nanog mailing list archives

Re: Exchanges that matter...


From: "Alex.Bligh" <amb () xara net>
Date: Thu, 05 Dec 1996 16:35:10 +0000

So how do you reconcile the increasing number of private facilities? Although 
not exchange points in the truest sense ala MAEs and NAPs, they do carry an 
increasing percentage of cross-network traffic. The number of these types of 
facilities will grow. Maybe our difference here is that I count these and 
others do not. des

My point was not in relation to the NAP vs Private interconnect debate,
nor the many NAP vs few NAPs debate, just when measuring "few" or "many"
they should be done in the context of telecoms pricing and locality
of content, and thus "NAPs per country" not "NAPs per continent" was the
appropriate ratio. I've since been told telecoms pricing between
Canada and US is almost as bad as between (say) UK and FR in terms
of the hike as you go over the border. I don't think many people would
argue each extra US NAP diminishes the case for an extra Canadian NAP.
However each successful US west coast NAP does probably diminish the
case for another successful NAP on the US west coast, or possibly the US
in total.

FYI my view on the private interconnect versus public IXP interconnect
(probably not very informed as I don't have many private interconnects
with Sprint et al :-) ) is that if public IXPs worked as well as private
interconnects (didn't get overloaded, no interference to traffic from
third parties, peer to peer bandwidth always available at STM-1 or
above etc. etc.) there would not be nearly so much of a case for private
interconnects (the "people whinging about peering" argument is valid
but not relevant here as I'm assuming tier 1s would always connect
to at least 1 IXP anyway and whinging is not proportional to no. of
exchange points connected to I guess). In fact one could argue that
we already have "public" IXPs run like this - the SDH/SONET equipment that
runs the private circuits on private interconnects. Other than their
invisibility to the customer, and the protocol, these aren't doing
a very substantially different job from an ATM switch with VCs
between different (off-site) peers. Perhaps someone should persuade
Cisco to make a card running channelised STM-15 and start an IXP
running with just mux/demux kit. Or maybe not... :-)

More seriously the argument about routers and bottlenecks is
relevant too - see Vadim's paper.

Alex Bligh
Xara Networks

 
----------
From:  Alex.Bligh
Sent:  Wednesday, December 04, 1996 1:50 PM
To:  Todd Graham Lewis
Cc:  Danny Stroud; nanog () merit edu
Subject:  Re: Exchanges that matter... 

On Wed, 4 Dec 1996, Todd Graham Lewis wrote:

Three NAPs per continent is plenty to serve this
purpose; anything over this is reckless.

Woops.  Three is a nice, round, theoretical number.  Five is fine.  Fifty
is highly questionable to my mind.  Thinking that more NAPs solves the
problem is just flat wrong.

Hmmm.. Not sure "continent" is the right granularity here. In North America
telecoms prices do not in general take enormous hikes when you cross state
borders. In (say) Europe they do. Lines between European countries often
cost more than lines between a given European country and the US. Also
content and thus traffic is far more localised to each country due to
language difficulties (well that part that doesn't go to English speaking
countries anyway). So 3-5 NAPs (or whatever) per homogenous area (homogenous
in content and in telecoms charging) perhaps. But ridiculous telco regulation
within Europe and language differences makes a very strong case for at least
one NAP per country (we dump about 50% of our UK traffic off in the UK).

Alex Bligh
Xara Networks





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