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First step into Trace Analysis

First step into Trace Analysis. What is Trace. Measurement data from real world networks Wired networks: netflow traces Wireless networks: Association trace, encouter trace…… More general traces which represent other types of networks: GPS trace (Cabspoting). Different types of Traces.

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First step into Trace Analysis

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  1. First step into Trace Analysis

  2. What is Trace • Measurement data from real world networks • Wired networks: netflow traces • Wireless networks: Association trace, encouter trace…… • More general traces which represent other types of networks: GPS trace (Cabspoting)

  3. Different types of Traces • Encounter traces • The Intel/Cambridge Haggle/Pocket Switch Network project • The U of Toronto PDA-based encounter experiments • Your own encounter trace • Cellphone traces • MIT Reality Mining: encounter, location of users (by cellphone tower/bluetooth), call log

  4. Different types of Traces • WLAN traces • UF traces, USC traces, Dartmouth • Vehicular traces • Cabspotting

  5. Format of UF WLAN trace • The format shown below is not the format from raw trace data • Association Trace • <time of the event in seconds>  <Access Point> <Event>  <MAC> • Login Trace • <Time of the event in seconds> <Gateway>  LOGIN  <MAC> <Username> <Session ID>

  6. Format of UF WLAN trace • Logout trace • <Time of the event in seconds> <Gateway>  LOGOUT  <MAC> <Username> <Session ID> <duration of session in seconds> <bytes_in> <bytes_out> <packet_in> <packet_out>

  7. The TRACE framework Analyze Represent Trace Characterize (Cluster) MobiLib Employ (Modeling & Protocol Design)

  8. Analyze the trace • You should have your own perspective about what to investigate • Make sure that the trace itself or together with some other possible resource can provide enough information you need • Decide a scheme to parse the trace or decide what kind of tools(database…) to use to get the information out of trace in your desired format (representation)

  9. Analyze the trace • Now, its time to sit down and extract useful information from the trace! • Then, you already convert the trace into a special representation or format. Try to identify a way to analyze it, many possibilities

  10. Example • Study the daily user flow relationship among locations • From the association trace, we can build a network among all the building around campus • If there is a user which first associates with one AP in Building A and then go to Building B and make another association, we draw an edge between A and B • The weight of the edge donates the number of users transition from A to B in a day

  11. Cont • Representation • Matrix with (a,b) donates the outflux from A to B • Then process the trace and populate the entries of the matrix, in the same run you may also want to get some other details (lags, sequence….)

  12. Cont • Get your results • Analyze it with any software, algorithm you want

  13. Access Points Syslogs • Users are reported by MAC addresses • When they associate with a AP • When they disaccosiate from a AP • When they roam away from a AP • When some other event happens (error in packet checksum, max retry for a packet reached, etc.)

  14. Authentication server syslogs • The authentication server reports the following events • DHCP lease – IP xxx is given to MAC yyy • User log in – User Gatorlink-ID logs in from MAC yyy • User log out – User Gatorlink-ID logs out, and it has been online for time ttt, sent/received bbb bytes • Every 30 minutes, each online user is reported for its traffic usage in the past 30 mins

  15. Tricks of Trace Processing • Identify a common format that you can convert multiple traces into • I use one file for each user, within each file, each line represents “time location duration” • Abuse your hard drive • Keep intermediate results if they take long time to generate.... You will thank your former self years after you generated those files

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