436109a9f36ceb9878c6343c8b7d966e.ppt
- Количество слайдов: 27
TIX – Telehouse Zurich Internet Exchange By Andre Oppermann TIX founder and project manager SWINOG Meeting, Berne, 18. October 2000
Contents • TIX today what it is today and where it stands -- boring stuff -- • Future developments planned enhancements and services -- interesting stuff – ; -)
TIX today • What it is: - ISP and Carrier neutral Internet Exchange • Where it is: - Located in Telehouse Facilities AG (now IXEurope Zurich) Zurich Datacentre in Hardstrasse 235, 8005 Zurich - http: //www. telehouse. ch
TIX today • Connected parties - 42 connected ISPs - 1 connected Enterprise
TIX today • History - announced in October 1999 - operations started in December 1999 - Foundry Big. Iron 8000 in May 2000 - 40 th ISP in September 2000
TIX today • Switched traffic - average on a working day is 140 Mbit/s and 25 kpps - peak traffic was 435 Mbit/s and 165 kpps (beginning of October 2000) - estimated average 500 MBit/s and 200 kpps in Q 1/2001
TIX today • Route Server in Test-Operations - 17 ISPs actively participating - 8200 prefixes seen on route server - Transparent AS and transparent Nexthop processing - Extensive communities support (see AS 8235 RIPE object) • Shall I spend a minute on further explaining the Route Server as of today?
Future Developments (1/4) • SLAs - zero packet loss on the switch - participants are not allowed to overload their connections - guaranteed support response times
Future Developments (2/4) • Support for Multicast - starting from Q 2/2000 - do you need/want it earlier? • Support for IPv 6 - starting from Q 2/2000 - do you need/want it earlier? • Expansions sites - in other carrier neutral telehousing facilities in Zurich, starting from Q 2/2001
Future Developments (3/4) • Managed Peering!
Managed Peering • The traditional Internet Exchange model where every ISP negotiates peerings with each other has reached it‘s limitations • Lots of small and medium ISPs don‘t have the resources to follow up with all newly connected peers • Lots of large ISPs don‘t want to spend the time and effort to deal with all the small ISPs
Managed Peering • The Route Server makes life easier but has also it‘s shortcomings: - some large ISP‘s don‘t want to peer with it - sometimes peering is not free - it‘s a „best-effort“ service
Managed Peering • Managed Peering extends the Route Server so that it provides: - guaranteed service and support with SLA‘s - manpower to assist and trace down problems - provide outsourcing for handling of peerings - central point of responsibility
Managed Peering • Managed Peering also wants to: - creating „pre-packaged“ peering with large ISP‘s for small ISP‘s - creating „pre-packaged“ peering with small ISP‘s for large ISP‘s - depending on the peering policy of the offering ISP the package will be free or will have a certain monthly fee - the monthly fee for the package is defined by the ISP but the money is collected by Telehouse Zurich and passed on to the ISP minus a handling deduction Example: SWITCH would say peering up to 2 Mbit/s costs 500. - a month, Telehouse Zurich will offer this to the ISP‘s and enable the ones that have choosen the package. Telehouse Zurich will collect the fee and credit it to SWITCH.
Managed Peering • Further services of Managed Peering: - monitor parts of the SLA‘s of the ISP‘s and escalate them if necessary - provide traffic statistics and also Netflow analysis to the ISP‘s
Managed Peering • Managed Peering will be available in Q 1/2001 • What do YOU think? • Comments and suggestions?
Future Developments (4/4) • Give non-ISP‘s access to the Internet Exchange!
Service provider connect • Create a win-win situation for bandwidth users and ISP‘s
Service provider connect • Only target a very specific set of bandwidth customers with/which: - have high bandwidth requirements - manage and operate their own servers! - need multiple upstreams - want to be independent - high connectivity requirements - have the choice of ISP‘s - connect to multiple ISP‘s • Don‘t compete with housing offers from ISP‘s
Service provider connect • Great benefits for ISP‘s and customers: - ISP‘s gain better access to high traffic customers - Customers gain better access to ISP‘s - Customers BUY IP feeds from several ISP‘s - ISP‘s can offer instant service to connected customers, no provisioning times and no local loops required
Service provider connect • Targeted customers: - Video & Audio Streamers - High traffic server operators - Independent Content providers - Application service providers
Service provider connect • How it works: - The SP is gets a 100 M or a Gig. E port on the TIX and pays a monthly port fee - The SP does not get a IP from and has no access to the public Internet Exchange - The SP has to connect a router - There is a dedicated VLAN between the customer and every ISP the SP is buying a IP feed from
Service provider connect • There will be different classes of connections to the Internet Exchange: - ISP, member of RIPE/ARIN/APNIC, own AS, own PA IPs - Enterprise, member of RIPE/ARIN/APNIC, own AS, own PI IPs - „Corporate“, all others, no own IPs, no own AS, will get IPs from ISP
Service provider connect • Available ports and port fees: - ISPs 2 x 100 Base. T 2 x 1000 Base. SX CHF 250. CHF 1500. - - Other 1 x 100 Base. T 1 x 1000 Base. SX CHF 1500. CHF 5500. - per month
Service provider connect • Service Provider connect will be available in Q 1/2001, but first movers will be allowed already (see Aargauer Zeitung) • What do YOU think? • Comments and suggestions?
That was it! • You have survived! • Thank you for your attention! • I‘m available for further questions and discussions at and after the panel discussion
TIX – Telehouse Zurich Internet Exchange SWINOG Meeting, Berne, 18. October 2000 Andre Oppermann oppermann@telehouse. ch
436109a9f36ceb9878c6343c8b7d966e.ppt