Well.. it seems that from orange, I am not able to get to datanet through
the IXP, though I can get to all other peers.
traceroute to another client on datanet
traceroute to 41.220.14.14 (41.220.14.14), 64 hops max, 72 byte packets
1 172.19.21.3 (172.19.21.3) 0.364 ms 0.288 ms 0.297 ms
2 41.202.229.5 (41.202.229.5) 0.952 ms 0.765 ms 0.748 ms
3 41.202.226.81 (41.202.226.81) 0.383 ms 0.350 ms 0.222 ms
4 41.202.226.57 (41.202.226.57) 1.038 ms 0.506 ms 0.485 ms
5 81.52.186.249 (81.52.186.249) 176.929 ms 177.445 ms 184.593 ms
6 tengige0-5-0-11.auvtr1.Aubervilliers.opentransit.net (193.251.129.205)
179.023 ms 178.196 ms 179.484 ms
7 te8-8.ccr01.par05.atlas.cogentco.com (130.117.15.233) 199.028 ms
184.846 ms 184.752 ms
8 te0-7-0-2.ccr22.par01.atlas.cogentco.com (154.54.58.121) 185.092 ms
185.298 ms 187.461 ms
9 154.54.75.225 (154.54.75.225) 192.779 ms
te0-4-0-0.ccr22.fra03.atlas.cogentco.com (154.54.63.189) 192.915 ms
te0-3-0-0.ccr22.fra03.atlas.cogentco.com (130.117.2.165) 192.913 ms
10 * * *
11 * * *
12 * * *
13 if-ctu-core-ei.data.co.ug (41.220.12.42) 208.411 ms 208.568 ms
213.154 ms
14 41.220.12.226 (41.220.12.226) 211.499 ms 211.785 ms 204.635 ms
15 one2net.co.ug (41.220.14.14) 221.942 ms 210.579 ms 205.350 ms
On 31 January 2013 16:55, Reinier Battenberg <
[email protected]> wrote:
> **
>
> Hi,
>
>
>
> Well, that is from your side, from my side, traffic *does* go to the UIXP.
> So, DN is peering with Orance, but no the other way around it seems. (just
> like i expected)
>
>
>
> Are there any other people on other networks?
>
>
>
> Mike, from me to you... :-)
>
>
>
> traceroute www.orange.ug
>
> traceroute to www.orange.ug (41.202.229.198), 30 hops max, 60 byte packets
>
> 1 ipcop.mountbatten.net (192.168.38.1) 0.157 ms 0.127 ms 0.127 ms
>
> 2 41.220.13.21 (41.220.13.21) 4.348 ms 4.363 ms 4.353 ms
>
> 3 41.220.12.129 (41.220.12.129) 19.145 ms 19.153 ms 19.142 ms
>
> 4 192.168.12.1 (192.168.12.1) 42.276 ms 42.304 ms 42.309 ms
>
> 5 192.168.198.1 (192.168.198.1) 42.279 ms 42.291 ms 44.790 ms
>
> 6 41.220.12.226 (41.220.12.226) 42.248 ms 41.205 ms 41.176 ms
>
> 7 192.168.83.2 (192.168.83.2) 43.682 ms 48.509 ms 48.491 ms
>
> 8 194.153.153.27 (194.153.153.27) 48.478 ms 72.075 ms 72.026 ms
>
> 9 41.202.226.26 (41.202.226.26) 71.942 ms 71.950 ms 71.928 ms
>
> 10 41.202.226.45 (41.202.226.45) 339.016 ms 338.998 ms *
>
> 11 orange.ug (41.202.229.198) 338.890 ms !X 338.876 ms !X 338.856 ms !X
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> On Thursday 31 January 2013 16:49:10 Mike Barnard wrote:
>
> All the mtr's to the list you gave go through the IXP for me (using an
> orange link). A trace to data.co.ug takes some very interesting path. It
> would appear that orange and datanet are peering in France and once I get
> into datanet's network, i bounce around some private range IP addresses
> before ending up with 100% packet loss.
>
> On 31 January 2013 16:05, Reinier Battenberg <
> [email protected]> wrote:
>
>
> As peering is mandatory for ISPs in Uganda, this would be a violation of
> this
> rule by either these ISPs or Datanet
>
>
> Peering is simply a connection between two service providers are provided
> for by UCC. What IP addresses the service provider advertises to the IXP is
> entirely their choice. Should UCC ask, they are peering. Traffic is being
> exchanged, but not for all prefixes they hold. Its really up to the ISP to
> choose which IP address prefix they will advertise depending on how they
> want to play with their traffic.
>
> That said, the purpose of the IXP is to keep Uganda destined traffic in
> Uganda. It is to the detriment (if at all these days of fibre) of the ISP
> that does not peer or exchange all its UG traffic locally.
>
>
> --
> Mike
>
> Of course, you might discount this possibility, but remember that one in a
> million chances happen 99% of the time.
> ------------------------------------------------------------
>
>
>
> --
>
> rgds,
>
>
>
> Reinier Battenberg
>
> Director
>
> Mountbatten Ltd.
>
> www.mountbatten.net
>
> tel: +256 758 801749
>
> twitter: @batje
>
> _______________________________________________
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--
Mike
Of course, you might discount this possibility, but remember that one in a
million chances happen 99% of the time.
------------------------------------------------------------
_______________________________________________
The Uganda Linux User Group: http://linux.or.ug
Send messages to this mailing list by addressing e-mails to: [email protected]
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