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Limitations
We now discuss the limitations of our study arising both due to the
inherent limitations of geographic information and due to limitations
of our experimental methodology.
- Geography does not determine performance: There is not a
perfect relationship between geographic distance and network
performance. It is possible that a circuitous path yields better
performance than a less circuitous one. For instance, the most optimal
path between certain countries may be via the U.S. even if that means
a large detour in geographic terms. However, in
Section 4.5, we show that there exits a strong
correlation between the minimum end-to-end delay between two end-hosts
and the linearized distance of their connecting path. In light of
this, we view our geographic analysis of network paths as providing
(a) hints on paths that are potentially anomalous and should be
examined more closely to determine if they are indeed anomalous, (b)
an indication of how much improvement there could be in end-to-end
latency if a non-circuitous path between source and destination were
feasible, and (c) a way to quantify network properties such as
hot-potato routing, which may provide new insight into these
properties.
- IP-level topology is incomplete: Our linearized distance
computation only considers the router-level (i.e., IP-level)
topology. We have no way of discovering the underlying physical
topology (which may be based on ATM, SONET, or other technologies), so
in general we would underestimate the linearized distance. While this
is a limitation of our methodology, we note that the trend in
high-speed networks (OC-48 and faster) is away from separate layer-2
and layer-3 architectures (e.g., IP-over-ATM) and towards an all-IP
network [15]. This trend increases the applicability of
our methodology.
Next: Circuitousness of Internet paths
Up: Experimental methodology
Previous: Possible inaccuracies
Lakshminarayanan Subramanian
2002-04-14