Ferro Vázquez Armando

Ferro Vázquez, Armando

Datos personales

Ferro Vázquez, Armando

Dirección: Alda. de Urquijo s/n. C.P.: 48013. Bilbao
Despacho: 3A42
Email: armando.ferro@ehu.es
Teléfono: +34 94 601 4209
Fax: +34 94 601 4259

 

Títulos académicos

Titulación universitaria

Título: Ingeniería de Telecomunicación
Intensificación: Electrónica
Centro: Universidad del País Vasco
Fecha de obtención: 1986

Doctorado

Título del programa: Tecnologías de la Información
Fecha de obtención DEA
Título de la tesis: propuestas de diseño de un sistema de detección de intrusión y definición de un modelo analítico para arquitecturas multiprocesador
Fecha de obtención: 2002

Publicaciones

— 5 Resultados por página
Mostrando el intervalo 1 - 5 de 8 resultados.

Artículos

Modeling Packet Processing Time in a Multiprocessor Network Traffic Monitoring System

Autoría:
Luis Zabala, Armando Ferro, Alberto Pineda
Año:
2012
Revista:
The 2012 International Conference on Parallel and Distributed Processing Techniques and Applications (PDPTA '12). Las Vegas (Nevada), USA. July 16-19
Descripción:

<span lang="en">Nowadays traffic monitoring is a must for manypurposes (IDS, antivirus, QoS monitoring, network problem detection, etc.) Deployment of high speed networks implies problems with these kind of systems to be able to cope with all the traffic in the network. Therefore, it would be interesting to know in advance whether our system will be able to do its task correctly, or it needs more processing power. This paper presents a simulator for network traffic capturing systems that use commodity hardware and general purpose operating systems. In order to establish the different elements of the simulator we carried out an in depth study of the network capturing subsystem in the Linux kernel. We identified the different stages of the travel of packets from wire to application, as well as the particular behavior of the system and computational cost for each one of them. With this information we have built up a model that simulates these different stages of a capturing system. This model allows us to estimate the performance a network application will be able to achieve, when packet losses will start and where they will appear.</span>