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Abstract
The Internet's layered architecture and organizational
structure give rise to a number of different topologies,
with the lower layers defining more
physical and the higher layers more virtual/logical types of
connectivity structures. These structures are very different,
and successful Internet topology modeling requires annotating
the nodes and edges of the corresponding graphs with
information that reflects their network-intrinsic meaning.
These structures also give rise to different representations
of the traffic that traverses the heterogeneous Internet, and
a traffic matrix is a compact and succinct description of the
traffic exchanges between the nodes in a given connectivity
structure. In this paper, we summarize recent advances in
Internet research related to (i) inferring and modeling the
router-level topologies of individual service providers (i.e.,
the physical connectivity structure of an ISP, where nodes
are routers/switches and links represent physical connections),
(ii) estimating the intra-AS traffic matrix when the AS's
router-level topology and routing configuration are known,
(iii) inferring and modeling the Internet's AS-level topology,
and (iv) estimating the inter-AS traffic matrix. We will also
discuss recent work on Internet connectivity structures that
arise at the higher layers in the TCP/IP protocol stack and are
more virtual and dynamic; e.g., overlay networks like the WWW
graph, where nodes are web pages and edges represent existing
hyperlinks, or P2P networks like Gnutella, where nodes represent
peers and two peers are connected if they have an active network
connection.
Mathematics Subject Classification: Primary: 90B15; Secondary: 90B10.
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