Performance analysis and Capacity planning of Home LAN Mobile Networks Lab 4

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
INTRODUCTION TO Wi-Fi TECHNOLOGY.
Advertisements

Services Course Windows Live SkyDrive Participant Guide.
CP Networking1 WAN and Internet Access. CP Networking2 Introduction What is Wide Area Networking? What is Wide Area Networking? How Internet.
1 Basic Installation and GUI Tech Basic Installation and GUI : Objectives  Installing the Quadro  Configuring the Quadro  Installing IP phones.
Chapter 5 Networks. Learning Objectives After reading this chapter the reader should be able to: Understand the importance of networks in the field of.
"Distance Learning and Networking Technologies" Assistant Prof. Dr.-Stelios Savaidis Department of Electronics, TEI Piraeus, Greece
Home Networking prepared for FCC Technical Advisory Committee 18 September 2002.
Performance Analysis of Orb Rabin Karki and Thangam V. Seenivasan 1.
Lecture 1 Internet Overview: roadmap 1.1 What is the Internet? 1.2 Network edge  end systems, access networks, links 1.3 Network core  network structure,
Lecture Chapter 1: roadmap 1.1 What is the Internet? 1.2 Network edge  end systems, access networks, links 1.3 Network core  network structure,
Introduction to Management Information Systems Chapter 5 Data Communications and Internet Technology HTM 304 Fall 07.
Copyright © 2006 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill Technology Education Copyright © 2006 by The McGraw-Hill Companies,
Copyright © 2006 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill Technology Education Copyright © 2006 by The McGraw-Hill Companies,
The StarNet Analyzer. Contact SNA Department x172
Web and Internet Part I ST: Introduction to Web Interface Design Prof. Angela Guercio Spring 2007.
1 Networking A computer network is a collection of computing devices that are connected in various ways in order to communicate and share resources. The.
BY: Jordan Ameerali. What is an Internet Service Provider? A Internet Service Provider or ISP is a company that provides access to the Internet. For a.
COMPUTER TERMS PART 1. COOKIE A cookie is a small amount of data generated by a website and saved by your web browser. Its purpose is to remember information.
TEW-691GR Training TEW-691GR Training TEW-691GR 450Mbps Wireless N Gigabit Router.
Before you begin If a yellow security bar appears at the top of the screen in PowerPoint, click Enable Editing. You need PowerPoint 2010 to view this presentation.
1: Introduction1 Part I: Introduction Goal: r get context, overview, “feel” of networking r more depth, detail later in course r approach: m descriptive.
DSL 305 Series ADSL Modem. Types of DSL305 series DSL305E ADSL Modem  PPP Half-Bridge (Default)  Transparent Bridge DSL305EU ADSL Router/Modem.
© 2007 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.Cisco Public ITE PC v4.0 Chapter 1 1 The Internet and Its Uses Working at a Small-to-Medium Business or.
Computer Networking Part 1 CS 1 Rick Graziani Cabrillo College Fall 2005.
Copyright © 2002 OSI Software, Inc. All rights reserved. PI-NetFlow and PacketCapture Eric Tam, OSIsoft.
Connecting to Network. ♦ Overview ► A network connection is required to communicate with other computers when they are in a network. Network interface.
Chapter 4. After completion of this chapter, you should be able to: Explain “what is the Internet? And how we connect to the Internet using an ISP. Explain.
Lab How to Use WANem Last Update Copyright 2011 Kenneth M. Chipps Ph.D. 1.
Copyright © 2006 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill Technology Education Copyright © 2006 by The McGraw-Hill Companies,
LaToya Poole CSC LaToya Poole CSC Dial-up Connection  Comcast Internet Services  Reliable Internet Connections  $ monthly charge.
