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Gianni Antichi

Researcher at Queen Mary University of London

Publications -  105
Citations -  1808

Gianni Antichi is an academic researcher from Queen Mary University of London. The author has contributed to research in topics: Network packet & Forwarding plane. The author has an hindex of 18, co-authored 94 publications receiving 1268 citations. Previous affiliations of Gianni Antichi include University of Cambridge & University of Pisa.

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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Re-architecting datacenter networks and stacks for low latency and high performance

TL;DR: NDP, a novel data-center transport architecture that achieves near-optimal completion times for short transfers and high flow throughput in a wide range of scenarios, including incast, is presented.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Understanding PCIe performance for end host networking

TL;DR: A theoretical model for PCIe and pcie-bench, an open-source suite, are presented that allows developers to gain an accurate and deep understanding of the PCIe substrate, and insights are gained which guided software and future hardware architectures for both commercial and research oriented network cards and DMA engines.
Journal ArticleDOI

An improved DFA for fast regular expression matching

TL;DR: A new representation for deterministic finite automata (orthogonal to previous solutions) is presented, called Delta Finite Automata (δFA), which considerably reduces states and transitions and requires a transition per character only, thus allowing fast matching.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

PINT: Probabilistic In-band Network Telemetry

TL;DR: Using real topologies and traffic characteristics, it is shown that PINT concurrently enables applications such as congestion control, path tracing, and computing tail latencies, using only sixteen bits per packet, with performance comparable to the state of the art.
Journal ArticleDOI

OSNT: open source network tester

TL;DR: The Open Source Network Tester is launched, a fully open source traffic generator and capture system that provides methods for scaling and coordinating multiple generator/capture systems, and supports 6.25 ns timestamp resolution with clock drift and phase coordination maintained by GPS input.