On Fri, Feb 15, 2002 at 12:33:39PM -0500, Guy.Ram@usa.telekom.de wrote:
Is the above statement OK, and what about egress analysis, would that not also provide useful as that information is more reliable?
Josh Wepman and I talked about this in our tutorial on Sunday and BOF on Monday, slides from which can be found here: http://www.automagic.org/IDTE1.ppt http://www.automagic.org/IDTE1bof.ppt (Sorry for the "ppt" part). We realised after we had finished that we forgot to put those URLs on the screen. Our examples were based on measuring outbound traffic, bascially counting packets and bytes per AS_PATH, as Bill mentioned. Some analysis of inbound traffic seems like it should be possible, but it is difficult to know how your model based on your particular view of the BGP table will correspond with real life: for example, you might be able to see a bunch of traffic sources that seem to get at least some transit through a small set of ASes, which might make those ASes good candidates for peering. However, just because they get some transit that way doesn't mean they don't have other transit too. Predicting traffic flow due to the policy of remote networks you have no control over is a somewhat inexact science. Questions of who to peer with are much easier to answer if your traffic profile is weighted outbound away from your AS. joe