Abrams, MarcWilliams, StephenAbdulla, GhalebPatel, ShashinRibler, RandyFox, Edward A.2013-06-192013-06-191995-04-01http://hdl.handle.net/10919/19934We describe how to investigate collections of trace data representing network delivery of multimedia information with CHITRA95, a tool that allows a user to visualize, query, statistically analyze and test, transform, and model collections of trace data. CHITRA95 is applied to characterize World Wide Web (WWW) traffic from three workloads: students in a classroom of network-connected workstations, graduate students browsing the Web, undergraduates browsing educational and other materials, as well as traffic on a courseware repository server. We explore the inter-access time of files on a server (i.e., recency), the hit rate from a proxy server cache, and the distributions of file sizes and media types requested. The traffic study also yields statistics on the effectiveness of caching to improve transfer rates. In contrast to past WWW traffic studies, we analyze client as well as server traffic; we compare three workloads rather than drawing conclusions from one workload; and we analyze tcpdump logs to calculate the performance improvement in throughput that an end user sees due to caching.application/postscriptenIn CopyrightMultimedia Traffic Analysis Using CHITRA95Technical reportTR-95-05http://eprints.cs.vt.edu/archive/00000420/01/TR-95-05.ps