On Thu, 1 Jul 2004 19:09:52 -0500 "Erik Amundson" <erik@myevilempire.net> wrote:
I have a question regarding information on my ISP's peering relationships. Are the speeds of some or all peering relationships public knowledge, and if so, where can I find this? By speed, I mean bandwidth (DS3, OC3, 100Mbps,
In addition to some of the other answers, you can sometimes discover peering relationships and even infer some routing policing at public exchanges if you 1) have access to a host on each of the provider's networks (near the exchange preferably) and 2) you can rely on the public address scheme provided by the exchange operator to be used for peering. So for example, if you have a host on provider X's network, run a series of traceroutes to each of the exchange IP space. If the traceroute reaches the far side, you can infer that peering is established. If not traceroute results in a TTL failure or unreachable message, you can infer that peering is not established. Finding hosts behind each network is often as easy as finding publicly accessible traceroute pages such as those found on traceroute.org. Note, this is far from full proof. For a number of reasons there will be false positives and false negatives if you try to rely on this as the only source of info for peering discovery. John