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Spring 2002 U.C. Berkeley -- EECS

Internet POPs, Telecom Hotels, and Internet Data

CentersCS 294-3 – The Converged

Network

Spring 2002George Porter

Spring 2002 U.C. Berkeley -- EECS

Internet: collection of networks

• This talk is about connectivity and computation– How do the networks in the Internet

communicate with each other?– What do transit providers do with

their traffic?– Motivation for computation in the

network (Internet Data Centers)

Spring 2002 U.C. Berkeley -- EECS

Computers increasingly connected

Spring 2002 U.C. Berkeley -- EECS

Spring 2002 U.C. Berkeley -- EECS

Spring 2002 U.C. Berkeley -- EECS

NSFnet

• 1987-1995• Managed by Merit

– ANS, IBM, MCI, State of Michigan

• Consisted of T-1 connections• In 1992, moved to T-3 links run by

Advanced Network & Services (ANSnet)

Spring 2002 U.C. Berkeley -- EECS

Post NFSnet

• vBNS (very high-speed backbone network services) run by MCI

• Additional NAPs (Network Access Points)– MAE-East, D.C. – MFS Datanet (now MCI Worldcom)– Ameritech, Chicago – Ameritech– PacBell, San Jose – PacBell– Sprint, Pennsauken, NJ - Sprint

Spring 2002 U.C. Berkeley -- EECS

Many new Commercial NAPs

• ATLnap (Atlanta)• Bellcore

Multimedia exchange

• NY6iX – New York IPv6

• MAE-LA• Seattle IX• MAE-Houston

• PAIX• Equinix• eXchange• Linx (London)• FreeIX (France)• AMS-IX

(Amsterdam)• etc

Spring 2002 U.C. Berkeley -- EECS

Internet POPs: Two Examples

• NeoSoft Inc., Houston Texas

• AMS-IX (Amsterdam)

Spring 2002 U.C. Berkeley -- EECS

Internet POPs: Two Examples

• NeoSoft Inc., Houston Texas

• AMS-IX (Amsterdam)

Spring 2002 U.C. Berkeley -- EECS

• BBS in 1989, became an ISP in 1992

• Founder Karl Lehenbauer (Left)

• I worked there from 1994-1999

Spring 2002 U.C. Berkeley -- EECS

Initial Connectivity

• Originally, NeoSoft connected to NSFnet via Sesquinet @ Rice

• T1 cost $14k up front, $2k/month• Cisco router IGS $10k• 198.??.xx.yy from Sesquinet’s

address space

Spring 2002 U.C. Berkeley -- EECS

New Connectivity

• Eventually bought fractional DS3 from MCI (Sprint wouldn’t route less than /20 due to problems)

• On own CIDR block (128 class C’s: 206.109)

• BGP-4 running on Cisco 7513 Router

• $15k/month

Spring 2002 U.C. Berkeley -- EECS

Peering

• Peered with UUnet for 2 months– NeoSoft had a large webserver, and

served out much more traffic than inbound

• Became member of MAE/Houston• MAGE (Metro Area Gigabit

Ethernet) via Phonoscope ($4k/month!)

Spring 2002 U.C. Berkeley -- EECS

Experiences in Peering

• Many other local providers didn’t have a clue!– INSYNC misconfigured their routes, and

traffic would be outbound through MAGE, inbound through random other routes

– Often advertised incorrect BGP updates

• PSInet: Advertised Dial-up ISDN

Spring 2002 U.C. Berkeley -- EECS

Hops, Multihoming

• In 1994, the Sprint and MCI handoff was in Chicago– 20 hops to next door neighbor– Eventually exchanged in Dallas

• Experimented with Multihoming (DS3 and T1 to Cable & wireless)– Not too good, BGP administration– Plan was for recovery

Spring 2002 U.C. Berkeley -- EECS

NeoSoft Internet America

• In 1999, Internet America buys NeoSoft for $8M

• Houston office closes

• I get laid off

Spring 2002 U.C. Berkeley -- EECS

Internet POPs: Two Examples

• NeoSoft Inc., Houston Texas

• AMS-IX (Amsterdam)

Spring 2002 U.C. Berkeley -- EECS

AMS-IX

• Carrier-neutral peering point• Founded in 1994• 100+ members• 565 Tbytes/month• AT&T, Akamai, Dynegy, Digital

Island, Deutsche Telecom, France Telecom, Global Crossing, UUnet NL, etc

Spring 2002 U.C. Berkeley -- EECS

Organization

Spring 2002 U.C. Berkeley -- EECS

Spring 2002 U.C. Berkeley -- EECS

Spring 2002 U.C. Berkeley -- EECS

How to Join

• Companies apply for membership after agreeing to numerous policies (sometimes voting is involved)

• Cost– 10baseT = 500,00 euro/month– 100baseT = 850,00 euro/month– 1000base T = 1200,00 euro/month

• 1 euro = 0.87 USD (12/26/2002)

Spring 2002 U.C. Berkeley -- EECS

Computation in the network

• It makes sense to move servers and content to places of high connectivity

• By the economics of scale it is cheaper to provide connectivity, power, management, etc to many customers at a central site

Spring 2002 U.C. Berkeley -- EECS

Example: eXchange

• Paul Ave location in SF: 350K sq. ft

• People can rent cabinets, racks, cages

• In addition to being a data center, also a huge connectivity point

Spring 2002 U.C. Berkeley -- EECS

Services

• UPS + generator• Office space• Climate Control• “Meet me” room with carriers and other

service providers• Professional monitoring• Security (hand scanners, guards)• Fire control

Spring 2002 U.C. Berkeley -- EECS

waveExchange

• Unique facility located across the street from eXchange

• 20+ carriers• Near fiber routes/loops• Carriers can meet in “meet me

rooms”• Service between ASPs, ISPs, CDNs…• Opened Nov 2, 2001

Spring 2002 U.C. Berkeley -- EECS

Tenants of waveExchange

• AT&T, Cogent, Enron, Level3, PacBell, Qwest, Sigma, Worldcom, Williams Communications, Xo, PAIX, others

• Network effect• Huge connectivity + Highly

available services

Spring 2002 U.C. Berkeley -- EECS

Summary

• Progression from leased lines to NAPs to peering points gives ISPs options

• I haven’t even mentioned private peering arrangements

• Putting computation in the network at the points of connectivity enables new services that can meet demand

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