1.1 What is the Internet What is the Internet? The Internet is a shared media (coaxial cable, copper wire, fiber optics, and radio spectrum) communication.
Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 3-1 CHAPTER 3 Created by, David Zolzer, Northwestern State University—Louisiana The Internet and World Wide.
Chapter 7 Connecting to the Internet. Connecting to the Internet FAQs: – What is the Internet? – What are the options for Internet service? – What is.
Home and Personal Communication Systems Lesson 2 – Internet Connections.
Teaching with OPNET Software
Technology In The Classroom Series Computer Basics.
DSL-2544N Dual Band Wireless N600 Gigabit ADSL2+ Modem Router
Ethernet port  Make sure that your computer has an Ethernet connection (RJ45 port).  Power the zSeries on and make sure the “network link” LED is solid.
15-1 Networking Computer network A collection of computing devices that are connected in various ways in order to communicate and share resources.
Chapter 12 Troubleshooting Internet Connectivity Prepared by: Khurram N. Shamsi.
 What is a network and how does it function with computer systems? It is a collection of computers and devices that communicate with one another over.
PowerLink Bandwidth Aggregation Redundant WAN Link and VPN Fail-Over Solutions.
Networks CS105. What is a computer network? A computer network is a collection of computing devices that are connected in various ways so that they can.
Chapter 1 What is the Internet?. The Wired World of the Internet Who runs the Internet? Collection of thousands of networks RFCs, users’ agreement about.
Communication Systems The Internet The largest wide area network in the world. It is made up of thousands of linked networks. What.
Chapter 7 Connecting to the Internet. 2Practical PC 5 th Edition Chapter 7 Getting Started In this Chapter, you will learn: − What is the Internet − Options.
Datacenter Network Simulation using ns3
Chapter 4 Telecommunications and Networking The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc All rights reserved. Irwin/McGraw-Hill.
Evaluating & Maintaining a Site Domain 6. Conduct Technical Tests Dreamweaver provides many tools to assist in finalizing and testing your website for.
Different Internet Connections Jennifer Keating CSC 101.
Term 2, 2011 Week 2. CONTENTS Communications devices – Modems – Network interface cards (NIC) – Wireless access point – Switches and routers Communications.
What is the Internet? A world-wide computer network made up of tens of thousands of smaller networks. It’s the biggest network of all! So, what is a network?
Networks. Local area network (LAN( Wide-area network (WAN( Networks Topology.
Introduction to Networking
Topic 6, Lesson 3: The Internet Computer Communications and Networking.
System Optimization Networking
Transmission Control Protocol A Reliable, Connection-Oriented, Byte-Stream Service Lab 9.
Internet Options By OTX-West. Discussion Points Technologies  Dial-Up  DSL  Cable Data Transfer Speeds  1 Kbps (Kilobit per second) = one thousand.
TELEPORT PRO Website to Hard Drive Completely download a website, enabling you to “Browse Offline” at much greater speeds than if you were to browse the.
Data Network Designing and Evaluation
Network LAB 3 Prepared by: Eng. Mennatallah Hesham Uder Supervision of: Dr. Nermeen Hamza Dr. Iman Fahmy.
Performance Evaluation of Ethernet Networks under different Scenarios Lab 6
Lab Assignment Mobile Networks Lab 3
Chapter Objectives In this chapter, you will learn:
Internet Safety Final Day
NetComm Wireless NB16WV-02 Training
ICT Communications Lesson 1: Using the Internet and the World Wide Web
Introduction to Opnet Mobile Networks Introduction to Opnet
Daisy Chain Versus Collapsed Backbone Architecture
Objectives To understand the about types of computer network
Presentation transcript:

