nanog mailing list archives

Re: Peering point speed publicly available?


From: Daniel Golding <dgolding () burtongroup com>
Date: Thu, 01 Jul 2004 21:57:55 -0400


On 7/1/04 8:14 PM, "Bill Woodcock" <woody () pch net> wrote:


I have a question regarding information on my ISP's peering relationships.
Are the speeds of some or all peering relationships public knowledge, and if
so, where can I find this?  By speed, I mean bandwidth (DS3, OC3, 100Mbps,
1Gbps, etc.).  I am trying to transfer large stuff from my AS, through my
ISP, through another ISP, to another AS, and I'm wondering how fast the
peering point is between the ISPs.

ISPs don't register it or publish it anywhere, generally, and if you ask
salescritters, they're likely to say "At the speed of LIGHT!!!" or some
such.  But the two methods people would generally use to determine this
externally would be first to do a bidirectional traceroute and look
closely at the in-addr DNS names associated with the router interfaces on
the IX or crossconnect, which, if you trust them, may give you some
indication of speed.  Next, if you have time, you could run pathchar
across the link.

                                -Bill



Of course, the big issue isn't the size of the links - its utilization. Most
private peering links today are OC-12 to OC-192. Most big ISPs do this in a
half dozen locations - sometimes more, occasionally less. Of course, you'll
use the closest exit between ISPs.

Ask your ISP what the utilization of that link is - or what the packet loss
is, historically. They are much more likely to tell you that.

Its funny, you always see people asking about peering link sizes or
locations on RFP's, but they never ask about peering utilization or packet
loss. The former is both NDA and meaningless - the latter is terribly
important.

-- 
Daniel Golding
Network and Telecommunications Strategies
Burton Group



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