Title
Measuring And Characterizing Ipv6 Router Availability
Abstract
We consider the problem of inferring IPv6 router uninterrupted system availability, or uptime, from a remote vantage point without privileged access. Uptime inference is important to broader efforts to measure and characterize the availability of critical infrastructure, provides insight into network operations, and has subtle security implications. Our approach utilizes active probes to periodically elicit IPv6 fragment identifiers from IPv6 router interfaces, and analyzes the resulting identifier time series for reboots. We demonstrate the approach's potential by characterizing 21,539 distinct IPv6 router interfaces over a five-month period. We find evidence of clustered reboot events, popular maintenance windows, and correlation with globally visible control plane data. Our results, validated by five ASes, provide initial insight into the current state of IPv6 router availability.
Year
DOI
Venue
2015
10.1007/978-3-319-15509-8_10
PASSIVE AND ACTIVE MEASUREMENT (PAM 2015)
Field
DocType
Volume
IPv6,Reboot,Identifier,Inference,Computer science,Critical infrastructure,Computer network,Network operations center,Real-time computing,Core router,Router,Distributed computing
Conference
8995
ISSN
Citations 
PageRank 
0302-9743
7
0.45
References 
Authors
15
4
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Robert Beverly136132.92
Matthew J. Luckie21117.66
Lorenza Mosley370.45
Kc Claffy41905115.64