CRAWDAD metadata: ucdavis/unitrans (v. 2006-11-01)

This data set includes several traces about the available Bluetooth connectivity during a typical day on the Unitrans bus system at University of California, Davis.
[xml metadata]

Note: This metadata was prepared by the CRAWDAD team and verified by the data set (or tool) authors. We have made every effort to ensure its accuracy, but urge all users to consider the metadata and data carefully and be sure that their use in research is consistent with the nature and limitations of the data. We welcome any corrections.


CRAWDAD metadata structure[what is CRAWDAD metadata]


[Dataset] ucdavis/unitrans (v. 2006-11-01)

top

version v. 2006-11-01
changes
the initial version
bibtex
@MISC{ucdavis-unitrans-2006-11-01,
  author = {Jason LeBrun and Chen-Nee Chuah},
  title = {{CRAWDAD} data set ucdavis/unitrans (v. 2006-11-01)}, 
  howpublished = {Downloaded from http://crawdad.cs.dartmouth.edu/ucdavis/unitrans},
  month = nov,  
  year = 2006
}
					
metadata last modified2007-03-01
summary
This data set includes several traces about the available Bluetooth connectivity during a typical day 
on the Unitrans bus system at University of California, Davis.
release date2006-11-01
measurement start 2006-01-24
measurement end 2006-03-03
authorsJason LeBrun
Chen-Nee Chuah
web site http://www.bluespotting.org/Projects/HaggleUnitrans
wiki go to the wiki page for this data set
keywordBluetooth, DTN, vehicular network
measurement purposesContent Distribution Evaluation
network typebluetooth
network typeDTN (Delay Tolerent Network)
environment
Wireless researchers have the problem of a lack of real-world mobility/connectivity 
data for doing simulation to evaluate various protocols, applications, and so on. 
The purpose of the experiment is to collect information about the available Bluetooth 
connectivity during a typical day on the Unitrans bus system at UC Davis.
network
We equipped each bus with a small wireless sensor node (Intel iMote) to build a real
public transit-centric network.
collection
We aimed to detect two buses that are close to each other, as well as any visible 
bluetooth devices that are used on the bus. Everytime an iMote sees another Bluetooth device 
(another iMote, or a cellphone/laptop/PDA with bluetooth capability), it logs the occurance, 
and for how long the other device was visible.
tracesets included ucdavis/unitrans/imote (v. 2006-11-01)

[Traceset] ucdavis/unitrans/imote (v. 2006-11-01)

top

version v. 2006-11-01
changes
the initial version
bibtex
@MISC{ucdavis-unitrans-imote-2006-11-01,
  author = {Jason LeBrun and Chen-Nee Chuah},
  title = {{CRAWDAD} trace set ucdavis/unitrans/imote (v. 2006-11-01)}, 
  howpublished = {Downloaded from http://crawdad.cs.dartmouth.edu/ucdavis/unitrans/imote},
  month = nov,  
  year = 2006
}
					
metadata last modified2007-03-01
summary
We collected information about the available Bluetooth connectivity during a typical day 
on the Unitrans bus system at University of California, Davis.
release date2006-11-01
measurement start 2006-01-24
measurement end 2006-03-03
measurement purposesContent Distribution Evaluation
methodology
We collected real-world data using Intel iMotes, which contain an ARM core 
as well as a Bluetooth radio stack. The motes run a simple Bluetooth inquiry program. 
Periodocally (e.g., every 2 minutes) the device does an inquiry for a duration 
(e.g., 5 seconds). All devices detected during this inquiry period are noted. 
These experiments give a list of contacts - with start and end times - that 
a particular mote has during its lifetime. For each experiment, the polling interval 
was 2 minutes, and the inquiry duration was 5 seconds.
sanitization
MACs are anonymized using a consistent hashing scheme.
note
This data can also be found in SQLite3 database format, 
along with some Python tools for parsing the SQLite database. 
The tools are here:
http://www.bluespotting.org/Projects/HaggleUnitrans
error
There were some fixes to the data from the raw data obtained from the iMote:
*Erroneous lines are omitted (if they don't contain 3 values)
*Corrupted MAC addresses are dropped
*Corrupted time values are dropped (less than 0)
*The time base is adjusted after a reset to try and keep it approximately the same.
*Corrupted MACs that ambiguously resolve to more than one mote are dropped
*Corrupted MACs that resolve to exactly one mote by flipping one or two bits are fixed and kept.

