Broadband Internet Performance: A View From the Gateway
Renata Teixeira,
University of Paris (LIP6)
Monday, November 12, 2012, 10am
Computer Science Room 402
Policymakers, ISPs, and users are increasingly interested in studying
the performance of Internet access links. This talk will first present
our findings on the the accuracy and overhead of state-of-the-art
available bandwidth estimation tools to measure residential broadband
throughput. Because of many confounding factors in a home network or on
end hosts, however, thoroughly understanding access network performance
requires deploying measurement infrastructure in users’ homes as gateway
devices. This talk will then present the first study of network access
link performance measured directly from home gateway devices. In
conjunction with the Federal Communication Commission’s study of
broadband Internet access in the United States, we study the throughput
and latency of network access links using longitudinal measurements from
nearly 4,000 gateway devices across 8 ISPs from a deployment of over
4,200 devices. We study the performance users achieve and how various
factors ranging from the user’s choice of modem to the ISP’s traffic
shaping policies can affect performance. Our study yields many important
findings about the characteristics of existing access networks. Our
findings also provide insights into the ways that access network
performance should be measured and presented to users, which can help
inform ongoing broader efforts to benchmark the performance of access
networks.
The work presented in this talk appeared at:
-O. Goga, R. Teixeira, "Speed Measurements of Residential Internet
Access", in Proc. of Passive and Active Measurement Conference, March
2012.
-S. Sundaresan, W. de Donato, N. Feamster, R. Teixeira, S.
Crawford, and A. Pescape, "Broadband Internet Performance: A View From
the Gateway", in Proc. of ACM SIGCOMM, August 2011.
Renata Teixeira received the B.Sc. degree in computer science and the
M.Sc. degree in electrical engineering from Universidade Federal do Rio
de Janeiro, Brazil, in 1997 and 1999, respectively, and the Ph.D. degree
in computer science from the University of California, San Diego, in
2005. During her Ph.D. studies, she worked on Internet routing at the
AT&T Research. She is currently a researcher with the Centre
National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS) at LIP6, UPMC Sorbonne
Universites, Paris, France. She was a visiting scholar at UC
Berkeyley/ICSI. Her research interests are in measurement, analysis, and
management of data networks. She has authored more than 40 papers in
this area. Renata serves in the editorial board of the IEEE/ACM
Transactions on Networking and of the ACM SIGCOMM Computer Communication
Review. She is also a member of the steering committee of the ACM
Internet Measurement Conference and has been active in the program
committees of ACM SIGCOMM, ACM IMC, PAM, IEEE INFOCOM, among others.