[JC Wrote] A more cynical view The cynic in me wonders how they will track how
many people I forwarded this to. I plan to win the prize for "the person who
refers the survey
to the most number of people" by forwarding it to millions of people. :-)
(I suspect that the prize will be won by the per
> We offer peak speeds of 4mbps, and we
> have an
> extrordinary amount of people using (abusing as some would say)
> streaming
> video for many hours of the day causing headaches for us.
I would bandwidth limit the ports, as someone else already mentioned. I
would also enable WRED, ECN and eve
On Fri, May 27, 2011, George Bonser wrote:
> > It's actually rather hard with current pc hardware to get to multiple
> > cores engaged in paralell per input interfaces. while you can plan for
> > various cases the the one to account for is the small packet
> > performance not overwhelming the capa
> > Every tool has its use. Also, they have several different sized
> > appliances. How much CPU use you get depends on how many cores you
> > throw at the problem. They can use multiple cores/processors. The
> > result given in one test might not match someone else's test if they
> > have hig
Wow, that works out be a per-connect max of 785 kbps.
Frank
-Original Message-
From: Adam Armstrong [mailto:li...@memetic.org]
Sent: Friday, May 27, 2011 7:54 AM
To: Jeroen van Ingen
Cc: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: Contention/Oversubscription maths
On 27/05/2011 13:44, Jeroen van Ingen
This report has been generated at Fri May 27 21:12:07 2011 AEST.
The report analyses the BGP Routing Table of AS2.0 router
and generates a report on aggregation potential within the table.
Check http://www.cidr-report.org for a current version of this report.
Recent Table History
Date
BGP Update Report
Interval: 19-May-11 -to- 26-May-11 (7 days)
Observation Point: BGP Peering with AS131072
TOP 20 Unstable Origin AS
Rank ASNUpds % Upds/PfxAS-Name
1 - AS982965222 4.0% 70.1 -- BSNL-NIB National Internet
Backbone
2 - AS14420 3
li...@memetic.org wrote:
From: Adam Armstrong
I'm more interested in the levels of traffic that we will see consistently.
-
>From experience, one thing's for sure. No matter how you end up estimating
>traffic levels, you should op
On Thu, May 26, 2011 at 6:48 PM, Adam Armstrong wrote:
> Do any of you have any pointers on how to go about predicting usage for
> high-speed ethernet access?
>
> Finally, what do people think of selling a 1G service with 1G backhaul (and
> potentially 10s or 100s of customers buying this service
This is an automated weekly mailing describing the state of the Internet
Routing Table as seen from APNIC's router in Japan.
The posting is sent to APOPS, NANOG, AfNOG, AusNOG, SANOG, PacNOG, LacNOG,
CaribNOG and the RIPE Routing Working Group.
Daily listings are sent to bgp-st...@lists.apnic.net
On May 27, 2011, at 9:50 AM, Michael Holstein wrote:
> Not picking on you personally .. but let's call a spade a spade, shall
> we? .. this is market research sponsored by a vendor with a hat in the
> game. Not exactly objective, and wasn't disclosed up-front.
OK, let me step in here.
This wa
> sponsored by Cisco.
>
Uh huh .. "Do you expect to invest in a comprehensive tool that solves
all the challenges identified in question 4?"
Not picking on you personally .. but let's call a spade a spade, shall
we? .. this is market research sponsored by a vendor with a hat in the
game. Not
[Steve Wrote] as an academic who frequently does research involving human
subjects, generally including surveys -- that this is a very normal way to
proceed. Finding enough subjects is always hard; it's the single biggest
obstacle we encounter. Paying people is the usual approach, but for a gr
On 27/05/2011 15:23, Jay Ashworth wrote:
- Original Message -
From: "Adam Armstrong"
Residence customers will tolerate a lot more oversubscription than business,
enterprise, and server going on down the list of oversubscription, but
happily *up* the list of "how much can I charge". Re
On Fri, May 27, 2011 at 11:38, JC Dill wrote:
> The cynic in me wonders how they will track how many people I forwarded this
> to. I plan to win the prize for "the person who refers the survey to the
> most number of people" by forwarding it to millions of people. :-)
>
> (I suspect that the priz
On 27/05/11 7:24 AM, Michael Holstein wrote:
> I am a student at UCLA Anderson School of Managment and my MBA
> field study team is working on a research that involves conducting
> a survey of CIOs, IT Managers/Administrators, IT Engineers to
> understand challenges in managing IT infrastructur
On May 27, 2011, at 10:24 22AM, Michael Holstein wrote:
>
>> I am a student at UCLA Anderson School of Managment and my MBA field study
>> team is working on a research that involves conducting a survey of CIOs, IT
>> Managers/Administrators, IT Engineers to understand challenges in managing
On 27/05/2011 15:49, Shaun Bryant wrote:
I run a WISP, where we have moved customers from 3mb/s to 8mb/s to
20mb/s over the course of 5 years. We do this one tower at a time
(about 150 customers) what we have learned is usage grows overtime not
with the increase in available bandwidth. Our Per
I run a WISP, where we have moved customers from 3mb/s to 8mb/s to 20mb/s
over the course of 5 years. We do this one tower at a time (about 150
customers) what we have learned is usage grows overtime not with the
increase in available bandwidth. Our Per-Customer-Avg (PCA) stayed about
the same wit
- Original Message -
> From: "Adam Armstrong"
> Statistics and graphs i've seen offlist have been very helpful, and
> suggest that 1000 100mbit customers is doable on 1GE.
