Izal Azcárate, Mikel

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Izal Azcárate

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Mikel

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Ingeniería Eléctrica, Electrónica y de Comunicación

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ISC. Institute of Smart Cities

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Now showing 1 - 10 of 20
  • PublicationOpen Access
    Midiendo retardos y pérdidas en las redes móviles de alta velocidad
    (2015) Prieto Suárez, Iria; Izal Azcárate, Mikel; Magaña Lizarrondo, Eduardo; Morató Osés, Daniel; Automática y Computación; Automatika eta Konputazioa
    Mobile networks are constantly evolving, but still, due to their nature, it is not trivial to analayse how they face up different kinds of traffic. On the Internet a wide range of services can be found. Usually the majority send large packets, i.e Web services, but others, like VoIP, send small packets. The question is how the mobile networks manage all this traffic. In this work experiments to measure losses and times of sending different packet size bursts are described. Also, preliminary results for experiments with a real network mobile client, are analaysed showing that the performance of the network is different depending on the size of packet.
  • PublicationOpen Access
    Pamplona-traceroute: topology discovery and alias resolution to build router level Internet maps
    (IEEE, 2013) García-Jiménez, Santiago; Magaña Lizarrondo, Eduardo; Morató Osés, Daniel; Izal Azcárate, Mikel; Automática y Computación; Automatika eta Konputazioa
    An Internet topology map at the router level not only needs to discover IP addresses in Internet paths (traceroute) but also needs to identify IP addresses belonging to the same router (IP aliases). Both processes, discovery and IP alias resolution, have traditionally been independent tasks. In this paper, a new tool called Pamplona-traceroute is proposed to improve upon current results in a state of the art for Internet topology construction at the router level. Indirect probing using TTLscoped UDP packets, usually present in the discovery phases, is reused in IP alias resolution phases, providing high identification rates, especially in access routers.
  • PublicationOpen Access
    A proposal of burst cloning for video quality improvement in optical burst switching networks
    (2013) Espina Antolín, Félix; Morató Osés, Daniel; Izal Azcárate, Mikel; Magaña Lizarrondo, Eduardo; Automática y Computación; Automatika eta Konputazioa
  • PublicationOpen Access
    Ingress traffic classification versus aggregation in video over OBS networks
    (2010) Izal Azcárate, Mikel; Espina Antolín, Félix; Morató Osés, Daniel; Magaña Lizarrondo, Eduardo; Automática y Computación; Automatika eta Konputazioa
    Optical Burst Switched (OBS) networks may become a backbone technology for video-on-demand providers. This work addresses the problem of dimensioning the access link of an ingress node to the optical core network in a video over OBS scenario. A video-ondemand provider using an OBS transport network will have to deliver traffic to a set of egress destinations. A large part of this traffic would be composed of video streaming traffic. However, in a real network there would be also a fraction of non video traffic related to non video services. This work studies the decision whether it is better to gather all traffic to the same destination in a joint burst assembler or separate video and general data traffic on different burs assemblers. The later may increase burst blocking probability but also allow for better tuning of OBS parameters that help improve video reception quality. Result show that this tuning of parameters is not enough to compensate the drop probability increase and thus it is better to aggregate video and general data traffic.
  • PublicationOpen Access
    Traffic generator using Perlin Noise
    (IEEE, 2012) Prieto Suárez, Iria; Izal Azcárate, Mikel; Morató Osés, Daniel; Magaña Lizarrondo, Eduardo; Automática y Computación; Automatika eta Konputazioa; Universidad Pública de Navarra / Nafarroako Unibertsitate Publikoa
    Study of high speed networks such as optical next generation burst or packet switched networks require large amounts of synthetic traffic to feed simulators. Methods to generate self-similar long range dependent traffic already exist but they usually work by generating large blocks of traffic of fixed time duration. This limits simulated time or require very high amount of data to be stored before simulation. On this work it is shown how self-similar traffic can be generated using Perlin Noise, an algorithm commonly used to generate 2D/3D noise for natural looking graphics. 1-dimension Perlin Noise can be interpreted as network traffic and used to generate long range dependent traffic for network simulation. The algorithm is compared to more classical approach Random Midpoint Displacement showing at traffic generated is similar but can be generated continuously with no fixed block size.
  • PublicationOpen Access
    A popularity-aware method for discovering server IP addresses related to websites
    (IEEE, 2013) Torres García, Luis Miguel; Magaña Lizarrondo, Eduardo; Izal Azcárate, Mikel; Morató Osés, Daniel; Automática y Computación; Automatika eta Konputazioa
