When you purchase a DS1, you're purchasing 1.5Mb/s. That means, 1.5Mb/s in BOTH directions. If the circuit was supposed to be billed as 3Mb/s, they would claim 3Mb/s linerate. Ethernet, ATM, blah blah blah works the same way. ADSL and cable modems are the strange mediums that are not SYMETRIC. IMHO, 1Mb/s means 1Mb/s IN, OUT or BOTH. --- John Fraizer EnterZone, Inc On Thu, 19 Apr 2001, Martin Hannigan wrote:
Isn't in+out a more fair representation of usage? I've always assumed that this was the standard to be honest. Thank god I'm not the billing person. I think Exodus does in+out.
-M
At 03:06 PM 4/19/2001 -0400, Thomas Kernen wrote:
I know one company in Europe that uses the in + out model.
Thomas
----- Original Message ----- From: "Alex Rubenstein" <alex@corp.nac.net> To: <nanog@merit.edu> Sent: Thursday, April 19, 2001 10:09 AM Subject: What does 95th %tile mean?
I've gotten myself into an argument with a provider about the definition of 'industry-standard 95th percentile method.'
To me, this means the following:
a) take the number of bytes xfered over a 5 minute period, and determine rate for both the inbound and outbound. Store this in your favorite data-store.
b) at billing time, presumably on the first of the month or some other monthly increment, take all the samples, sort them from greatest to least, hacking off the top 5% of samples. Actually, this is done twice, once for inbound, once for outbound. Then, take the higher of those two, and
multiply
it by your favorite $ multiple (ie, $500 per megabit per second, or $1 per kilobit per second, etc).
I think that most people agree with the above; the issue we are running into is one rogue provider who is billing this at in + out, not the greater of in or out.
How is everyone else doing it? Specifically, larger folks (UU, Sprint, CW, Exodus/FGC, GX, Qwest, L3)
Thanks!
Regards,
-- Martin Hannigan hannigan@fugawi.net Fugawi Networks Founder/Director of Implementation Boston, MA http://www.fugawi.net Ph: 617.742.2693 Fax: 617.742.2300