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Orbit > Tutorial > Analyzing Measurement Results
Analyzing Results
It is important to understand how measurements were collected and organized to be able to interpret them. The ORBIT Measurement Framework provides tools to insert points to tap available information and to effectively collect that information in a timely manner. And after the experiment is done, the user would get access to the exprimenet database generated. In general, the results of the experiment is in one MySQL database. Different participating nodes populate different tables of this database. Usually, user would like to post-process or visualize those raw measurements for further analysis.
A number of different tools are available to interpret experimental results. The choice of tools depends upon availability and the nature of the measurements. Excel and Matlab connections from your local laptop to our database server may be blocked by the firewall. Hence, until we are working on figuring out a proxy service to expose these databases based on user credentials, please use the Perl script approach.
Using Perl scripts
Sample Perl script that gets data from the database:
#! /usr/bin/perl # # Script: getdata.pl # A simple script that gets all the rows from a single table in the database. # # ./getdata.pl <db_name> <table_name> <outputfile> # # Example: ./getdata.pl zmac1_2005_04_28_00_46_10 sender_otg_senderport out.txt # # To use this script replace the XXXX in DBUSER and DBPASS # with correct username and password for idb1. # # use DBI(); $DBHOST = "idb1"; $DBNAME = $ARGV[0]; $DBUSER = "XXXX"; $DBPASS = "XXXX"; $QUERY = "select * from $ARGV[1]"; $OUTFILE = $ARGV[2]; $dsn = "DBI:mysql:database=$DBNAME;host=$DBHOST"; #Connect to the DB $dbh = DBI->connect($dsn, $DBUSER, $DBPASS, {'RaiseError' => 1}); # Prepare and execute query my $qry = $dbh->prepare($QUERY); $qry->execute(); open(out, ">$OUTFILE"); #Print the column names print out "@{$qry->{'NAME'}} \n"; #Print the data while (my @ref = $qry->fetchrow()) { print out "@ref \n"; } $qry->finish(); # Disconnect from the database. $dbh->disconnect();
A more specific Perl script for OTG/OTR application can be found here
Using Microsoft Excel
Microsoft Excel can be used to analyze an experiment as shown below.
The user could import MySQL database to Microsoft Excel and use chart and other tools to analyze the measurements.
==Using Matlab ==
Matlab is another tool can be used. Sample Matlab code is shown below
function nsf(dbServer, dbUser, dbPW, database); % Part where we retrieve data from the database; mysql('open',dbServer, dbUser, dbPW); mysql('use', database); output = struct('time',[],'thr_all',[],'node',[]); [output.time, output.thr_all, output.node] = mysql('select timestamp, throughput, node_id from group2'); [thru1_4, time1_4, thru3_1, time3_1] = sort_mysql(output); % Finally, the plotting part subplot(2,1,1); plot(time1_4, thru1_4, '-*'); title('Throughput On Obstructed Link'); xlabel('Time (sec)'); ylabel('Throuhput (bps)'); grid on; subplot(2,1,2); plot(time3_1, thru3_1, '-*'); title('Throughput On Monitor Node'); xlabel('Time (sec)'); ylabel('Throuhput (bps)'); grid on;
And the resulting graph is show below:
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