North American Network Operators Group

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Re: UUNET peering policy

  • From: Sean Donelan
  • Date: Mon Jan 15 10:51:47 2001

In the past, some providers have specified peering requirements such
as "must use a Cisco 7000 with SSP".

If you are concerned about congestion, you should specify a performance
requirement covering congestion, not some internal architecture design
of the other network.  How the other network chooses to solve the congestion
problem should be up to them.

By saying you should treat the other provider as a black box I mean you
should be able to tell if the other provider is meeting or not meeting
their performance requirements with examination of how much they are
paying for their circuits, what type of routers they are using, or how
they design their internal network.

On Sun, 14 January 2001, Paul Vixie wrote:
> > ...  I think interconnection agreements should be based on the point of
> > interconnection.  When you delve too much in how the internals of other
> > providers' networks work, I think you are always going to run into
> > problems.  I think it is best to view other provider's networks as a
> > black box.
> 
> I don't agree.  Peering is a business relationship transcending locations.
> The best peering agreements I know of (e.g., mine) specify growth terms so
> that traffic won't eventually encounter congestion while trying to get from
> one to the other or back again.  Some forms of growth involve additional
> peering locations, and some do not.  A peering agreement which was based on
> the point of interconnection would be far less useful in avoiding congestion.