nanog mailing list archives

Re: Traffic Engineering


From: "Jay R. Ashworth" <jra () scfn thpl lib fl us>
Date: Thu, 18 Sep 1997 13:20:10 -0400

On Thu, Sep 18, 1997 at 12:55:37PM -0400, Sean M. Doran wrote:
"Jay R. Ashworth" <jra () scfn thpl lib fl us> writes:

Are there any major potholes in this theory that I'm missing?

Well, you have two technical problems to solve: firstly,
the same numbering problem that anyone else has,
viz. addresses will change.

[ Looks at From: address ]  Oh.  Hi, Sean.  :-)

                            Secondly, you have a traffic
attraction/traffic dispersion problem for non-local
connectivity.  You also have to provide better
value-for-money than the classical hierarchy-of-providers
model your competitors will be using.

Probably.  But, given the relative pricing of T-3s and T-1s, I don't
think this will be that hard to do, especially if wireless last mile
picks up as fast I I expect it will...

The "classical" approach is to renumber to solve the first
case and do the oh-so-fun BGP tricks Dennis Ferguson
described here a couple of incarnations ago.

A better approach to both problems is to use NAT to deal
with the renumbering issue, and large-scale NAT to deal
with your border problem (you not only want to reduce the
number of prefixes you advertise outbound, and use the DNS
to offer back different topolical locators (i.e., IP
addresses) for the things connected to you, but you also
want to reduce the amount of information you take in from
the outside world).

Well, yeah, but the delights of NAT in a two or three customer-level
deep commercial environment are an administrative problem I don't think
I even want to go near...

To deal with connectivity failures outside the NATs
themselves you build tunnels through working inside or
outside infrastructure between your NATs.   This is
straightforward and is what is done now.

Dealing with the failures of the NATs themselves requires
synchronized or deterministic address mappings,
NAT-friendly higher-layer protocols, and a simple IGP.

Um... I haven't gotten quite this far down the pike, yet, Sean.  :-)

With some performance-affecting trade-offs you can deal
with many NAT-unfriendly higher-layer protocols in various
ways too, mostly by sharing state information among your 
border NATs.

Sometimes I feel like I'm at a multi-level marketing seminar... :-)

Cheers,
-- jra
-- 
Jay R. Ashworth                                                jra () baylink com
Member of the Technical Staff             Unsolicited Commercial Emailers Sued
The Suncoast Freenet      "People propose, science studies, technology
Tampa Bay, Florida          conforms."  -- Dr. Don Norman      +1 813 790 7592


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