North American Network Operators Group

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Re: Customer AS

  • From: Justin W. Newton
  • Date: Wed Aug 21 21:03:31 1996

At 11:41 PM 8/19/96 -0400, Perry E. Metzger wrote:
>
>Sean Doran writes:
>> | We can't pretend to be able to replace the phone networks until we can
>> | achieve similar reliability. Phone networks typically are spec'ed to
>> | two minutes a year downtime. 
>> 
>> Uh huh, while I agree with you that the Internet is not
>> remotely as stable as voice networks are, I think that 
>> this has a great deal to do with the revenue difference.
>
>I strongly disagree. It has far more to do with the primitive
>engineering methods we are employing.
>
>The mere fact that I've actually seen networks built in the real world
>that simply never go down and that don't cost an order of magnitude
>more leads me to believe that it can be done. I must admit that these
>networks are much smaller than the national networks a large provider
>tends to build -- on the order of twelve cities, fifteen or sixteen
>sites, and a hundred or two hundred ethernets. On the other hand, such
>a network is more than large enough that a "normal" network of this
>sort will experience substantial downtime in some of its links. The
>networks I've been involved with, though, go down orders of magnitude
>less frequently than you normally expect. Why is that?
>
>1) redundancy in all components and links.
>2) No "cowboy"ism.

3) These sites aren't turning up /hundreds/ of T-1's and other links on a
given week.  

4) Points of entry into these networks are very limited, and therefore the
network manager has much more control over what comes into and out of his
network as far as both data and routing advertisements.

5) These networks are not nearly large enough at this point in time to
seriously push hardware to/beyond its design specifications.

6) Traffic patterns are relativelty predictable, you don't suddenly have
triple the traffic over one link that you didn't have yesterday.


Anyone care to add to the list?

Justin Newton
Internet Architect
Erol's Internet Services

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