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SIGMETRICS
2005
ACM

Fundamental bounds on the accuracy of network performance measurements

14 years 5 months ago
Fundamental bounds on the accuracy of network performance measurements
This paper considers the basic problem of “how accurate can we make Internet performance measurements”. The answer is somewhat counter-intuitive in that there are bounds on the accuracy of such measurements, no matter how many probes we can use in a given time interval, and thus arises a type of Heisenberg inequality describing the bounds in our knowledge of the performance of a network. The results stem from the fact that we cannot make independent measurements of a system’s performance: all such measures are correlated, and these correlations reduce the efficacy of measurements. The degree of correlation is also strongly dependent on system load. The result has important practical implications that reach beyond the design of Internet measurement experiments, into the design of network protocols. Categories and Subject Descriptors C.2.3 [Computer-Communications Networks]: Network Operations—network monitoring General Terms Performance,Measurement Keywords Network performance...
Matthew Roughan
Added 26 Jun 2010
Updated 26 Jun 2010
Type Conference
Year 2005
Where SIGMETRICS
Authors Matthew Roughan
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