A Measurement Study of Diskless Workstation Traffic on an Ethernet Riccardo Gusella International Computer Science Institute 1947 Center Street, Suite 600 Berkeley, California 94704 ABSTRACT We analyze the traffic on a 10-Mb/s Ethernet local-area network that connects diskless worksta- tions to file servers in a university environment. The traffic is substantially heavier than has been recorded in previous studies; measured over 1s intervals, it frequently exceeds 30% of the net- work bandwidth. We display and interpret the distribution of packet lengths and packet interarrival times for the three protocols that carry significant traffic: the Transmission Control Protocol (char- acter traffic), the Network Disk protocol (paging traffic), and the Network File System protocol (remote file access traffic). The two latter pro- tocols account for 68% of the packets and 94% of the data bytes on the network. File access to a remote file server generates bursts of traffic that can last several seconds and demand bandwidths on the order of 120 kbytes/s, or about 10% of the Ethernet bandwidth. It appears that network bandwidth may be a scarce resource in applications that involve high-performance virtual-memory diskless machines. A key prerequisite for the success of future disk- less workstations will be the design of fast interactive communication protocols that function effectively under high network load. (This paper was published in IEEE Transactions on Communica- tions, Vol. 38, No. 9, pp. 1557-1568, September 1990.)