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third-party ns stuff I turned up



Having just realised that the berkeley ns contributed-code web pages
only stretch to stuff that they've been contacted about by authors of
said stuff, I went searching to see if there was any other stuff out
there; here's some useful-looking stuff I hadn't seen/mentioned before
(ignoring results pertaining to berkeley/isi stuff)...

Code:

http://www.infres.enst.fr/~dax/guides/ns-nam/
http://www-stud.enst.fr/~vinot/ns-nam/accueil.htm
 tutorial, presentation, project report in French. (is there anything
 Phillippe doesn't stretch to?)
http://www-stud.enst.fr/~michon/realisations.html
http://www-stud.enst.fr/~michon/opus/hach.tgz
 provides rest of stuff, including scripts, behind report.

http://klamath.stanford.edu/~aaa/tcp-bfa/
 TCP buffer fill avoidance stuff.

http://wwwcip.rus.uni-stuttgart.de/~inf13425/projects/virtualclock/
 virtual clock scheduler for QoS enforcement via timestamps.

http://www.eecs.umich.edu/~wuchang/red/
 (probably completely obsolete) RED for ns v1.


Tutorials:

http://www.okada.ecip.nagoya-u.ac.jp/~susumu/sim/ns/
 getting started in Japanese.

http://www.fukt.hk-r.se/projekt/netSim/
 getting started comprehensively in Swedish.

http://www.docs.uu.se/~perg/course/datakom2/it98/tcpsims_lab.html
 comparing tcp variants.

http://ucsub.colorado.edu/~la/otcl/tutorial.html
 yet another mirror of that OTcl tutorial.


...and then there's RFC2415 in particular. didn't bother scanning
stuff in drafts.


Of course, I haven't used this stuff in any depth.
Caveat surfer said stuff.

There's probably more stuff out there, but I got tired of wading
through stuff from search engines, and I have other stuff to do. 

cheers,

L.

www.google.com gets my vote; if there was a ballot, I'd stuff the box.

<[email protected]>PGP<http://www.ee.surrey.ac.uk/Personal/L.Wood/>