You have a couple of things to consider. Most exchanges have route servers. Some folks peer with those and pretty much anyone can gain access to these route servers. Not everyone peers with these however. In the large IXes it’s typically the small to medium folks who are on the route servers. The “big folks” typically want you to peer with them directly. In the case of Equinix you will probably get some requests sent to you as soon you are in the database for that location. We typically see he.net one of the fastest folks. Sometimes within an hour. Many folks can lookup and see how much traffic would be exchanged with your ASN and decide if it’s worth it. Also, the Content folks are more likely to peer with you on a public exchange instead of directly. Not everyone is listed on peeringdb. It would be great if they were. Equinix has a list of who is on their exchanges. This is typically where information is scraped from. Justin Wilson j2sw@mtin.net --- http://www.mtin.net Owner/CEO xISP Solutions- Consulting – Data Centers - Bandwidth http://www.midwest-ix.com COO/Chairman
On Jan 25, 2016, at 10:21 PM, Colton Conor <colton.conor@gmail.com> wrote:
If a service provider or enterprise orders collocation at an Equinix Global Internet Exchange Point, and orders a port on the exchange from Equinix, then what happens? How does a provider actually peer with the peers on the exchange?
Lets assume the SP or enterprise already has an ANS, transit from multiple providers, and a BGP router that can accept and hold full routes.
You can see the members of the exchange on peeringdb.com. Many of the members say their policy is Open with little to no traffic requirements. So does just ordering a port to the exchange automatically connect you with all of these open providers, or do you have to contact each on individually?