Hi William, Ha ha! Thanks for pointing that out. I’m not related to any ISP at all, so this is something new. I understand, PeeringDB is just a basic guideline and ISPs put their own information about their traffic ratios. I’m interested to know whether ISPs check their own accumulated traffic and then set their own outbound:inbound traffic ratios threshold to declare themselves as Heavy Outbound/ Inbound or Balanced. Or, is there some kind of rough understanding among networking community to treat certain ratios as Heavy/ Mostly Inbound/ Outbound. Thank you. - Prasun Regards, Prasun Kanti Dey Ph.D. Candidate, Dept of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Central Florida web: https://prasunkantidey.github.io/portfolio/
On Jun 19, 2019, at 2:14 PM, William Herrin <bill@herrin.us> wrote:
On Wed, Jun 19, 2019 at 9:50 AM Prasun Dey <prasun@nevada.unr.edu <mailto:prasun@nevada.unr.edu>> wrote:
I’m a Ph.D. candidate from University of Central Florida. I have a query, I hope you can help me with it or at least point me to the right direction. I’ve seen from PeeringDB that every ISP reveals its traffic ratio as Heavy/ Mostly Inbound or Balanced or Heavy/ Mostly Outbound. I’m wondering if there is any specific ratio numbers for them. In Norton’s Internet Peering Playbook or some other literary work, they mention the outbound:inbound traffic ratio as 1:1.2 to up to 1:3 for Balanced. But, I couldn’t find the other values.
Hi Prasun,
Ratio only masquerades as a technical term. It's whatever it takes to convince the other guy to set up settlement-free peering and you'll tweak your routing adjusting reality to match. The information in peeringdb is just a rough guide to help you figure out who to talk to as you try to adjust your traffic profile so that you can go after the big fish as "balanced."
Regards, Bill Herrin
-- William Herrin bill@herrin.us <mailto:bill@herrin.us> https://bill.herrin.us/ <https://bill.herrin.us/>