On Wed, Nov 02, 2005 at 08:22:20AM -0600, Pete Templin wrote:
Time out here. John set the stage: cold potato addressed the long haul (or at least that's the assumption in place when I hopped on board). If NetA and NetB are honoring MED (or other appropriate knob), NetA->NetB traffic has already arrived at the closest mutual peering point in the A->B direction. The rest of the infrastructure would be the responsibility of NetB to get the traffic to CustomerPortXYZ, no? How could CustomerXY get any closer to NetA without cutting NetB out of the middle, and if NetB is out of the middle, why should CustomerXY pay NetB anything?
You're forgetting that MEDs suck. When used on real complex production networks, they almost always degrade the quality of the routing. Yes with enough time and energy (or a small enough network) you *can* beat perfect MEDs out of the system (and your customers). You can selectively deaggregate the hell out of your network, then you can zero out all the known aggregate blocks and regions that are in the middle of two MED-speaking interconnection points, and get your customers to tag aggregate blocks announced in multiple locations so that you can zero out those MEDs. With enough time and energy anything is possible, the point is that most folks don't consider it to be worth the time, let alone the customer anger when it degrades your traffic. -- Richard A Steenbergen <ras@e-gerbil.net> http://www.e-gerbil.net/ras GPG Key ID: 0xF8B12CBC (7535 7F59 8204 ED1F CC1C 53AF 4C41 5ECA F8B1 2CBC)