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LUSerNet

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LUSerNet
Developer(s)bramp
Stable release
1.2 / 2002
Engine
    Operating systemWindows
    TypeLAN Peer-to-peer
    LicenceFree
    Websitebramp.34sp.com

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    LUSerNet (pronounced Loser Net, roughly standing for Lancaster University Student Network) is a free peer-to-peer package for use on local area networks, developed between the end of 2001 and late 2002 by a Lancaster University first-year Computer Science student known as 'bramp'.[1] Following the sudden and massive popularity of the program, the university's network system was brought to near collapse, and forced the network administrators to completely redevelop the network to cope with the program, earning the program cult status.[citation needed] It is now[when?] being used in universities other than Lancaster, and has even spread to America.

    Concept

    bramp developed LUSerNet as a solution to the lack of peer-to-peer systems available to students at Lancaster, England. Primarily, the project was born out of boredom, and bramp and a fellow student put together the first version with the intention of only their immediate friends using it. The program allowed users to search through the content of other users' PCs and download the files over the local area network, in much the same way a normal peer-to-peer system works. The program was simplistic and unobtrusive, and offered a simple and easy way to share files.

    Initial success

    The knowledge of LUSerNet spread quickly through the University, and within months vast proportions of the 10,000-strong student population were using it. Buoyed on by this success, bramp developed further versions of the software, adding new functionality and making the program more secure. Unfortunately for the network administrators at Lancaster University, working under the name ISS, the thousands of students downloading terabytes of data completely stalled the network. ISS reacted quickly, but found it was unable to halt the flow of data without crippling the network's usability themselves.

    University response

    Going back in time, when Resnet was first completely wired (Summer 2001), the decision was made to wire every room on campus 3 years earlier than planned rather than to make all installed lines live. As a result, the network used somewhat second-hand 3Com FMS 10baseT hubs with up to 144 users per stack. Due to increasing demands of network applications, a shared 10Mb segment for 144 users was no longer acceptable for use; however, the problems of such infrastructure were massively increased by LUSerNet.

    The increased uptake of Resnet, falling prices for switch ports, and massive staff costs of a daily walk to 40 comms rooms to make new requests live made this model no longer viable. As a result, a complete equipment replacement of Resnet occurred over two summers (2002 and 2003). In 2002, all hubs were removed and switches installed. The uptake of Resnet was far higher than expected during 2002, and as a result, all ports were connected and remotely managed in 2003. Every year since, further improvements have been made to the performance, reliability, and security. Future developments will almost certainly be 802.1x for user authentication and provision of multicast services.

    The motivation for splitting up the network was not to limit the use of LUSerNet, as is frequently stated, but to reduce the damage to student machines from virus infections. This has been an unquestionable success, with outbreaks limited to a few users rather than tens or hundreds of users. For LUSerNet, this has been problematic because of its searching mechanism relying on broadcast rather than unicast and peer lists, which many other p2p applications rely on.

    For the record, ISS could have stopped LUSerNet from working at any point at the network layer but chose not to, for various undisclosed reasons.

    bramp, who never technically broke any of the university's rules at the time, remains at Lancaster University, and is currently working as a research associate after successfully completing a Ph.D..

    Legacy

    The program has earned cult status at Lancaster University, and is still widely used, despite its now limited effectiveness.[citation needed] Both ISS and the Lancaster University Student Union have released statements regarding its use,[2] encouraging users against it. In one of the final versions, bramp made the program operational on all LAN types, not just Lancaster, so the program has spread beyond the university. References that LUSerNet has been used at other universities have appeared.[3][unreliable source?]

    References

    External links


    This article "LUSerNet" is from Wikipedia. The list of its authors can be seen in its historical and/or the page Edithistory:LUSerNet. Articles copied from Draft Namespace on Wikipedia could be seen on the Draft Namespace of Wikipedia and not main one.