In case folks are interested.... Craig and I did some work in this area some years ago... Our findings appeared in FTCS 99 and are available at http://www.computer.org/proceedings/ftcs/0213/02130278abs.htm (this requires digital library access). I also have a pointer to the U-M techreport version at http://www.merit.edu/~ahuja/CSE-TR-382-98.pdf. We have continued to collect more data on this and are in the process of putting together our follow-up. It should be out soon. We'd love to get more community input and more sources of data if folks are willing to participate in our further studies... Thanks! -abha ;) On Fri, 6 Jul 2001, Avi Freedman wrote:
In article <10162.15117.22199@avi.netaxs.com> Sean wrote:
: In roughly the order
: 1. Network Engineers (What's this command do?) : 2. Power failures (What's this switch do?) : 3. Cable cuts (Backhoes, enough said) : 4. Hardware failures (What's that smell?) : 5. Congestion (More Bandwidth! Captain, I'm giving you all she's got!) : 6. Attacks (malicious, you know who you are) : 7. Software bugs (Your call is very important to us....)
Very much disagree. Or at least, separate performance and outages.
Outage/Instability:
(Tie for 1st):
1) Shitty software from Major Router Vendors (and everyone else) 1) Misconfiguration a) Often caused by shitty/easy to fumble CLIs from Major Router Vendors 2) Attacks 3) Power failures 4) Cable cuts 5) (distant)Hardware failure
Performance has been covered; the only real broadband is Universities, and relatively few transit networks can get to network large and small well.
Avi