• DocumentCode
    3391109
  • Title

    Network visualisation and analysis tool based on logical network abridgment

  • Author

    Arvanitis, T.N. ; Constantinou, C.C. ; Stepanenko, A.S. ; Sun, Y. ; Liu, B. ; Baughan, K.

  • Author_Institution
    Dept. of Electron., Electr. & Comput. Eng., Univ. of Birmingham
  • fYear
    2005
  • fDate
    17-20 Oct. 2005
  • Firstpage
    106
  • Abstract
    A novel procedure of summarizing and abstracting the topology and distributed statistical measures of routing performance for communication networks is presented. This procedure, called logical network abridgment (LNA), forms the basis of a novel resilient recursive routing (R3) protocol. In this paper, we investigate the usefulness of LNA in visualizing and defining the state of health of a communication network. Traditionally, connectivity and metrics (such as link utilization, end-to-end delay, etc.) are used to provide indications of the state of health of a network. However, connectivity alone tells us little about the intrinsic diversity of the network and therefore its resiliency to attacks or attrition. Similarly, individual localized or path specific metrics tell us little about the overall intrinsic capability of the network. The LNA procedure summarizes the metric of choice over the total network and is thus capable of describing the intrinsic state of its health. In the context of military command and control, as well as commercial network management, scenarios, operators wish to easily create well-designed networks, in terms of resiliency and performance. Furthermore, operators need to identify, in an intuitive manner, the vulnerabilities that exist in a network. In addition, the consequences of actions taken to remedy failures or strengthen resiliency are often time consuming to understand in a large distributed system. The LNA procedure offers a quick and reliable algorithmic visual tool to achieve these. The paper presents work funded by the US Air-Force Research Laboratory (AFRL-EOARD) that demonstrates the potential of network visualization and analysis through the proposed LNA procedure
  • Keywords
    routing protocols; telecommunication network management; telecommunication network reliability; telecommunication network topology; telecommunication security; AFRL-EOARD; US Air-Force Research Laboratory; commercial network management; communication networks routing; intrinsic diversity; logical network abridgment; military command and control; network visualisation; resilient recursive routing protocol; Communication networks; Computer networks; Distributed computing; Large-scale systems; Network topology; Performance analysis; Robustness; Routing protocols; Telecommunication traffic; Visualization;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Military Communications Conference, 2005. MILCOM 2005. IEEE
  • Conference_Location
    Atlantic City, NJ
  • Print_ISBN
    0-7803-9393-7
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/MILCOM.2005.1605672
  • Filename
    1605672