DocumentCode
2923901
Title
A Packet Arrival Model for Wolfenstein Enemy Territory Online Server Discovery Traffic
Author
Armitage, Grenville
Author_Institution
Swinburne Univ. of Technol., Melbourne
fYear
2007
fDate
19-21 Nov. 2007
Firstpage
31
Lastpage
36
Abstract
Clients for online multiplayer first person shooter (FPS) games typically discover game servers through a two-step process. Clients initially query a well-known master server for a list of currently registered game servers, and then sequentially probe each game server in the order they were returned by the master server. The starting and stopping of clients over time creates a 24-hour cycle of ´background noise´ (probe traffic) impacting on registered game servers, independent of a given server´s actual popularity with players. Based on over 10 million probe packets from two topologically distinct Wolfenstein enemy territory servers in 2006, this paper shows that probe arrivals are uncorrelated and exhibit exponentially distributed inter-probe intervals during both busiest and least-busy hours of the 24-hour cycle. A modified Laplace curve is then shown to be a reasonable estimator of lambda for the exponentially distributed probe arrivals during any hour of the day. The ability to easily synthesise probe traffic patterns will augment existing approaches to modeling the IP traffic loads experienced by game servers and network devices attached to game servers.
Keywords
Internet; client-server systems; computer games; exponential distribution; network servers; telecommunication traffic; IP traffic; Internet; Laplace curve; Wolfenstein enemy territory game; client-server system; exponential distribution; online game server discovery traffic; online multiplayer first person shooter game; packet arrival model; Australia; Background noise; Delay; Network servers; Network synthesis; Probes; Telecommunication traffic; Traffic control; Web and internet services; Web server;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Networks, 2007. ICON 2007. 15th IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location
Adelaide, SA
ISSN
1556-6463
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-1230-3
Electronic_ISBN
1556-6463
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ICON.2007.4444057
Filename
4444057
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