On Tue, Jun 07, 2011 at 10:15:48AM -0400, Drew Weaver wrote: > -----Original Message----- > From: Jon Lewis [mailto:jle...@lewis.org] > Sent: Tuesday, June 07, 2011 10:00 AM > > -snip- > > I manage a network that's primarily a hosting network. There's a similar > hosting network at the other end of the building. We both have multiple > gigs of transit. We don't peer with each other. Perhaps we should, > because the cost of the connection would be negligible (I think we already > have multiple fiber pairs between our suites), but looking at my sampled > netflow data, I'm guessing we average about 100kbit/s or less traffic in > each direction between us. At that low a level, is it even worth the time > and trouble to coordinate setting up a peering connection, much less > tying up a gigE port at each end? > ----- > > 100kbit/s at <1ms is better than 100kbit/s at > 1ms.
True, but the point being made is: how *much* better? Is it enough better to justify the cost of installing and maintaining another peering link? - Matt -- "Ah, the beauty of OSS. Hundreds of volunteers worldwide volunteering their time inventing and implementing new, exciting ways for software to suck." -- Toni Lassila, in the Monastery