Le 27/09/2019 à 11:42, Robert Kisteleki a écrit :
Indeed we are working on software probes (installable software package
that acts as a RIPE Atlas probe). We're making progress and I plan to
make announcements about this at the upcoming RIPE meeting (RIPE 79 in
Rotterdam, 14-18 October).
Perfe
Hello,
Indeed we are working on software probes (installable software package
that acts as a RIPE Atlas probe). We're making progress and I plan to
make announcements about this at the upcoming RIPE meeting (RIPE 79 in
Rotterdam, 14-18 October).
Regards,
Robert
On 2019-09-27 10:06, Toussaint O
Thank you for your answer.
I saw anchors are able to perform more measurements than probes, and
collect larger amount of data. In my situation, bandwidth is scarse and
expensive. With the amount I'm currently paying for 10M, I could get 1G
of transit in a data center in Paris :-)
Then, I can
Hi Nitinder.
If you haven’t already contact the ripe atlas team and they can lift the limit
on the number of nodes used and other restrictions to better allow point in
time and frequent testing so if you wanted to see the impact of events that
occur in routing during your testing.
They have
I had written up instructions for the VM based anchor method of installing with
KVM/QEMU. You need to apply for an anchor and be approved and then set it up
for them. It's not that hard.
https://labs.ripe.net/Members/kistel/outcome-of-the-ripe-atlas-anchor-vms-pilot
Likely has the best info.
Hi,
I just saw a survey last June about software probes. I would be greatly
interested by them. Can we have some news about this project ?
I know I can deploy software anchors. But I'm on a tiny island. I have
very few bandwidth, and it's very expensive; then I can't afford
spending too much
Sent you 10 million, have fun!
Fred
Frederic Gargula
IP-Max SA
> On 26 Sep 2019, at 14:59, Mohan, Nitinder wrote:
>
> Dear all,
>
> Greetings from Finland!
>
> I am a Ph.D. student at the University of Helsinki, Finland. I am currently
> involved in a research project which is taking a