Bug#246147: marked as done (RFP: netiathome -- collects network performance statistics from end-systems)
Your message dated Wed, 21 Sep 2005 16:00:52 -0600
with message-id <E1EICe4-0004VA-00@merkel.debian.org>
and subject line WNPP bug closing
has caused the attached Bug report to be marked as done.
This means that you claim that the problem has been dealt with.
If this is not the case it is now your responsibility to reopen the
Bug report if necessary, and/or fix the problem forthwith.
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(administrator, Debian Bugs database)
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From: Bas Zoetekouw <bas@debian.org>
To: Debian Bug Tracking System <submit@bugs.debian.org>
Subject: ITP: netiathome -- collects network performance statistics from end-systems
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Date: Tue, 27 Apr 2004 16:31:26 +0200
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Package: wnpp
Severity: wishlist
* Package name : netiathome
Version : 1.01
Upstream Author : neti@ece.gatech.edu
* URL : http://www.neti.gatech.edu/index.html
* License : GPLv2
Description : collects network performance statistics from end-systems
[note: it seems that this package needs java to compile. I haven't tried
compiling it with gcj.]
Using NETI@home will make the Internet a better place! (and hopefully a little
faster)
NETI@home is an open-source software package that collects network performance
statistics from end-systems. It has been written for and tested on the Windows,
Linux, and Solaris operating systems, with testing for other operating systems
to be completed soon. NETI@home is designed to run on end-user machines and
will collect various statistics about Internet performance. These statistics
will then be sent to a server at the Georgia Institute of Technology (Georgia
Tech), where they will be collected and made publicly available. We believe
that this tool will give researchers much needed data on the end-to-end
performance of the Internet, as measured by end-users. Our basic approach is to
sniff packets sent to and received by the host and infer performance metrics
based on these observed packets. NETI@home users will be able to select a
privacy level that will determine what types of data will be gathered, and what
will not be reported. NETI@home is designed to be an unobtrusive software
system that runs quietly in the background with little or no intervention by
the user, and using few resources.
NETI@home is written in C++ and uses the popular Ethereal network analyzer to
sniff packets. NETI@home also uses the zlib compression library. As previously
mentioned, NETI@home has been designed for the Windows, Linux, and Solaris
operating systems and should work with various other *NIX flavors with little
or no modification. NETI@home has been developed as a thesis project at Georgia
Tech and has been designed in accordance with the CAIDA specifications on
network statistics. In conclusion, NETI@home has been designed to aid
researchers who are studying Internet performance by providing a wealth of
end-to-end data that has been previously unavailable.
NETI@home includes the NETIMap application, written in Java, to encourage the
use of NETI@home. The NETIMap application, when run, will display a
geographical map of the world. As Internet hosts are contacted (a website, for
example), a dot is placed on that host's calculated coordinates. The
coordinates are calculated using CAIDA's NetGeo database.
-- System Information:
Debian Release: testing/unstable
APT prefers unstable
APT policy: (990, 'unstable'), (1, 'experimental')
Architecture: i386 (i686)
Kernel: Linux 2.6.3
Locale: LANG=en_GB.ISO8859-15, LC_CTYPE=en_GB.ISO8859-15
---------------------------------------
Received: (at 246147-done) by bugs.debian.org; 21 Sep 2005 22:00:53 +0000
>From damog@merkel.debian.org Wed Sep 21 15:00:53 2005
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To: 246147-done@bugs.debian.org
Subject: WNPP bug closing
Message-Id: <E1EICe4-0004VA-00@merkel.debian.org>
From: David Moreno Garza <damog@merkel.debian.org>
Date: Wed, 21 Sep 2005 16:00:52 -0600
Delivered-To: 246147-done@bugs.debian.org
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Hello,
This is an automatic mail sent to close the RFP you have reported or
are involved with.
Your RFP wnpp bug is being closed because of the following reasons:
- It is, as of today, older than 450 days.
- It hasn't had any activity recently.
As this an automatic procedure, it could of course have something
wrong and probably it would be closing some bugs that are not
intended by owners and submitters (like you) to be closed, for
example if the RFP is still of your interest, or there has been
some kind of activity around it. In that case, please reopen the
bug, do it, DO IT NOW! (I don't want to be blamed because of
mass closing and not let people know that they can easily reopen
their bugs ;-).
To re-open it, you simply have to mail control@bugs.debian.org
with a body text like this:
reopen 246147
thanks bts
Further comments on the work done in the bug sent to
246147@bugs.debian.org would be truly welcomed.
Anyway, if you have any kind of problems when dealing with
the BTS, feel free to contact me and I'd be more than happy to help
you on this: <damog@debian.org>.
This is the second massive wnpp closing that is being done. The next close
will be done on inactive RFPs older than 365 days and finally, an automatic
script will close, by default, *inactive* RFPs when they reach one year of
inactivity.
A similar process is being applied to other kind of wnpp bugs.
Thanks for your cooperation,
-- David Moreno Garza <damog@debian.org> Wed, 20 Sep 2005 17:06:42 -0500
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