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Dave's Home Page

[a snapshot of Dave]

PLONKA at DOIT dot WISC dot EDU

In this document:
[What's GNU?] [Internet Traffic Measurement] [GNU/Linux] [Experiments] [Networking Links] [Other Stuff]


What's GNU?

One of my primary activities is authoring free software, which you can find at packages.html. I'm also a perl developer on CPAN, http://www.cpan.org, so another place to find some of my work is http://www.cpan.org/authors/id/P/PL/PLONKA/.


Internet Traffic Measurement

I do a lot of work with flow-based passive measurement of Internet traffic. If you do as well, here are some links that may be of use.


GNU/Linux

I use GNU/Linux quite a bit. Here are some things that I find useful.

Experiments

These are just some things experiments. Please don't refer to them from other HTML documents since they may disappear or change soon.
  • WiscNet Circuits (c. 1998)
    State Map of WiscNet Circuits
    This is a map of WiscNet circuits that I generated automatically using addresses, to determine latitude and longitude of customer sites and hub routers, information about what circuits exist between routers, and gnuplot. The state outline is actually a plot of nearly 1200 latitude/longitude coordinate pairs defining its perimeter, which I found in the boundary directory at ftp://ftp.census.gov/pub/tiger/ (See the readme info.). I beleive this method would be suitable for mapping most WANs.
  • U.S. Geographical Distribution of Plonkas (Didn't everyone want to know this?)
    [U.S. Geographical Distribution of Plonkas]
    I produced this, with big help from http://tiger.census.gov, using addresses glommed from http://www.whowhere.com, then wrote a perl script which used http://maps.yahoo.com/yahoo to get the latitude and longitude values in this file. (Lastly, I cropped it then used giftopnm |ppmtogif -transparent rgb:7f/af/ff to make the background/water transparent.)

  • Networking-related Links

  • http://www.stuartcheshire.org/rants/Latency.html
    It's the Latency, Stupid. Stuart Cheshire's rant reminding us that bandwidth isn't the only factor influencing the Internet's performance. If you want to read more, try this:
    http://www.stuartcheshire.org/papers/LatencyQuest.html
  • http://oss.oetiker.ch/rrdtool/
    This is where you can find Tobi Oetiker's RRDTOOL. RRD is the Acronym for Round Robin Database. RRD is a system to store and display time-series data. I spend a lot of time using this stuff and have written some tools which use it.
  • flow-tools
    cflowd
    flow-tools and cflowd are freely-available collection and analysis packages used with Cisco's flow-export feature.
  • University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Communications Engineering
  • National Laboratory for Applied Network Research
  • Internet Monitoring WWW sites
  • Merit Network, Inc.
  • MRTG: The Multi Router Traffic Grapher - a tool to monitor the traffic load on network-links.
  • The SimpleWeb - links and information on network management
  • SNMP software (Commercial and freely available)
  • Network Management
    This server functions as the archive base for comp.dcom.net-management, as well as for a place to bring together references to other applications and servers. In addition, this site acts as a mirror site for applications, utilities and FAQs pertinent to Network Management.
  • University of New Hampshire InterOperability Lab Tutorials, etc.
  • ATM Forum approved specs, etc.
  • The CMU SNMP Library
    The CMU SNMP Library provides developers with a set of core functions allowing them to write SNMP agents and managers. The library will encode and decode all SNMP PDUs and variables; handle network connections; and return data in an easily parsable format.
  • UCD SNMP

  • Other Stuff

  • The Mutt E-Mail Client
    Mutt is a small but very powerful text-based mail client for Unix operating systems. Some of its features include: color support, message threading, MIME support, POP3 support, highly customizable - including key bindings, PGP support, ...
    ELM users will find it quite painless to switch as the default key bindings are identical!
  • The fetchmail Home Page
    Fetchmail retrieves mail from remote mail servers and forwards it via SMTP, so it can then be be read by normal mail user agents such as elm(1) or mail(1) (or mutt!). It allows all your sytem MTA's filtering, forwarding, and aliasing facilities to work just as they would on normal mail.
  • Programming Republic of Perl
  • The code of the Geeks
    Here's mine:
    
    
    If you don't know what that means, look here (thanks to http://www.ebb.org/ungeek/).
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