nanog mailing list archives

Re: packet reordering at exchange points


From: Iljitsch van Beijnum <iljitsch () muada com>
Date: Tue, 9 Apr 2002 00:32:50 +0200 (CEST)


On Mon, 8 Apr 2002, Paul Vixie wrote:

packet reordering at MAE East was extremely common a few years ago. Does
anyone have information whether this is still happening?

more to the point, does anybody still care about packet reordering at
exchange points?  we (paix) go through significant effort to prevent it,
and interswitch trunking with round robin would be a lot easier.  are
we chasing an urban legend here, or would reordering still cause pain?

Obviously some applications care. In addition to the examples mentioned
earlier: out of order packets aren't really good for TCP header
compression, so they will slow down data transfers over slow links.

But how is packet reordering on two parallell gigabit interfaces ever
going to translate into reordered packets for individual streams? Packets
for streams that are subject to header compression or for voice over IP or
even Mbone are nearly always transmitted at relatively large intervals, so
they can't travel down parallell paths simultaneously.


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