Summary: | With the development of the Internet, numerous new applications have emerged, the features of which are constantly changing. It is necessary to perform application classification detection on the network traffic to monitor the changes in the applications. Using RelSamp to sample traffic can provide the sampled traffic with sufficient application features to support application classification. RelSamp separately assigns counters for each flow to record the statistical features and introduces a collision chain into the hash flow table to resolve hash conflicts in the table entries. However, in high-speed networks, owing to the number of concurrent flows and heavy-tailed nature of the traffic, the storage allocation method of RelSamp results in a significant waste of storage on the traffic sampling device. Moreover, the hash conflict resolution of RelSamp causes the collision chains of several hash table entries to be excessively deep, thereby reducing the search efficiency of the flow nodes. To overcome the shortcomings of RelSamp, this study presents a sampling model known as MiniSamp. Based on the RelSamp sampling mechanism, MiniSamp introduces shared counter trees to compress the storage space of the counters during the sampling process and integrates an efficient search tree into the hash table. The search tree structure is adjusted according to the network environment to improve the search efficiency of the flow nodes. The experimental results demonstrate that MiniSamp can effectively aid network operators to classify traffic in the high-speed network.
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