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{{More citations needed|date=April 2016}}
[[File:Internet map 1024.jpg|thumb|right|A visual representation of a part of the Internet]]
'''Network mapping''' is the study of the physical connectivity of networks e.g. the [[
==Large-scale mapping project==
Images of some of the first attempts at a large scale map of the internet were produced by the [[Internet Mapping Project]] and
More recent efforts to map the internet have been
The "Map of the Internet Project" maps over 4 billion internet locations as cubes in 3D [[cyberspace]]. Users can add [[Uniform Resource Locator|URL]]s as cubes and re-arrange objects on the map. In early 2011 Canadian based ISP [[Peer 1|PEER 1 Hosting]] created their own [[Map of the Internet]] that depicts a graph of 19,869 [[Autonomous system (Internet)|autonomous system]] nodes connected by 44,344 connections. The sizing and layout of the autonomous systems was calculated based on their [[eigenvector]] centrality, which is a measure of how central to the network each autonomous system is.
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== Enterprise network mapping ==
Many organizations create network maps of their network system. These maps can be made manually using simple tools such as [[Microsoft Visio]], or the mapping process can be simplified by using tools that [[Network documentation|integrate auto network discovery with Network mapping
There are three main techniques used for network mapping: [[Simple Network Management Protocol|SNMP]] based approaches, [[active probing]] and [[route analytics]].
The SNMP based approach retrieves data from Router and Switch MIBs in order to build the network map. The active probing approach relies on a series of traceroute-like probe packets in order to build the network map. The route analytics approach relies on information from the [[routing
==Internet mapping techniques==
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===Active probing===
This technique relies on [[traceroute]]-like probing on the IP address space. These probes report back IP forwarding paths to the destination address. By combining these paths one can infer router level topology for a given [[
===AS PATH inference===
This technique relies on various [[Border Gateway Protocol|BGP]] collectors who collect routing updates and tables and provide this information publicly. Each BGP entry contains a [[Path Vector]] attribute called the AS Path. This path represents an [[autonomous system (Internet)|autonomous system]] forwarding path from a given origin for a given set of [[prefixes]]. These paths can be used to infer AS-level connectivity and in turn be used to build AS topology graphs. However, these paths do not necessarily reflect how data is actually forwarded and adjacencies between AS nodes only represent a policy relationship between them. A single AS link can in reality be several router links. It is also much harder to infer peerings between two AS nodes as these peering relationships are only propagated to an ISP's customer networks. Nevertheless, support for this type of mapping is increasing as more and more ISP's offer to peer with public route collectors such as [[Route-Views]] and [[Réseaux IP Européens|RIPE]]. New toolsets are emerging such as Cyclops and [[NetViews]] that take advantage of a new experimental BGP collector [[BGPMon]]. NetViews can not only build topology maps in seconds but visualize topology changes moments after occurring at the actual router. Hence, routing dynamics can be visualized in real time.
In comparison to what the tools using BGPMon does there is another tool
{{Image frame|width=800|content=[[Image:NetTransformer Internet BGP map.jpg|800px]]
|caption=Internet BGP peering map (red - multi homed AS, green stubs) |link=BGP peering|align=center}}
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== See also ==
* [[Comparison of network diagram software]]
* [[DIMES]]
* [[Webometrics]]▼
* [[Network topology]]
* [[
▲* [[Webometrics]]
==Notes==
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== External links ==
*[
*[http://www.caida.org/ Center for Applied Internet Data Analysis]
*[http://netlab.cs.memphis.edu/netviews1.html NetViews: Multi-level Realtime Internet Mapping]
*[http://cyclops.cs.ucla.edu/ Cyclops: An AS level Observatory]
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20050523235412/http://www.
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20060106055420/http://research.lumeta.com/ches/map/ Internet Mapping Research Project]
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20040824013519/http://www.opte.org/ The Opte Project]
[[Category:Internet architecture]]
[[Category:Network mappers]]
[[sv:Internetmappning]]
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