On 4/1/09, Kai Chen <kch670@eecs.northwestern.edu> wrote:
We read and compare our results with the following projs, the new links are those in our dataset not in follows, which is interesting. Note the results come from measurements of extremely large-scale monitors than public available monitors.
- Kai
I confess, those were me--I've been secretly logging into most of the major networks around the world, and have been secretly bringing up new AS adjacencies between them in an effort to improve routing and promote world peace through shared packet infrastructure. If it's a problem, I can just go back and remove them all so your data looks clean again, and conforms to the expected results. Apologies for the confusion. ^_^;; Matt (such an excellent day for a thread such as this! ;)
On Wed, Apr 1, 2009 at 3:49 AM, Ricardo Oliveira <rveloso@cs.ucla.edu>wrote:
And you might want to have a look at: http://www.cs.ucla.edu/~rveloso/papers/completeness.pdf<http://www.cs.ucla.edu/%7Erveloso/papers/completeness.pdf> http://www.cs.ucla.edu/~rveloso/papers/completeness_tr.pdf<http://www.cs.ucla.edu/%7Erveloso/papers/completeness_tr.pdf>
--Ricardo
On Mar 31, 2009, at 7:56 PM, Kai Chen wrote:
Hello folks,
As part of a research project here at Northwestern, we have found quite a few unexpected AS-level links that do not appear in public available BGP tables. We really need your help in validating them; for anyone who knows links associated with any AS, if you can assist us with this please contact us off list.
Thanks! - Kai