nanog mailing list archives

Re: That MIT paper


From: "David G. Andersen" <dga () lcs mit edu>
Date: Thu, 12 Aug 2004 16:36:35 -0400


On Thu, Aug 12, 2004 at 01:35:36PM +0200, Niels Bakker scribed:

* dga () lcs mit edu (David G. Andersen) [Thu 12 Aug 2004, 02:55 CEST]:
Global impact is greatest when the resulting load changes are
concentrated in one place.  The most clear example of that is changes
that impact the root servers.  When a 1% increase in total traffic
is instead spread among hundreds of thousands of different, relatively
unloaded DNS servers, the impact on any one DNS server is minimal.
And since we're talking about a protocol that variously occupies less than
3% of all Internet traffic, the packet count / byte count impact is
negligible (unless it's concentrated, as happens at root and
gtld servers).

This doesn't make sense to me.  You're saying here that a 1% increase in
average traffic is a 1% average increase in traffic.  What's your point?

if a load change is concentrated in one place how can the impact be
global?

  Because that point could be "critical infrastructure" (to abuse
the buzzword).  If a 1% increase in DNS traffic is 100,000 requests
per second (this number is not indicative of anything, just an
illustration), that could represent an extra request per second per
nameserver -- or 7,000 more requests per second at the root.
One of these is pretty trivial, and the other could be
unpleasant.

At root and gTLD servers I assume DNS traffic occupies significantly
more than 3% of all traffic there.  Still, a 1% increase remains 1%.

   Sure, but the ratio still plays out.  If your total traffic due
to DNS is small, then even a large (percentage) increase in DNS traffic
doesn't affect your overall traffic volume, though it might hurt
your nameservers.  If you're a root server, doubling the DNS traffic
nearly doubles total traffic volume, so in addition to DNS-specific
issues, you'll also start looking at full pipes.

  -Dave

-- 
work: dga () lcs mit edu                          me:  dga () pobox com
      MIT Laboratory for Computer Science           http://www.angio.net/


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