HOME
Students
Publications
Projects
Tools & Datasets
Tools
The main goal of this tool is to help system
administrators to monitor wireless networks. The tool generates metrics of
packet loss and network utilization based on the delays and losses of the
beacons packets sent by the access points. It also provides other information
such as the received signal strength indication (RSSI), the security (i.e. WEP,
WPA or WPA2 protected network), the BSSID of the access point, the SSID and
channel of every network.
N3Sim A
Simulation Framework for Diffusion-based Molecular Communication
N3Sim is a complete simulation framework for
diffusion-based molecular communications, which allows the evaluation of the
communication performance of molecular networks with several transmitters and
receivers in an infinite space with a given concentration of molecules.
Transmitters encode the information by releasing particlPhDes
into the medium, thus varying the concentration rate in their vicinity. The
diffusion of particles through the medium is modeled as Brownian motion, taking
into account particle inertia and collisions among particles. Finally,
receivers decode the information by sensing the local concentration in their
neighborhood. The benefits of such a simulator are multiple: the validation of
existing channel models for molecular communications and the evaluation of
novel modulation schemes are just two examples.
LISPmon is a monitoring platform, developed at the Advanced Broadband
Communications Center of UPC. It periodically
probes different parameters of the LISP pilot network, and makes the results of these measurements
available to the public.
CoreSim is an Internet-scale LISP deployment simulator with a hybrid
event/trace based architecture and is able to replay a packet trace to simulate
the behavior of an ITR and the associated mapping system. It builds its
topology using Internet measurement data from the iPlane project and reports mapping lookup latency, the load
imposed on each participating node, and ITR cache and packet buffer statistics.
It was first presented to the academic community at the Trilogy Future Internet Summer School poster session (extended abstract, poster).