hey,
For availability I think it is best approach to do many small edge
devices.
This is also great for planned maintenance. ISSU has not really worked
out for any of the vendors and with two small devices you can upgrade
them independently.
Great for aggregation, enables you to dual-home
* na...@ics-il.net (Mike Hammett) [Wed 19 Jun 2019, 23:19 CEST]:
PeeringDB has categories of ratios to choose from. What has the
community decided is acceptable ratios for each category? It's
fairly trivial for any network to determine what their ratio is
as a number, but not necessarily as a P
Hi Martijn and Josh,
Thank you for your detailed explanation. Let me explain my requirement so that
you may help me better.
According to PeeringDB, Charter (Access), Sprint (Transit), Amazon (Content)
all three of them are ‘Balanced’. While, Cable One, an Access ISP says it is
Heavy Inbound, whi
Hi William,
Ha ha! Thanks for pointing that out. I’m not related to any ISP at all, so this
is something new. I understand, PeeringDB is just a basic guideline and ISPs
put their own information about their traffic ratios. I’m interested to know
whether ISPs check their own accumulated traffic
Josh,
That’s great. I’m assuming your traffic is mainly inbound. So, my question is,
do you have a threshold that defines your traffic ratio type.
I’m taking an example from this thread. Say, your average incoming traffic is
~45 gbps, and outgoing traffic is ~4.5 gbps. So, your outbound:inbound
[cid:image001.png@01D526B7.B99D6BB0]
From: NANOG [mailto:nanog-boun...@nanog.org] On Behalf Of Josh Luthman
Sent: Wednesday, June 19, 2019 3:24 PM
To: Prasun Dey
Cc: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: Traffic ratio of an ISP
>my question was more like to understand when an ISP decides to claim itself a
Thank you Aaron,
This is great. This gives an interesting insight regarding CDN as they seem to
play a big role here. However, in general, what do you call your ISP as? A
'Heavy Inbound' or 'Mostly Inbound'? Is there any community standard about this
ratio (having 1:10 or higher) to be treated
Seems you just have updated today. Thanks for letting us know.
Last time, I checked was yesterday and based on that I mentioned your traffic
ratio being ‘Balanced’.
Regards,
Prasun Kanti Dey
Ph.D. Candidate,
Dept of Electrical and Computer Engineering,
University of Central Florida
web: https:/
Hi Prasun,
It was updated because ‘Balanced’ wasn’t accurate, we didn’t notice that’s what
it said until you pointed it out, because it really don’t matter in the whole
scheme of things. In regards to:
>> So, my question was more like to understand when an ISP decides to claim
>> itself as any
Thank you, Mike.
From an outsider, I don’t have any information of an ISP’s traffic numbers. And
this may be confidential unless we are using any measurement platform, which
CAIDA is doing. To get a rough idea about any ISP’s traffic outbound:inbound
ratio I can only see it's PeeringDB label. Bu
Thank you Aaron for confirming that. This is helpful.
-
Prasun
Regards,
Prasun Kanti Dey
Ph.D. Candidate,
Dept of Electrical and Computer Engineering,
University of Central Florida
web: https://prasunkantidey.github.io/portfolio/
> On Jun 19, 2019, at 5:26 PM, Aaron Gould wrote:
>
> I’m h
Thank you Steller,
Your response is extremely helpful. I really appreciate your detailed
explanation.
While I was looking for these numbers, I couldn’t find any. I thought, as an
outsider, these numbers may not be accessible for me. And, as I don’t own an
AS, so, I can’t be a member of Peering
You’re right on that, Baldur. I’m aware of this, but my focus is to know
whether there are any exact numbers that community has agreed on.
Thank you for your reply.
Regards,
Prasun Kanti Dey
Ph.D. Candidate,
Dept of Electrical and Computer Engineering,
University of Central Florida
web: https://p
> clusters so it's not really up to Bell to go against Akamai's request
> to send their own + customer prefixes for their cluster.
>
Does Akamai mostly rely on the DNS the request was coming from?
Regards
Bjoern
The problem you're running into, Prasun, is that people either aren't actually
reading what you're saying or have poor comprehension skills. Very few people
are directly addressing what you're asking.
-
Mike Hammett
Intelligent Computing Solutions
Midwest Internet Exchange
The Brot
On 19/Jun/19 22:22, adamv0...@netconsultings.com wrote:
> Yes it will cost a bit more (router is more expensive than a LC)
I found the reverse to be true... chassis' are cheap. Line cards are costly.
>
> Would like to hear what are your thoughts on this conundrum.
So this depends on where
On Thu, Jun 20, 2019 at 4:21 PM Steller, Anthony J
wrote:
> because it really don’t matter in the whole scheme of things.
Indeed, it doesn't matter. The "traffic ratio" field in PeeringDB
probably should be deprecated, there is no formal definition nor is
are there any operational consequences to
On Wed, 19 Jun 2019 16:20:37 -0400, Prasun Dey said:
> So, my question was more like to understand when an ISP decides to claim
> itself as any of these (Heavy Outbound/ Inbound or Balanced)? From an ISPâs
> own
> point of view, at what point, it says, my outbound:inbound is something, so
> Iâ
On 19/Jun/19 23:30, Steller, Anthony J wrote:
>
>
> TL;DR - There are no hard numbers to give you, it just depends how
> someone feels that day of the week when setting it.
>
Not surprising if some use it as a way to separate peers that have the
stamina from those that don't :-).