Probably.
> Atleast, today. Next year's (decade?) launch of the YouView platform in
> the UK should increase usage
> I am a student at UCLA Anderson School of Managment and my MBA field study
> team is working on a research that involves conducting a survey of CIOs, IT
> Managers/Administrators, IT Engineers to understand challenges in managing IT
> infrastructure.
>
> Could you please help by filling out t
- Original Message -
> From: "Adam Armstrong"
> I'm more interested in the levels of traffic that we will see
> consistently.
You're planning to engage in Statistical Multiplexing, or what I've always
termed "bandwidth surfing": how hard can I oversubscribe my uplink without
pissing off
On 5/26/11 11:23 PM, David Conrad wrote:
On May 26, 2011, at 5:14 PM, Wil Schultz wrote:
Out of curiosity, is there an IPv6 stack for ham devices?
Well there's a loaded question.
...
I won't say that there aren't "ham devices" with an IP stack built in, but I
think we're talking about differ
On 27/05/2011 14:40, Jacob Broussard wrote:
We offer peak speeds of 4mbps, and we have an extrordinary amount of
people using (abusing as some would say) streaming video for many
hours of the day causing headaches for us. You probably would be safe
to assume that you can use a higher ratio f
I apologize if you thought I was trying to call you out or correct you; I
was merely trying to provide some perspective. Sorry if I came off as
hostile. I understand that a 1000:1 does not mean that you get 1000th the
backhaul speed, no need for the snarky remarks. I simply stated that it may
ca
On May 24, 2011, at 7:52 PM, George Bonser wrote:
>> The graphs show near 100% CPU usage at small packet sizes, and low
>> PPS. That would lead to a pretty easy to launch DDoS against a
>> software based router platform.
>> Since there isn't a separation between control plane/forwarding plane,
>>
On 27/05/2011 14:02, Jacob Broussard wrote:
I don't use almost any bandwidth outside of Netflix, Steam game
downloads, and getting my daily dose of streaming starcraft videos and
ntop tells me I averaged 1.7mbps over the last month. Mind you this
is on an 8mbps peak connection. With peak sp
I don't use almost any bandwidth outside of Netflix, Steam game downloads,
and getting my daily dose of streaming starcraft videos and ntop tells me I
averaged 1.7mbps over the last month. Mind you this is on an 8mbps peak
connection. With peak speeds of 8m I would be pissed if I was getting 500k
On 27/05/2011 13:45, Jared Mauch wrote:
On May 27, 2011, at 8:14 AM, Adam Armstrong wrote:
No SLA, residential customers.
I would watch out for the 'abusers' in this case, and have the capability to
rate-limit the ports if necessary. Some hardware doesn't deal well with
'small' buckets of r
On 27/05/2011 13:44, Jeroen van Ingen wrote:
Hi Adam,
I'm talking of 1000 users on the end of a 1GE, not 50,000. I don't think
either of these scenarios are worrying.
300MB takes<3seconds on 1GE or 30 seconds on 100M. I don't think those
kinds of events will have an appreciable effect on the p
On May 27, 2011, at 8:14 AM, Adam Armstrong wrote:
> No SLA, residential customers.
I would watch out for the 'abusers' in this case, and have the capability to
rate-limit the ports if necessary. Some hardware doesn't deal well with
'small' buckets of rate-limiting, eg: taking a 1G port to 1M
On 27/05/2011 03:12, valdis.kletni...@vt.edu wrote:
On Thu, 26 May 2011 23:48:48 BST, Adam Armstrong said:
Finally, what do people think of selling a 1G service with 1G backhaul
(and potentially 10s or 100s of customers buying this service alongside
n*100s of customers with 100M service)?
Depe
On Fri, 27 May 2011 10:49:05 BST, Adam Armstrong said:
> I'm talking of 1000 users on the end of a 1GE, not 50,000. I don't think
> either of these scenarios are worrying.
>
> 300MB takes <3seconds on 1GE or 30 seconds on 100M.
The pont is that it takes a lot longer than 3 seconds if that uplink
On 27/05/2011 03:45, Dobbins, Roland wrote:
On May 27, 2011, at 9:12 AM,
wrote:
What do you do on Patch Tuesday?
For that matter, what do you do when the latest 'cool' YouTube video go viral,
or Amazon offer the next Lady GaGa album on sale for $0.99, or people with
iDevices download th
Carlos Martinez-Cagnazzo wrote:
>
> I'm addicted to sipcalc: http://www.routemeister.net/projects/sipcalc/
>
> It's available on standard repositories for MacPorts, Ubuntu, Debian
> and Fedora. I guess install is straightforward in other platforms as
> well.
>
> regards
>
> Carlos
>
> On Wed,
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