Performance analysis and Capacity planning of Home LAN Mobile Networks Lab 4

Lab Objective Investigate application performance and capacity planning, by changing the link speed between a home LAN and its ISP Perform “what if” analyses on network designs by looking at how response times, latency (delays) and other network performance measures will change under different network design approaches

Network Topology Model a family’s home PC network, which has three PCs connected to the Internet for game playing, web browsing, , audio streaming, and FTP (file transfer protocol)

Conduct a series of what-if simulations (scenarios) to see how performance differs if the family connects to the Internet using 1) a slow modem downloading at 20 kbps, 2) a fast modem downloading at 40 kbps, 3) a cable modem or DSL line downloading at 512 kbps, 4) a T1 line with download speed of Mbps For each scenario, you will set the download speed in the simulation model, run a simulation, and view the results. You will be addressing the question of whether faster connections are worth higher prices for the home network.

Network Topology Configure Applications: – Web (light browsing) – Web(heavy) – (light browsing) – FTP (light) Create profiles: – Web browsing (web (light)) – Researcher (web (heavy), (light)) – Game player(FTP (light))

Drag and drop devices: – Home network: 3 Ethernet workstations (Web Browser, Researcher, Game Player) Ethernet 16switch 1 router (ethernet_slip8_gtwy) – Internet Cloud – 3 servers (PPP servers) Web server Server Data(files) server Links: – Client  switch: 100BaseT – Switch  router: 100BaseT – Router  Internet cloud: ppp_adv – Internet  servers: T3

Statistics Individual: – Web Browser Client: Client HTTP (page response time, traffic received) – Researcher: Client HTTP (page response time, traffic received) Client (download response time, upload response time) – Game Player Client FTP (all) – WAN Link utilization Global: – FTP, HTTP, , TCP, Ethernet

Scenario 1: Dialup link Configure the WAN Link(router  Internet) to 20 Kbps – Right-click on the WAN link select Edit Attributes – Click in the Value field of the data rate attribute and select Edit… – Enter 20000; press Enter and then click OK Configure and Run the Simulation (8 hours) – View various statistics including the web application Response Time experienced by the Researcher and the WAN link utilization

WAN Link Utilization Right-click on the WAN link and select View Results to view the utilization results for this link. Expand point-to-point and select utilization in both directions. Select Overlaid Statistics from the pull-down menu on the bottom right- hand corner to place the results in the same panel.

Lab Tasks Task 1. – Many statistics are being collected like the throughput and the queuing delay on the WAN link. View these 2 results for the four scenarios and prepare a brief report of your observation. Task 2: – Create a duplicate scenario. Change the data rate of the WAN link between the Router and the ISP to get an average response time of 1sec. (Hint: From the results, we can see that the data rate might fall between 40 Kbps and 512 Kbps.) What WAN speed did your find to give this response time?

Task 3: What would happen if there were two more PCs? Select and Copy the Researcher PC. Then paste the PC. Copy one more PC in the similar manner. Connect these two PCs to the switch by copying and pasting the links connecting the first researcher PC and the switch. Run the simulation and see view the web Response Times of each of these PCs for all the data rates. What did you find?

Task 4: Add more applications to the researcher PC and check the response time that it gets. (Hint: To add applications to a client, you need to edit the attributes of the Profile object and edit the Profile Configuration.)

Researcher PC performance Right-click on the PC2 Researcher client and select View Results to view the web Response Time and Traffic Received. Expand Client Http and select Page Response Time (seconds). Also make sure that the pull- down menu on the bottom right-hand corner is set to As Is.

Observations Observe the download link Utilization and researchers Response Time. The download link Utilization averages about 80% and the upload link Utilization about 2%. With a download link utilization of 80%, this does not give much available bandwidth for potential new applications or users. The Response Time that the Researcher experiences is in the range of 5 to 7.5 seconds, which is painfully long. This slow WAN link is badly overloaded.

Scenario 2 40 kbps Scenario Similar to above scenario, Configure the Link to 40 Kbps – Right-click on the WAN link and change the data rate attribute to View Results for 40Kbps Scenario Follow the same steps mentioned before to view the link utilization, and Response Time by the researcher PC. – Notice the difference between two statistics

Scenario 3 and 4 Scenario 3: Set the link to 512 Kbps and run the simulation – Set the data rate for the WAN link to – Rerun the simulation. – View the results for link utilization, Response Time and Traffic Received by the Researcher PC. Scenario 4: Configure the link to T1 line and run the simulation – For T1 data rate is Mbps in both directions

Compare Results Compare results of all scenarios Show the difference in link utilization and response time with all scenarios.

Lab Report A cover page with your name, course information, lab number and title, and date of submission. A summary of the addressed topic and objectives of the lab. Implementation: a brief description of the process you followed in conducting the implementation of the lab scenarios.

Results obtained throughout the lab implementation, the analysis of these results, and a comparison of these results with your expectations. Answers to the given questions at the end of the lab. If an answer incorporates new graphs, analysis of these graphs should be included here. A conclusion that includes what you learned, difficulties you faced, and any suggested extensions/improvements to the lab.

Submission Details Hardcopy: Due by 10 th Oct 2011, at the start of lab Softcopy: (For those who missed the deadline of Assignment2) Complete 1 st two lab tasks and submit the report before 2400 hrs today (3 rd Oct 2011) Write your name, reg#, syn, and ‘A2 missed deadline penalty’ in the subject field of .