For those t
What are folks using these days for smaller organizations, that need to
dole out time from an internal source?
On 6/20/19 7:16 AM, Mike Hammett wrote:
The problem you're running into, Prasun, is that people either aren't
actually reading what you're saying or have poor comprehension skills.
Very few people are directly addressing what you're asking.
A good question would be, who actually cares about r
I use the $300 GPS-based TM1000A from TimeMachinesCorp.com. Gets Stratum-1 time
from GPS satellites and distributes it. Usually I relay this through a handful
of local time servers to spread out the load, but it can handle hundreds of
queries per minute, so it’s reasonable to use as a primary so
Can someone who manages RBL1 contact me off-list?
Thank you in advance!
--
Aaron
On 20/Jun/19 16:46, Seth Mattinen wrote:
>
>
> A good question would be, who actually cares about ratios in the year
> 2019? Does anyone still calculate them and use them to decide
> anything? If so, why does it matter?
We never have.
I find the exercise pointless. In fact, more than 90% of
On Thu, Jun 20, 2019 at 11:00 AM Mel Beckman wrote:
>
> I use the $300 GPS-based TM1000A from TimeMachinesCorp.com. Gets Stratum-1
> time from GPS satellites and distributes it. Usually I relay this through a
> handful of local time servers to spread out the load, but it can handle
> hundreds o
Warren,
I like the cheap price of the LeoNTP. The only reason I prefer the Tm1000a is
that it has an embedded web server, which lets me monitor the satellite
constellation visibility. Otherwise, except for oven-controller time clocks, it
seems obvious that the $2000+ GPS NTP servers are overpri
On Thu, Jun 20, 2019 at 11:42 AM Mel Beckman wrote:
>
> Warren,
>
> I like the cheap price of the LeoNTP. The only reason I prefer the Tm1000a is
> that it has an embedded web server, which lets me monitor the satellite
> constellation visibility. Otherwise, except for oven-controller time clock
Having an inbound:outbound ration of 10:1 is known as a leech ...
---
The fact that there's a Highway to Hell but only a Stairway to Heaven says a
lot about anticipated traffic volume.
>-Original Message-
>From: NANOG [mailto:nanog-boun...@nanog.org] On Behalf Of Prasun Dey
>Sent: Wedn
Why would you think that "Heavy Inbound" signifies a greater inbound:oubound
ratio compared to "Mostly Inbound"?
To me "Heavy Inbound" means that there is more inbound than outbound and
"Mostly Inbound" means exactly that -- mostly/usually/exclusively inbound with
the occasional outbound byte
Thanks Valdis for mentioning the classifications. I’ve used ISPs as generic
word. But, you’re right, it’d be better if I had distinguished the CPs, ISPs or
the Transits specifically. However, thanks to the community, they’ve understood
and provided me some really helpful answers.
-
Prasun
Reg
Dear Mike,
Regardless of very few direct answers, I found this discussion very
interesting. I think one possible reason for not having any specific numbers,
as some members have already pointed out, is there doesn’t exist any. As an
outsider, with zero hands-on experience in ISP field apart from
Hi Job,
While doing some study, I recently came across this
https://drpeering.net/white-papers/The-Folly-Of-Peering-Ratios.html
This discussion was from from a Nanog meeting that took place a long time ago.
This made me interested to know whether there is some actual numbers behind
those Peering
Thanks Valdis for clarifying this. Based on this thread discussion, I’m getting
this understanding as well.
-
Prasun
Regards,
Prasun Kanti Dey
Ph.D. Candidate,
Dept of Electrical and Computer Engineering,
University of Central Florida
web: https://prasunkantidey.github.io/portfolio/
> On Jun 2
Hi Keith,
Honestly? I don’t! I have never worked with an ISP or similar. If I ever get
the chance, that would be exciting. Until then, I think this platform is one of
the best places where I can get the answer from the people who has first-hand
experience in this field.
Your classification is al
As I recall, yes that is true.
Somethings mentioned here...
https://www.akamai.com/us/en/multimedia/documents/akamai/akamai-accelerated-network-partner-aanp-faq.pdf
I recall that after I deployed my local AANP clusters, that *if* I wanted to
bypass local aanp caching, that I would change my dns
On Thu, 20 Jun 2019 10:16:03 -0600, "Keith Medcalf" said:
> Having an inbound:outbound ration of 10:1 is known as a leech ...
Just remember that without "leech" networks like Comcast, everybody who's
selling transit to content providers would be having a hard sell indeed.
pgpkFBQ_vWGng.pgp
I think that was a BitTorrent reference.
On Thu, Jun 20, 2019, 8:17 PM Valdis Klētnieks
wrote:
> On Thu, 20 Jun 2019 10:16:03 -0600, "Keith Medcalf" said:
> > Having an inbound:outbound ration of 10:1 is known as a leech ...
>
> Just remember that without "leech" networks like Comcast, everybody
On 6/20/19 07:39, David Bass wrote:
What are folks using these days for smaller organizations, that need to
dole out time from an internal source?
If you want to go really cheap and don't value your time, but do value
knowing the correct time, a GPS receiver with a USB interface and a
Raspber
> On Jun 20, 2019, at 10:18 PM, Jay Hennigan wrote:
>
> On 6/20/19 07:39, David Bass wrote:
>> What are folks using these days for smaller organizations, that need to dole
>> out time from an internal source?
>
> If you want to go really cheap and don't value your time, but do value
> knowin
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