nanog mailing list archives

Re: Cogent service


From: Iljitsch van Beijnum <iljitsch () muada com>
Date: Fri, 20 Sep 2002 22:20:21 +0200 (CEST)


On Fri, 20 Sep 2002, Petri Helenius wrote:

Under the best possible circumstances, most of the extra delay is due to
the fact that routers do "store and forward" forwarding, so you have to
wait for the last bit of the packet to come in before you can start
sending the first bit over the next link. This delay is directly
proportional to the bandwidth and the packet size. Since ATM uses very
small "packets" this isn't as much an issue there.

But doing SAR at the ends of the PVC you´ll end up suffering the same
latency anyway

Yes, but only once. With a layer 3 network (or non-ATM layer 2 network)
you get this at every hop.

However, the real problem with many hops comes when there is congestion.
Then the packet suffers a queuing delay at each hop. Now everyone is going
to say "but our network isn't congested" and it probably isn't when you
look at the 5 minute average, but short term (a few ms - several seconds)
congestion happens all the time because IP is so bursty. This adds to the

If you either do the math at OC48 or above

Ok, if you push your line to 99% utilization your average queue size is
100 packets. Assuming those are 1500 bytes this adds up to 1200000 bits or
some 480 microseconds delay...

Not sure how many people do 99% or more over their 2.4 Gbps lines, though.

or just look at how many places are able to generate severe, even
subsecond bursts on any significant backbone, you´ll figure out that
99.9% of the time, there aren´t any.

Well, I don't have an OC48 but I have seen slower lines that aren't
considered congested by any definition still experience tail drops from
time to time, so bursts happen. But that could be just 0.1% of the time,
yes.

However, when an ATM network gets in trouble it's much, much worse than
some jitter or even full-blown congestion, so I'll take as many hops as I
must to avoid ATM (but preferably no more than that) any day.

Depends on your ATM hardware, most of the vendors fixed their ATM to make
decisions based on packets. Which kind of defeats the idea of having 53 byte
shredded packets in the first place.

I'm sure that after seeing jumboframes in gigabit ethernet, someone will
invent jumbocells for ATM to solve those shredding inefficiencies.

The problem with running IP over ATM is that both protocols need/use very
different ways handle congestion and those ways tend to conflict. So then
you have to cripple either one or the other. (Or buy more bandwidth.)


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