nanog mailing list archives

Re: Extreme congestion (was Re: inter-domain link recovery)


From: Stephen Wilcox <steve.wilcox () packetrade com>
Date: Fri, 17 Aug 2007 11:55:06 +0100


On Fri, Aug 17, 2007 at 10:54:47AM +0100, Sam Stickland wrote:

Ted Hardie wrote:
Fred Baker writes:

 
Hence, moving a file into a campus doesn't mean that the campus has the 
file and will stop  bothering you. I'm pushing an agenda in the open 
source world to add  some concept of locality, with the purpose of moving 
traffic off ISP  networks when I can. I think the user will be just as 
happy or  happier, and folks pushing large optics will certainly be.
   

As I mentioned to Fred in a bar once, there is at least one case where you 
have
to be a bit careful with how you push locality.  In the wired campus case, 
he's certainly
right:  if you have the file topologically close to other potentially 
interested users,
delivering it from that "nearer" source is a win for pretty much everyone.
This is partly the case because the local wired network is unlikely to be 
resource
constrained, especially in comparison to the upstream network links.

In some wireless cases, though, it can be a bad thing.  Imagine for a 
moment that
Fred and I are using a p2p protocol while stuck in an airport.  We're both 
looking
for the same file.  The p2p network pushes it first to Fred and then 
directs me to get
it from him.  If he and I are doing this while we're both connected to the 
same resource-constrained base station, we may actually be worse off, as 
the
same base station has to allocate data channels for two high data traffic
flows while it passes from him to me.  If I/the second user gets the file 
from outside the pool of devices connected to that base  station, in other 
words, the base station , I, and its other users may well be better off.  

 
A similar (and far more common) issue exists in the UK where ISPs are 
buying their DSL 'last mile' connectivity via a BT central pipe. 
Essentially in this setup BT owns all the exchange equipment and the 
connectivity back to a central hand-off location - implemented as a L2TP 
VPDN. When the DSL customers connects, their realm is used to route 
their connection over the VPDN to the ISP. The physical hand-off point 
between BT and the ISP is what BT term a BT Central Pipe, which is many 
orders of magnitude more expensive than IP transit.

In this scenario it's more expensive for the ISP to have a customer 
retrieve the file from another customer on their network, then it is to 
go off net for the file.

Hey Sam,
 thats an excellent point made..

Altho I dont think its unique to UK/BT .. since last mile is recognised as most places as the big cost (in the UK its 
around 100x the cost of the backbone roughly) .. here anything traversing the last mile is not desirable, especially if 
it does it twice.

Steve


Current thread: