Document Type
Dissertation
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
Major/Program
Computer Science
First Advisor's Name
Jason Liu
First Advisor's Committee Title
Committee Chair
Second Advisor's Name
Raju Rangaswami
Third Advisor's Name
Ming Zhao
Fourth Advisor's Name
Chen Liu
Keywords
computer networks, networking, simulation, emulation, real-time simulation, vizualization
Date of Defense
3-30-2012
Abstract
Developing analytical models that can accurately describe behaviors of Internet-scale networks is difficult. This is due, in part, to the heterogeneous structure, immense size and rapidly changing properties of today's networks. The lack of analytical models makes large-scale network simulation an indispensable tool for studying immense networks. However, large-scale network simulation has not been commonly used to study networks of Internet-scale. This can be attributed to three factors: 1) current large-scale network simulators are geared towards simulation research and not network research, 2) the memory required to execute an Internet-scale model is exorbitant, and 3) large-scale network models are difficult to validate. This dissertation tackles each of these problems.
First, this work presents a method for automatically enabling real-time interaction, monitoring, and control of large-scale network models. Network researchers need tools that allow them to focus on creating realistic models and conducting experiments. However, this should not increase the complexity of developing a large-scale network simulator. This work presents a systematic approach to separating the concerns of running large-scale network models on parallel computers and the user facing concerns of configuring and interacting with large-scale network models.
Second, this work deals with reducing memory consumption of network models. As network models become larger, so does the amount of memory needed to simulate them. This work presents a comprehensive approach to exploiting structural duplications in network models to dramatically reduce the memory required to execute large-scale network experiments.
Lastly, this work addresses the issue of validating large-scale simulations by integrating real protocols and applications into the simulation. With an emulation extension, a network simulator operating in real-time can run together with real-world distributed applications and services. As such, real-time network simulation not only alleviates the burden of developing separate models for applications in simulation, but as real systems are included in the network model, it also increases the confidence level of network simulation. This work presents a scalable and flexible framework to integrate real-world applications with real-time simulation.
Identifier
FI12050124
Recommended Citation
Van Vorst, Nathanael M., "Towards Simulation and Emulation of Large-Scale Computer Networks" (2012). FIU Electronic Theses and Dissertations. 612.
https://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/etd/612
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