nanog mailing list archives

Re: First step of network optimization


From: Joe Shen <joe_hznm () yahoo com sg>
Date: Mon, 3 Oct 2005 01:32:58 +0800 (CST)


Thanks for the response.


You want to optimize for the lowest monetary cost
network that still allows you
to meet all the SLA's you've negotiated.  And this
depends on what you
negotiated - for instance, if the SLA specifies 3
9's of reliability, spending
money to build a 4 9's network is cutting into your
profits.  Of course, if the
SLA's are biased towards latency or bandwidth,
you'll have to consider those.

There is always someone claims his network could reach
availability 99.9% or so, but I don't understand how a
network availability should be measured or figured
out. Is there any paper on this?

Focusing on SLA of a network, ISP network or PoP site
should not carry only one type of business traffic (
e.g. broadband access, MPLS-VPN, L2 VPN etc.), if we
consider it simply by taking network as a single
system optimization will surely be of no usage.

Looking at PoP site , is there any recommendation on
its design? a layer-2 access model is better than
router based system?

Joe




And remember that there usually isn't one right
answer for anything but the
most simple problems - almost always, some
constraint will be placed on the
solution. Often it's of the form "The salesdroid
just promised XYZ", also known
as the "Don't let your mouth write no check your
router can't cash" syndrome.
If it isn't that, it's a financial issue inside the
company - there's always the
network you *want* to build, which is almost never
the network that your
revenue stream will allow you to build....





                
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