Team for Research in
Ubiquitous Secure Technology

NetQuery: a knowledge plane for reasoning about network properties
Alan Shieh, Emin Gun Sirer, Fred Schneider

Citation
Alan Shieh, Emin Gun Sirer, Fred Schneider. "NetQuery: a knowledge plane for reasoning about network properties". Proceedings of the ACM CoNEXT Student Workshop, ACM CoNEXT, 30, November, 2010.

Abstract
Depending on their configuration, administration, and provisioning, networks provide drastically different features. For instance, some networks provide little failure resilience while others provision failover capacity and deploy middleboxes to protect against denial of service attacks [1, 2]. Yet the standard IP interface masks these differences; every network appears to provide the same basic "dial-tone" service. Consequently, clients that desire certain network properties must resort to ad hoc techniques to detect these differences or must target the lowest common denominator service.

Electronic downloads

Citation formats  
  • HTML
    Alan Shieh, Emin Gun Sirer, Fred Schneider. <a
    href="http://www.truststc.org/pubs/875.html"
    >NetQuery: a knowledge plane for reasoning about network
    properties</a>, Proceedings of the ACM CoNEXT Student
    Workshop, ACM CoNEXT, 30, November, 2010.
  • Plain text
    Alan Shieh, Emin Gun Sirer, Fred Schneider. "NetQuery:
    a knowledge plane for reasoning about network
    properties". Proceedings of the ACM CoNEXT Student
    Workshop, ACM CoNEXT, 30, November, 2010.
  • BibTeX
    @inproceedings{ShiehSirerSchneider10_NetQueryKnowledgePlaneForReasoningAboutNetworkProperties,
        author = {Alan Shieh and Emin Gun Sirer and Fred Schneider},
        title = {NetQuery: a knowledge plane for reasoning about
                  network properties},
        booktitle = {Proceedings of the ACM CoNEXT Student Workshop},
        organization = {ACM CoNEXT},
        day = {30},
        month = {November},
        year = {2010},
        abstract = {Depending on their configuration, administration,
                  and provisioning, networks provide drastically
                  different features. For instance, some networks
                  provide little failure resilience while others
                  provision failover capacity and deploy middleboxes
                  to protect against denial of service attacks [1,
                  2]. Yet the standard IP interface masks these
                  differences; every network appears to provide the
                  same basic "dial-tone" service. Consequently,
                  clients that desire certain network properties
                  must resort to ad hoc techniques to detect these
                  differences or must target the lowest common
                  denominator service.},
        URL = {http://www.truststc.org/pubs/875.html}
    }
    

Posted by Mary Stewart on 4 Apr 2012.
For additional information, see the Publications FAQ or contact webmaster at www truststc org.

Notice: This material is presented to ensure timely dissemination of scholarly and technical work. Copyright and all rights therein are retained by authors or by other copyright holders. All persons copying this information are expected to adhere to the terms and constraints invoked by each author's copyright.