nanog mailing list archives

Re: AT&T MPLS / BIB Routers


From: Mikeal Clark <mikeal.clark () gmail com>
Date: Wed, 16 Feb 2011 17:16:09 -0600

I'm building up to 3000-4000ms latency with these BIB routers.  We never had
this issue on the old point to points using Cisco gear.

On Wed, Feb 16, 2011 at 5:09 PM, Jim Gettys <jg () freedesktop org> wrote:

On 02/16/2011 05:44 PM, Mikeal Clark wrote:

We just put in a AT&T MPLS and are having a pretty negative experience
with
the "Business in a Box" routers they are using for our smaller sites.  We
are seeing extremely high latency under load.  Anyone have any experience
with these devices that could shed some light on this?  Are they really
this
bad?


There is excessive buffering in all sorts of devices all over the Internet.
This causes high latency under load (along with higher packet losses, and
lots of other problems.

It's what I've been blogging about on http://gettys.wordpress.com. These
buffers fill; and they are so large they have defeated TCP congestion
avoidance to boot, with horrifying consequences.

So far, I've found this problem (almost) everywhere I've looked:
       o ICSI has good data that bufferbloat is endemic in DSL, Cable, and
FIOS.  Delays are often measured in seconds (rather than milliseconds).
       o some corporate and ISP networks run without AQM, in circumstances
that they should.
       o Windows, Mac OSX and Linux all have bufferbloat in their network
stacks, at a minimum on recent network device drivers, and often elsewhere.
       o Every home router I've tested is horrifyingly bad.
       o 3g networks & 802.11 have this in spades.

Why should AT&T's MPLS be any different?

My next topic will be "transient" bufferbloat, having to do with defeating
slowstart.

Come start helping fix this: please join us at bufferbloat.net, as we
try to get people to fix it.  Already there are some experimental patches
for the Linux Intel wireless driver.
                       Jim Gettys
                       Bell Labs




Current thread: