Create a free virtual private server on Amazon Web Services

As an incentive to use their service, Amazon Web Services offers new users a “free tier” of service that provides a VPS “micro-instance” at no cost for one year. The free tier of service is fairly flexible. Amazon AWS provides enough free hours to run the micro-instance twenty-four hours a day for a year but, […]

How to build Mininet documentation

After installing the Mininet software-defined network simulator on a virtual machine, you may want to build the documentation. Documentation is available on the Mininet web site but, if you installed a beta version of a new development release or installed an old version, you may want to use the documentation specific for the version you

How to install the Mininet SDN Network Simulator

Most people who use the Mininet network simulator will download and set up the Mininet virtual machine image. However, there are times when we may want to use a different version of Mininet than the one already installed in the Mininet VM. For example, we may want to use the newest features of Mininet currently

How to Customize CORE Network Emulator Services

When setting up a complex network scenario in the CORE Network Emulator, we may want to change the default configurations provided by CORE services. Fortunately, the CORE Network Emulator allows the user to customize services. A user may want to customize CORE services in order to: set up complex network emulation scenarios by adding more

CORE Network Emulator Services overview

CORE Services is a feature of the CORE Network Emulator — an open-source network simulator — that configures and starts processes on each node running in a network simulation. Examples of processes supported by CORE Services are: quagga, dhcpd, or radvd. Because the CORE Network Emulator implements its virtual nodes using a lightweight virtualization technology

CORE Network Emulator 4.7: What’s New

The CORE Network Emulator development team released CORE version 4.7 in August 2014. I installed this new version of CORE on a newly-installed Linux 14.04 system and tested some of the new features. In this post, I list the new features that are most relevant to researchers who use the CORE GUI to set up

Blog status report 2014

The occasion of my fiftieth post is a good milestone to pause and look back on the two years since I started blogging about open-source routing and network simulation. I will review the blog’s performance statistics and reflect on why I started this blog and what I want to do next. The chart above shows

Run desktop environment on guest VM in cloonix network simulator

The Cloonix open-source network simulator uses the Spice remote desktop system to provide a virtual desktop connection to quest virtual machines that run a graphical user interface, such as Microsoft Windows or a Linux desktop environment. To use a graphical desktop user interface on a guest VM, we access the VM using the Spice desktop

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