-Note: external device MACs may also be corrupted, but this is not accounted for.
download urlDownload (348 KB tar.gz) from US UK
parent dataucdavis/unitrans (v. 2006-11-01)
traces included ucdavis/unitrans/imote/Run1 (v. 2006-11-01)
ucdavis/unitrans/imote/Run2 (v. 2006-11-01)
ucdavis/unitrans/imote/Run3 (v. 2006-11-01)

[Trace] ucdavis/unitrans/imote/Run1 (v. 2006-11-01)

top

version v. 2006-11-01
changes
the initial version
bibtex
@MISC{ucdavis-unitrans-imote-Run1-2006-11-01,
  author = {Jason LeBrun and Chen-Nee Chuah},
  title = {{CRAWDAD} trace ucdavis/unitrans/imote/Run1 (v. 2006-11-01)}, 
  howpublished = {Downloaded from http://crawdad.cs.dartmouth.edu/ucdavis/unitrans/imote/Run1},
  month = nov,  
  year = 2006
}
					
metadata last modified2007-03-01
summary
Trace of Bluetooth sightings by a group of students carrying the motes at UC Davis
derivedfalse
release date2006-11-01
measurement start 2006-01-24
measurement end 2006-01-27
configuration
A student experiment that ran from Jan 24th, 2006 at 4:20pm until Jan 27th 2006 around noon. 
All of the students in a networking class carried the motes around during their day.
format
The text files are named according the anonymized ID of the mote 
from which the data was collected. The format of the files is just 
a series of lines. Each line contains four values:

<seen_vendor> <seen_id> <start> <end> <since_this> <since_any>

Information about the fields:
seen_vendor: vendor portion of MAC for the Bluetooth device seen in this contact.
seen_id: anonymized device portion for the Bluetooth device seen in this contact.
start: The start time for the contact (in seconds since boot)
end: The end time for the contact (in seconds since boot)
since_this: The amount of time passed since this mote last saw the
device in this contact.
since_any: The amount of time passed since this mote saw *any* other
device before this contact.

Some lines may contain all zeros. This indicates that a reset occurred between 
the previous line and the following line. The ramification of this is that for data 
collected after this time, we can no longer be sure about synchronization between 
this mote and the other motes.
parent dataucdavis/unitrans/imote (v. 2006-11-01)

[Trace] ucdavis/unitrans/imote/Run2 (v. 2006-11-01)

top

version v. 2006-11-01
changes
the initial version
bibtex
@MISC{ucdavis-unitrans-imote-Run2-2006-11-01,
  author = {Jason LeBrun and Chen-Nee Chuah},
  title = {{CRAWDAD} trace ucdavis/unitrans/imote/Run2 (v. 2006-11-01)}, 
  howpublished = {Downloaded from http://crawdad.cs.dartmouth.edu/ucdavis/unitrans/imote/Run2},
  month = nov,  
  year = 2006
}
					
metadata last modified2007-03-01
summary
Trace of Bluetooth connectivity experiment on the Unitrans bus system at UC Davis
derivedfalse
release date2006-11-01
measurement start 2006-01-30
measurement end 2006-02-03
configuration
The first bus run, on Jan 30th, 2006 until Feb 3rd, 2006. Each bus in the UC Davis Unitrans 
system received one mote near the front of the bus. Many motes ran until the end of the week, 
although some were dead when we collected them back.
format
The text files are named according the anonymized ID of the mote 
from which the data was collected. The format of the files is just 
a series of lines. Each line contains four values:

<seen_vendor> <seen_id> <start> <end> <since_this> <since_any>

Information about the fields:
seen_vendor: vendor portion of MAC for the Bluetooth device seen in this contact.
seen_id: anonymized device portion for the Bluetooth device seen in this contact.
start: The start time for the contact (in seconds since boot)
end: The end time for the contact (in seconds since boot)
since_this: The amount of time passed since this mote last saw the
device in this contact.
since_any: The amount of time passed since this mote saw *any* other
device before this contact.

