computer systems.
An automated Peer-to-Peer testing and evaluation framework is used to setup, run and manage scenarios. It is being used to test and compare current real world BitTorrent implementations and for running, commanding and managing BitTorrent swarms. Complete automation and integration of network, hosts and swarm management tools allows deployment of realistic scenarios.
Through client instrumentation, we are able collect client-centric data, store and analyse it in order to provide information on the impact of network topology, protocol implementation and peer characteristics . Our approach provides micro-analysis, rather than macro-analysis of a given swarm, focusing on detailed peer-centric properties, instead of global, tracker-centric information.