nanog mailing list archives

Re: Backbone IP network Economics - peering and transit


From: Deepak Jain <deepak () ai net>
Date: Thu, 22 Apr 2004 15:18:39 -0400




alex () yuriev com wrote:
where's the "lot of cost"?

Stephen J. Wilcox
This is private vs public..

Even if it's private, and assuming that you're clever enough not to peer
for a modem's worth of traffic, the cost is a no-brainer, IMHO.
Someone checks my math please:
At $20 per megabit for transit (which I find very low, but let's go for
it anyway) a GE link for peering with an average use of 10% means $24000
per year saved; pays for the xconnect.


If you have a gig of traffic to peer out to a single AS, you need quite a
bit of infrastructure to support the peering and that infrastructure does
not come cheap.


But that structure doesn't vary vastly if you'd traffic out that gig via transit vs direct connect. It does vary (and add lots of infrastructure) if you don't aggregate your traffic at IXes and instead use loops to bring transit to you instead of going to it. (say a few 100Mb/s or OC3s in a few places instead of a GigE at an IX).

Perhaps we should (for technical reasons) describe peering as "direct connecting". Business reasons aside, technically the difference is that with transit you are expecting access via indirect connections to networks. With peering you expect direct connections into a network.

Deepak Jain
AiNET


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