DocumentCode
1294468
Title
Self-similarity through high-variability: statistical analysis of Ethernet LAN traffic at the source level
Author
Willinger, Walter ; Taqqu, Murad S. ; Sherman, Robert ; Wilson, Daniel V.
Author_Institution
AT&T Bell Labs., Murray Hill, NJ, USA
Volume
5
Issue
1
fYear
1997
fDate
2/1/1997 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
71
Lastpage
86
Abstract
A number of empirical studies of traffic measurements from a variety of working packet networks have demonstrated that actual network traffic is self-similar or long-range dependent in nature-in sharp contrast to commonly made traffic modeling assumptions. We provide a plausible physical explanation for the occurrence of self-similarity in local-area network (LAN) traffic. Our explanation is based on convergence results for processes that exhibit high variability and is supported by detailed statistical analyzes of real-time traffic measurements from Ethernet LANs at the level of individual sources. This paper is an extended version of Willinger et al. (1995). We develop here the mathematical results concerning the superposition of strictly alternating ON/OFF sources. Our key mathematical result states that the superposition of many ON/OFF sources (also known as packet-trains) with strictly alternating ON- and OFF-periods and whose ON-periods or OFF-periods exhibit the Noah effect produces aggregate network traffic that exhibits the Joseph effect. There is, moreover, a simple relation between the parameters describing the intensities of the Noah effect (high variability) and the Joseph effect (self-similarity). An extensive statistical analysis of high time-resolution Ethernet LAN traffic traces confirms that the data at the level of individual sources or source-destination pairs are consistent with the Noah effect. We also discuss implications of this simple physical explanation for the presence of self-similar traffic patterns in modern high-speed network traffic
Keywords
local area networks; packet switching; statistical analysis; telecommunication traffic; Ethernet LAN traffic; Joseph effect; Noah effect; ON/OFF sources; convergence results; high-speed network traffic; high-variability; local-area network; network traffic; packet-trains; self-similarity; source level; source-destination pairs; statistical analysis; traffic measurements; traffic modeling; working packet networks; Analysis of variance; Convergence; Ethernet networks; High-speed networks; Local area networks; Protocols; Statistical analysis; Telecommunication traffic; Time measurement; Traffic control;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Networking, IEEE/ACM Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1063-6692
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/90.554723
Filename
554723
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