• DocumentCode
    17008
  • Title

    Automatic Test Packet Generation

  • Author

    Hongyi Zeng ; Kazemian, Peyman ; Varghese, George ; McKeown, N.

  • Author_Institution
    Stanford Univ., Stanford, CA, USA
  • Volume
    22
  • Issue
    2
  • fYear
    2014
  • fDate
    Apr-14
  • Firstpage
    554
  • Lastpage
    566
  • Abstract
    Networks are getting larger and more complex, yet administrators rely on rudimentary tools such as ping and traceroute to debug problems. We propose an automated and systematic approach for testing and debugging networks called “Automatic Test Packet Generation” (ATPG). ATPG reads router configurations and generates a device-independent model. The model is used to generate a minimum set of test packets to (minimally) exercise every link in the network or (maximally) exercise every rule in the network. Test packets are sent periodically, and detected failures trigger a separate mechanism to localize the fault. ATPG can detect both functional (e.g., incorrect firewall rule) and performance problems (e.g., congested queue). ATPG complements but goes beyond earlier work in static checking (which cannot detect liveness or performance faults) or fault localization (which only localize faults given liveness results). We describe our prototype ATPG implementation and results on two real-world data sets: Stanford University´s backbone network and Internet2. We find that a small number of test packets suffices to test all rules in these networks: For example, 4000 packets can cover all rules in Stanford backbone network, while 54 are enough to cover all links. Sending 4000 test packets 10 times per second consumes less than 1% of link capacity. ATPG code and the data sets are publicly available.
  • Keywords
    Internet; automatic testing; computer network reliability; failure analysis; telecommunication network routing; ATPG code; Internet2; Stanford University backbone network; automatic test packet generation; debug problems; debugging networks; device-independent model; failure detection; fault localization; router configurations; static checking; systematic approach; testing networks; Data plane analysis; network troubleshooting; test packet generation;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Networking, IEEE/ACM Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    1063-6692
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TNET.2013.2253121
  • Filename
    6497083