Some lines may contain all zeros. This indicates that a reset occurred between 
the previous line and the following line. The ramification of this is that for data 
collected after this time, we can no longer be sure about synchronization between 
this mote and the other motes.
parent dataucdavis/unitrans/imote (v. 2006-11-01)

[Trace] ucdavis/unitrans/imote/Run3 (v. 2006-11-01)

top

version v. 2006-11-01
changes
the initial version
bibtex
@MISC{ucdavis-unitrans-imote-Run3-2006-11-01,
  author = {Jason LeBrun and Chen-Nee Chuah},
  title = {{CRAWDAD} trace ucdavis/unitrans/imote/Run3 (v. 2006-11-01)}, 
  howpublished = {Downloaded from http://crawdad.cs.dartmouth.edu/ucdavis/unitrans/imote/Run3},
  month = nov,  
  year = 2006
}
					
metadata last modified2007-03-01
summary
Trace of Bluetooth connectivity experiment on the Unitrans bus system at UC Davis
derivedfalse
release date2006-11-01
measurement start 2006-02-27
measurement end 2006-03-03
configuration
The second bus run, on Feb 27th, 2006 until March 3rd, 2006. 
An advertisement was placed on buses during this run, asking students 
to turn their Bluetooth radios on.
format
The text files are named according the anonymized ID of the mote 
from which the data was collected. The format of the files is just 
a series of lines. Each line contains four values:

<seen_vendor> <seen_id> <start> <end> <since_this> <since_any>

Information about the fields:
seen_vendor: vendor portion of MAC for the Bluetooth device seen in this contact.
seen_id: anonymized device portion for the Bluetooth device seen in this contact.
start: The start time for the contact (in seconds since boot)
end: The end time for the contact (in seconds since boot)
since_this: The amount of time passed since this mote last saw the
device in this contact.
since_any: The amount of time passed since this mote saw *any* other
device before this contact.

Some lines may contain all zeros. This indicates that a reset occurred between 
the previous line and the following line. The ramification of this is that for data 
collected after this time, we can no longer be sure about synchronization between 
this mote and the other motes.
parent dataucdavis/unitrans/imote (v. 2006-11-01)

[Author] Jason LeBrun

top

emailjblebrun@ece.ucdavis.edu
departmentElectrical and Computer Engineering
institutionUniversity of California, Davis
related data/toolsucdavis/unitrans (v. 2006-11-01)

[Author] Chen-Nee Chuah

top

emailchuah@ece.ucdavis.edu
departmentElectrical and Computer Engineering
positionAssociate Professor
institutionUniversity of California, Davis
web site http://www.ece.ucdavis.edu/~chuah
related data/toolsucdavis/unitrans (v. 2006-11-01)

[Paper] lebrun-content

top

-09-
category inproceedings
authorsJason LeBrun
Chen-Nee Chuah
titleBluetooth content distribution stations on public transit
booktitleMobiShare '06: Proceedings of the 1st international workshop on Decentralized resource sharing in mobile computing and networking
year2006
pages63-65
addressLos Angeles, California
keyword
download urlhttp://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1161252.1161269
abstract
In this poster, we introduce our Bluespots project, in which a small computer 
on a bus serves as a Bluetooth Content Distribution (BCD) station in a 
university public transit scenario. An important feature of the application 
space that we envision is that it depends only on single hops between devices. 
The primary form of communication will be between user mobile devices and 
Bluespots, or information waypoints. In later incarnations of this system, 
larger-scale dissemination can be achieved by using application-level 
peer-to-peer connections. However, we do not think of the system as a general 
data transit system. We consider it more as an implementation of social 
networking, in which users only participate in functions that are in line with 
their own interests and goals.
keywordsmeasurement
keywordswireless
keywordsucdavis/unitrans
keywordscrawdad
related data/toolsucdavis/unitrans