Getting Started with GENI: A User Tutorial Jonathon Duerig, Robert Ricci, Charles Carpenter, Zongming Fei, Leigh Stoller, Matt Strum, James Grif oen, Hussamuddin Nasir, Gary Wong Jeremy Reed, Xiongqi Wu University of Utah University of Kentucky ricci@cs.utah.edu griff@netlab.uky.edu This article is an editorial note submitted to CCR. It has NOT been peer reviewed. The authors take full responsibility for this article s technical content. Comments can be posted through CCR Online. ABSTRACT GENI, the Global Environment for Network Innovations, is a National Science Foundation project to create a virtual laboratory at the frontiers of network science and engineering for exploring future internets at scale. It provides researchers, educators, and students with resources that they can use to build their own networks that span the country and through federation the world. GENI enables experimenters to try out bold new network architectures and designs for networked systems, and to deploy and evaluate these systems on a diverse set of resources over a large footprint. This tutorial is a starting point for running experiments on GENI. It provides an overview of GENI and covers the process of creating a network and running a simple experiment using two tools: the Flack
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