One thing to keep in mind that the number of routes that disappeared from the routing table, while a start, is in no way the final arbiter of how a particular incident affected the internet's performance. While the direct effect is obvious, other, less easily measurable consequences can result from the loss of capacity producing congestion on the remaining network infrastructure, as well as increased latency resulting from longer backhauls. If there's plenty of available backup bandwidth, this effect wil be minimal, but if not, let the pain begin. As an example, a certain DSL provider has had to reroute their Covad PVCs from 25 Broadway to their Boston and Washington, DC installations, resulting in their capacity to Covad in those locations being almost completely pegged 24/7. Not fun to be their customer in any of these areas right about now. -Chris On Mon, Sep 24, 2001 at 12:22:08PM -0700, Grant A. Kirkwood wrote:
Sean Donelan wrote:
On Mon, 24 Sep 2001, Bob Bownes wrote:
But there was a point in time when taking out a certain parking garage in Va could have caused us a very great deal of difficulty. But I'd say we are past that, for the most part.
Are we?
When 25 Broadway failed, approximately 1% of the global Internet routing table also disappeared. Which I would guess qualifies it as a "major" hub.
But does that mean that X number of sites were unreachable, or that there were simply Y number fewer routes to X sites? (Excluding those *directly* affected, ie; those *in* 25 Broadway)
Verizon still has 100,000 lines out of service, and only now begun to restore service to "small" businesses.
Yes, but my understanding was that we were referring to IP traffic. POTS doesn't exactly have a built-in routing protocol.
A couple of years ago a fiber cut in Ohio disrupted about 20% of the Internet routing table.
But again, does this mean that 20% of the Internet was unreachable, or that there were 20% fewer routes to a given number of (hopefully multihomed) sites?
No, this question is not rhetorical... I simply don't have any imperical evidence to look at that could adequately answer this question.
Grant
-- Grant A. Kirkwood - grant@virtical.net Chief Technology Officer - Virtical Solutions, Inc. http://www.virtical.net/