This assumes that there are no cooperatives providing settlement free peering which includes both peer and transit routes. Owen
On Feb 17, 2016, at 14:09 , Bill Woodcock <woody@pch.net> wrote:
Each bit traverses only one peering session, however, at the "top of its trajectory" to use a physical metaphor. The uphill and downhill sides are all transit.
-Bill
On Feb 17, 2016, at 14:06, Owen DeLong <owen@delong.com> wrote:
The premise above therefore devolves to: Since most of the traffic is to those networks, then most of the bits flow over contracted peerings.
Perhaps “most” can be argued, but obviously a significant portion of all peering bits flow over contracted sessions. Hopefully we can all agree on that.
There’s greater complexity here, however…
Many of the bits that flow flow over several networks between their source and destination. Likely the vast majority of bits traverse at least 3 autonomous systems in the process.
So when you want to count traffic that went over a non-contract peering session vs. traffic that went over a contract peering session, how do you count traffic that traverses some of each?
Owen