    The complexity of web traffic has grown in the past years as websites evolve and new services are provided over the HTTP protocol. When accessing a website, multiple connections to different servers are opened and it is usually difficult to distinguish which servers are related to which sites. However, this information is useful from the perspective of security and accounting and can also help to label web traffic and use it as ground truth for traffic classification systems. In this paper we present a method to discover server IP addresses related to specific websites in a traffic trace. Our method uses NetFlow-type records which makes it scalable and impervious to encryption of packet payloads. It is, moreover, popularity-aware in the sense that it takes into consideration the differences in the number of accesses to each site in order to provide a better identification of servers. The method can be used to gather data from a group of interesting websites or, by applying it to a representative set of websites, it can label a sizeable number of connections in a packet trace.
  • PublicationOpen Access
    TNS research in progress
    (Universidad Politécnica de Cartagena, Servicio de Documentación, 2012) Izal Azcárate, Mikel; Prieto Suárez, Iria; Espina Antolín, Félix; Morató Osés, Daniel; Magaña Lizarrondo, Eduardo; Automática y Computación; Automatika eta Konputazioa; Universidad Pública de Navarra / Nafarroako Unibertsitate Publikoa
    This paper summarizes latest works of Telematic, Networks and Services research group (TNS) of Public University of Navarra in the topics of FIERRO thematic network. Last two papers sent to major conferences are addressed First work shows how self-similar traffic can be generated using Perlin Noise, an algorithm commonly used to generate 2D/3D noise for natural looking graphics. 1-dimension Perlin Noise can be interpreted as network traffic and used to generate long range dependent traffic for network simulation. The algorithm is compared to more classical approach Random Midpoint Displacement showing at traffic generated is similar but can be generated continuously with no fixed block size. Second work presents two novel cloning schemes for video delivery in OBS networks that dramatically improve user perceived content quality. These schemes take into account the special characteristics of compressed video traffic. Analytical and simulation results show up to 40% QoE improvement without a substantial increase in the overall network traffic and without increasing the number of bursts in the network. The results show the strong dependency of this novel cloning scheme on the video traffic structure due to the coding mechanisms.
  • PublicationOpen Access
    On the nature of unused TCP connections in web traffic
    (2015) Torres García, Luis Miguel; Magaña Lizarrondo, Eduardo; Izal Azcárate, Mikel; Morató Osés, Daniel; Automática y Computación; Automatika eta Konputazioa
    The popularity of the web and the requirements introduced by current web content have pushed for the development of new techniques that meet these challenges and improve the experience of the users. In particular, during the last years, web browsers have taken aggressive measures in order to reduce webpage download times. These measures have had a noteworthy effect on the profile of web traffic. One of the most striking consequences is that nowadays, more than 20% of the TCP connections opened by a browser are left unused. In this paper we describe these connections, explain why they happen and use them as a simple way of identifying the traffic of different web browsers.
  • PublicationOpen Access
    Computation of traffic time series for large populations of IoT devices
    (MDPI, 2018) Izal Azcárate, Mikel; Morató Osés, Daniel; Magaña Lizarrondo, Eduardo; García-Jiménez, Santiago; Ingeniaritza Elektrikoa, Elektronikoaren eta Telekomunikazio Ingeniaritzaren; Institute of Smart Cities - ISC; Ingeniería Eléctrica, Electrónica y de Comunicación
    En este artículo se estudian las tecnicas para clasificar paquetes de tráfico de red en múltiples clases orientadas a la realización de series temporales de tráfico en escenarios de un elevado numero de clases como pueden ser los proveedores de red para dispositivos IoT. Se muestra que usando técnicas basadas en DStries se pueden monitorizar en tiempo real redes con decenas de miles de dispositivos.
  • PublicationOpen Access
    ETOMIC advanced network monitoring system for future Internet experimentation
    (Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg, 2010) Csabai, István; Fekete, Attila; Hága, Péter; Hullár, Béla; Kurucz, Gábor; Laki, Sándor; Mátray, Péter; Stéger, József; Vattay, Gábor; Espina Antolín, Félix; García-Jiménez, Santiago; Izal Azcárate, Mikel; Magaña Lizarrondo, Eduardo; Morató Osés, Daniel; Aracil Rico, Javier; Gómez, Francisco; González, Iván; López Buedo, Sergio; Moreno, Víctor; Ramos, Javier; Automática y Computación; Automatika eta Konputazioa
    ETOMIC is a network traffic measurement platform with high precision GPS-synchronized monitoring nodes. The infrastructure is publicly available to the network research community, supporting advanced experimental techniques by providing high precision hardware equipments and a Central Management System. Researchers can deploy their own active measurement codes to perform experiments on the public Internet. Recently, the functionalities of the original system were significantly extended and new generation measurement nodes were deployed. The system now also includes well structured data repositories to archive and share raw and evaluated data. These features make ETOMIC as one of the experimental facilities that support the design, development and validation of novel experimental techniques for the future Internet. In this paper we focus on the improved capabilities of the management system, the recent extensions of the node architecture and the accompanying database solutions.