Hello all.
With 10 days to go to the 7th edition of SAFNOG, we are delighted, and
excited, to welcome you all to sunny and vibrant Cape Town, where we can
all see each other after 2 years of social distancing.
We have put together a very exciting program that covers a number of
new, trending
lets just say cogent gives 400GE in each pop they have in common with
he.net for free.
*BUT* they will rate-limit he.net links *to* previous month's 95th
percentile upload or download (which is minimum) rate (*each month*)
to make ratio 1:1... to make downstream and upstream traffics fair...
alternatively you can do this every 5 minutes..
you could write a script to get 5 minute average for both downstream and
upstream
and then equalize by rate-limiting with 5 minute delay. it would be
nearly instant and absolutely fair for both sides.
19.08.2022 18:03 tarihinde VOLKAN KIRIK y
OTOH, knowing that Cogent loves splitting the global Internet is one
good reason to not contract their services.
I think they sell traffic to their private Intranet. Which is huge,
but doesn't encompass the whole Internet.
Rubens
On Fri, Aug 19, 2022 at 12:04 PM VOLKAN KIRIK wrote:
>
> lets jus
this is 50/50 situation. nobody has to peer for free.
but everyone can.
lets just say above 1:1 ratio he.net pays their own ip transit price to
cogent for paid peering excess amount and both sides monitor traffic
we can solve this issue by becoming middlemen worldwide...
both operators are c
The problem them becomes *who* pays? When do the tables turn as to who pays?
The alpha gets paid and the beta does the paying?
The network with more POPs gets paid?
The network with more downstream ASes gets paid?
Is it the same for IPv4 as it is for IPv6?
-
Mike Hammett
Intel
the more uploading side pays each month for the excess amount.
as content networks are supposed to pay expenses.
what do you think?
19.08.2022 18:28 tarihinde Mike Hammett yazdı:
The problem them becomes *who* pays? When do the tables turn as to who
pays?
The alpha gets paid and the beta d
for example he.net upstream = 300 gbps average
downstream = 200 gbps average (monthly, 95th)
then they should pay 6 cent per megabit of 100 gbps.
would be fair enough.. lets see if they are really giving back to the
community.
why did they stop bgp tunnels? lots of RD networks moved to CH
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