Overview
Comment: | Restructure experiment examples to clarify possibilities and usage. |
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Downloads: | Tarball | ZIP archive | SQL archive |
Timelines: | family | ancestors | descendants | both | trunk |
Files: | files | file ages | folders |
SHA1: |
d6b27da7d8d0d9d4b1aa5f6464a3fb32 |
User & Date: | ivan on 2012-09-19 10:36:30 |
Other Links: | manifest | tags |
Context
2012-09-19
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11:02 | Mention link info and management data collection for experiments and external services. check-in: 1e2a1f4994 user: ivan tags: trunk | |
10:36 | Restructure experiment examples to clarify possibilities and usage. check-in: d6b27da7d8 user: ivan tags: trunk | |
10:12 | Note what's not implemented yet. check-in: 7451c9cd6d user: ivan tags: trunk | |
Changes
Modified script.txt from [a5a6ffd88e] to [09af443dbe].
127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 |
the CN. - Control software - Uses LXC tools on containers to enforce resource limitation, resource isolation and node stability. - Uses traffic control, filtering and anonymization to ensure network stability, isolation and privacy (partialy implemented). - The recovery device can force a hardware reboot of the RD from several triggers and help with upgrade and recovery (not implemented yet). ** Node and sliver connectivity # Node simplified diagram, hover to interesting parts. Slivers can be configured with different types of network interfaces depending on what connectivity researchers need for experiments: - Home computer behind a NAT router: a private interface with traffic forwarded using NAT to the CN and filtered to ensure network stability. - Publicly open service: a public interface (with a public CN address) with traffic routed directly to the CN and filtered to ensure network stability. - Traffic capture (not implemented yet): a passive interface using a direct interface for capture. Incoming traffic is filtered and anonymized to ensure network privacy. - Routing: an isolated interface using a VLAN on top of a direct interface. It only can reach other slivers of the same slice with isolated interfaces on the same link. All traffic is allowed. - Low-level testing (not implemented yet).: the sliver is given raw access to the interface. For privacy, isolation and stability reasons this should only be allowed in exceptional occasions. * How the testbed works # Event diagram, hover over components explained. An example experiment: two slivers, one of them (source sliver) pings the other one (target sliver). 1. The researcher first contacts the server and creates a slice description which specifies a template for slivers (e.g. Debian Squeeze i386). Experiment data is attached including a program to setup the experiment and another one to run it. 2. The server updates the registry which holds all definitions of testbed, nodes, users, slices, slivers, etc. |
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127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 |
the CN. - Control software - Uses LXC tools on containers to enforce resource limitation, resource isolation and node stability. - Uses traffic control, filtering and anonymization to ensure network stability, isolation and privacy (partialy implemented). - The recovery device can force a hardware reboot of the RD from several triggers and help with upgrade and recovery (not implemented). * Supported experiments # Node simplified diagram, hover to interesting parts. Researchers can configure slivers with different types of network interfaces depending on the connectivity needs of experiments: - Home PC-like access: a private interface with traffic forwarded using NAT to the CN (filtered to ensure network stability). - Internet service: a public interface (with a public CN address) with traffic routed directly to the CN (filtered to ensure network stability). - Traffic analysis (not implemented): a passive interface capturing traffic on a direct interface (filtered and anonymized to ensure network privacy). - Routing: an isolated interface using a VLAN on top of a direct interface. All traffic is allowed, but it can only reach other slivers of the same slice with isolated interfaces on the same physical link. - Low-level testing (not implemented): the sliver is given raw access to the interface. For privacy, isolation and stability reasons this should only be allowed in exceptional occasions. ** An example experiment # Event diagram, hover over components explained. To show how the testbed works: two slivers, one of them (source sliver) pings the other one (target sliver). 1. The researcher first contacts the server and creates a slice description which specifies a template for slivers (e.g. Debian Squeeze i386). Experiment data is attached including a program to setup the experiment and another one to run it. 2. The server updates the registry which holds all definitions of testbed, nodes, users, slices, slivers, etc. |