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Circuitousness of Internet paths
In this section, we examine the nature of circuitous routes in the
Internet. Since there is not a standard measure of circuitousness, we
define a metric, distance ratio, as the ratio of the linearized
distance of a path to the geographic distance between the source and
destination of the path. The distance ratio reflects the degree to
which the network path between two nodes deviates from the direct
geographic path between the nodes. A ratio of 1 would indicate a
perfect match (i.e., an absolutely direct route) while a large ratio
would indicate a circuitous path.
We present several different analysis with a view to studying the
impact of spatial factors as well as temporal factors. Under spatial
factors, we study the effect of the geographic and network locations
of end-hosts on the circuitousness of paths.
To study temporal properties, we compare the circuitousness of paths
drawn from Paxson's 1995 data set to the ones drawn from our 2000 data
set. Finally, we analyze the relationship between the minimum delay
between two end-hosts and the linearized distance along their path.
Subsections
Next: Effect of network location
Up: Geographic Properties of Internet
Previous: Limitations
Lakshminarayanan Subramanian
2002-04-14