Bought and used ED at SV1 since mid-2004 I think. I was running a consumer website at the time. I'm no longer with the company but when I checked last year, they were still using it as a *backup* internet provider and it's worked out well for them. The biggest problem back then, and currently, is the lack of larger ISPs. At SV1 they had Global Crossing, but the rest were basically mid-sized regional or national network providers like Hurricane Electric. The process for using it: 1) Purchase the service 2) Get the connect to ED, hook up to your equipment 3) You will establish a BGP neighbor relationship with the ED route servers only, regardless of how many actual network providers you configure, 4) Use a web interface to pick the providers you want, - it'll be arranged as a matrix where you can choose commit rates (they start at "0" for a lot of providers) and the resulting price, as well as terms (which also start at "none"). - also depending on provider, some will do DIA (direct internet access) or just on-net (just their, and their direct customer's networks), or both. Make sure you know what service you're purchasing and that it matches your design. 5) Modify or apply any routing policies you want specific for the providers you've chosen, 6) Start pushing packets. Though you peer with Equinix Direct and not the provider's router, of course ED strips their ASN and you don't see it in the path attribute. You may or may not be able to set attributes like community or MED with the providers; I don't know because we never used them in that capacity. It was strictly a backup circuit for us and so we set local-pref and path prepending and left it at that. We occasionally had problems with our primary service providers and the ED service would work great. External monitoring (a la Gomez or Keynote) wouldn't catch a thing and no customer (internal or external) complaints ever bubbled up to me. During contract negotiations with our primary provider, we ran on Global Crossing through ED for 1-2 months with no problems. For on-demand bandwidth with no commit and no contracts required, and if you're already in an Equinix data center, I think it's a very nice service. bt On Thu, May 24, 2012 at 1:01 PM, Tim Durack <tdurack@gmail.com> wrote:
Anyone got experience with "Equinix Direct"?
Looks like an interesting product from the glossy, but rather light on details. I'm interested in the technical specs and real-life experience.
(Not looking for sales. I've got a purchasing d00d for that.)
Thanks,
-- Tim:>