Computer Networks

A diagram of a simulation of a computer network.

Simulation of a computer network, in 10 iterations, with 2.0 ms steps. The red represents the new recalculated step, and the green is the trace from the previous step. (Image from Tutorial 2, by Hari Balakrishnan.)

Instructor(s)

MIT Course Number

6.829

As Taught In

Fall 2002

Level

Graduate

Cite This Course

Course Description

Course Features

Course Highlights

This course features an extensive reading list, along with lecture notes and other materials used by students in the course.

Course Description

How does the global network infrastructure work and what are the design principles on which it is based? In what ways are these design principles compromised in practice? How do we make it work better in today's world? How do we ensure that it will work well in the future in the face of rapidly growing scale and heterogeneity? And how should Internet applications be written, so they can obtain the best possible performance both for themselves and for others using the infrastructure? These are some issues that are grappled with in this course. The course will focus on the design, implementation, analysis, and evaluation of large-scale networked systems.

Topics include internetworking philosophies, unicast and multicast routing, congestion control, network quality of service, mobile networking, router architectures, network-aware applications, content dissemination systems, network security, and performance issues. Material for the course will be drawn from research papers, industry white papers, and Internet RFCs.

Related Content

Hari Balakrishnan. 6.829 Computer Networks. Fall 2002. Massachusetts Institute of Technology: MIT OpenCourseWare, https://ocw.mit.edu. License: Creative Commons BY-NC-SA.


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