The lockdowns and lifestyle changes during the COVID-19 pandemic have caused a measurable impact on Internet traffic in terms of volumes and application mix, with a sudden increase of usage of communication and collaboration apps. In this work, we focus on five such apps, whose traffic we collect, reliably label at fine granularity (per-activity), and analyze from the viewpoint of traffic classification. To this aim, we employ state-of-art deep learning approaches to assess to which degree the apps, their different use cases (activities), and the pairs app-activity can be told apart from each other. We investigate the early behavior of the biflows composing the traffic and the effect of tuning the dimension of the input, via a sensitivity analysis. The experimental analysis highlights the figures of the different architectures, in terms of both traffic-classification performance and complexity w.r.t. different classification tasks, and the related trade-off. The outcome of this analysis is informative for a number of network management tasks, including monitoring, planning, resource provisioning, and (security) policy enforcement.
Guarino, I., Aceto, G., Ciuonzo, D., Montieri, A., Persico, V., Pescape, A. (2021). Classification of Communication and Collaboration Apps via Advanced Deep-Learning Approaches. 345 E 47TH ST, NEW YORK, NY 10017 USA : Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc. [10.1109/CAMAD52502.2021.9617789].
Classification of Communication and Collaboration Apps via Advanced Deep-Learning Approaches
Guarino I.;
2021
Abstract
The lockdowns and lifestyle changes during the COVID-19 pandemic have caused a measurable impact on Internet traffic in terms of volumes and application mix, with a sudden increase of usage of communication and collaboration apps. In this work, we focus on five such apps, whose traffic we collect, reliably label at fine granularity (per-activity), and analyze from the viewpoint of traffic classification. To this aim, we employ state-of-art deep learning approaches to assess to which degree the apps, their different use cases (activities), and the pairs app-activity can be told apart from each other. We investigate the early behavior of the biflows composing the traffic and the effect of tuning the dimension of the input, via a sensitivity analysis. The experimental analysis highlights the figures of the different architectures, in terms of both traffic-classification performance and complexity w.r.t. different classification tasks, and the related trade-off. The outcome of this analysis is informative for a number of network management tasks, including monitoring, planning, resource provisioning, and (security) policy enforcement.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.


