Ecode.EXPFacilities History

Hide minor edits - Show changes to markup - Cancel

July 12, 2008, at 01:37 PM by Dimitri Papadimitriou -
Changed line 9 from:
 Details about the expansion and development of PlanetLab can be found here.
to:

Details about the expansion and development of PlanetLab can be found here.

July 12, 2008, at 01:36 PM by Dimitri Papadimitriou -
Changed lines 5-7 from:

PlanetLab initiated by from the University of Princeton, is a software platform structued around Planetlab nodes and composing a global research network. PlanetLab currently consists of 888 nodes at 461 sites spread over the Internet. PlanetLab allows users to reserve slices on nodes and run experiments on them.

Since the beginning of 2003, more than 1,000 researchers at top academic institutions and industrial research labs have used PlanetLab to develop new technologies for distributed storage, network mapping, peer-to-peer systems, distributed hash tables, and query processing. Details about the expansion and development of PlanetLab can be found here.

to:

PlanetLab initiated by from the University of Princeton, is a software platform structured around Planetlab nodes that compose a large distributed research network. PlanetLab currently consists of 888 nodes at 461 sites spread over the Internet. PlanetLab allows users to reserve slices on nodes and run experiments on them.

Since the beginning of 2003, more than 1,000 researchers at top academic institutions and industrial research labs have used PlanetLab to develop new technologies for distributed storage, network mapping, peer-to-peer systems, distributed hash tables, and query processing.

 Details about the expansion and development of PlanetLab can be found here.
June 29, 2008, at 06:32 PM by Dimitri Papadimitriou -
Changed lines 5-7 from:

PlanetLab initiated by from the University of Princeton, is a software platform managing Planetlab nodes spread over the Internet (about 800 nodes in about 400 sites). PlanetLab allows users to reserve slices on nodes and run experiments on them.

to:

PlanetLab initiated by from the University of Princeton, is a software platform structued around Planetlab nodes and composing a global research network. PlanetLab currently consists of 888 nodes at 461 sites spread over the Internet. PlanetLab allows users to reserve slices on nodes and run experiments on them.

Since the beginning of 2003, more than 1,000 researchers at top academic institutions and industrial research labs have used PlanetLab to develop new technologies for distributed storage, network mapping, peer-to-peer systems, distributed hash tables, and query processing. Details about the expansion and development of PlanetLab can be found here.

June 29, 2008, at 06:23 PM by Dimitri Papadimitriou -
Changed lines 11-13 from:

OneLab follows three main goals: extending PlanetLab into new environments (such as WiMAX, UMTS, etc.) beyond the traditional wired Internet, deepening of PlanetLab's monitoring capabilities (passive and topology monitoring), and providing a European administration for PlanetLab nodes in Europe.

to:

OneLab follows three main goals: extending PlanetLab into new environments (such as WiMAX, UMTS, etc.) beyond the traditional wired Internet, deepening of PlanetLab's monitoring capabilities (passive and topology monitoring), and providing a European administration for PlanetLab nodes in Europe.

The OneLab2 project, funded by the European Commission under the Framework Programme 7 (FP7) and the FIRE initiative, continues the OneLab activities.

June 29, 2008, at 06:19 PM by Dimitri Papadimitriou -
Added lines 1-13:

(:Title Experimental Facilities:)

  • PlanetLab

PlanetLab initiated by from the University of Princeton, is a software platform managing Planetlab nodes spread over the Internet (about 800 nodes in about 400 sites). PlanetLab allows users to reserve slices on nodes and run experiments on them.

  • OneLab

The OneLab project, funded by the European Commission under the Framework Programme 6 (FP6), aims at providing an open networking laboratory for integrating, testing, validating and demonstrating new fixed and wireless networking technologies in real world settings and production environments. The OneLab experimental facility provides for a large scale, and open testbed with real-life conditions.

OneLab follows three main goals: extending PlanetLab into new environments (such as WiMAX, UMTS, etc.) beyond the traditional wired Internet, deepening of PlanetLab's monitoring capabilities (passive and topology monitoring), and providing a European administration for PlanetLab nodes in Europe.

  • PanLab