Colton,

We are a member on the Equinix IX. Maybe best for you to speak to an Equinix SE 
on the topic, but there are two main connection methods. In laymen's terms you 
can be a member on the switch and then build peering relationships within any 
other network that will have you. Meaning, you reach out to them or they reach 
out to you via their contacts in PeeringDB and setup a typical BGP session but 
usually only exchanging private routes. Therefore you are are not providing 
transit to the other. 

The other option Equinix offers is their MLPE (Multi-Lateral Peering Exchange). 
Essentially from what we understand you peer once to Equinix's router and all 
other participants and you are able to exchange traffic. It's not an all or 
none, you can use filtering to exclude specific ASNs. We are not a member of 
this service today. 


Sincerely,
Nick Ellermann – CTO & VP Cloud Services
BroadAspect
 
E: nellerm...@broadaspect.com 
P: 703-297-4639
F: 703-996-4443
 
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-----Original Message-----
From: NANOG [mailto:nanog-boun...@nanog.org] On Behalf Of Colton Conor
Sent: Monday, January 25, 2016 10:22 PM
To: NANOG <nanog@nanog.org>
Subject: Peering Exchange

If a service provider or enterprise orders collocation at an Equinix Global 
Internet Exchange Point, and orders a port on the exchange from Equinix, then 
what happens? How does a provider actually peer with the peers on the exchange?

Lets assume the SP or enterprise already has an ANS, transit from multiple 
providers, and a BGP router that can accept and hold full routes.

You can see the members of the exchange on peeringdb.com. Many of the members 
say their policy is Open with little to no traffic requirements. So does just 
ordering a port to the exchange automatically connect you with all of these 
open providers, or do you have to contact each on individually?

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