Is this a declaration of principles? There is no reason why 'Tier 1' means that 
the carrier will not have an incentive to shape or even block traffic. 
Particularly, if they have a lot of eyeballs. 

Roderick S. Beck
Director of EMEA Sales
Hibernia Atlantic
1, Passage du Chantier, 75012 Paris
http://www.hiberniaatlantic.com
Wireless: 1-212-444-8829. 
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[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
``Unthinking respect for authority is the greatest enemy of truth.'' Albert 
Einstein. 



-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] on behalf of ChiloƩ Temuco
Sent: Wed 8/15/2007 6:06 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Extreme congestion (was Re: inter-domain link recovery)
 
Congestion and applications... 

My opinion:
 
A tier 1 provider does not care what traffic it carries.  That is all a 
function of the application not the network.
 
A tier 2 provider may do traffic shaping, etc.
 
A tier 3 provider may decide to block traffic paterns.
 
________________________________

 
More or less...  The network was intended to move data from one machine to 
another...  The less manipulation in the middle the better...  No manipulation 
of the payload is the name of the game.
 
That being said.  It's entirely a function of the application to timeout and 
drop out of order packets, etc.
 
ONS is designed around this principle.
 
In streaming data... often it is better to get bad or missing data than to try 
and put out of order or bad data in the buffer... 
 
A good example is digital over-the-air tv...  If you didn't build in enough 
error correction... then you'll have digital breakup, etc.   It is impossible 
to recover any of that data.
 
If reliable transport of data is required... That is a function of the 
application.

ONS is an Optical Networking Standard in the development stage.

-Chiloe Temuco

On 8/15/07, Stephen Wilcox <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: 


        Hey Sean,
        
        On Wed, Aug 15, 2007 at 11:35:43AM -0400, Sean Donelan wrote:
        > On Wed, 15 Aug 2007, Stephen Wilcox wrote: 
        > >(Check slide 4) - the simple fact was that with something like 7 of 9
        > >cables down the redundancy is useless .. even if operators maintained
        > >N+1 redundancy which is unlikely for many operators that would imply 
        > >50% of capacity was actually used with 50% spare.. however we see
        > >around 78% of capacity is lost. There was simply to much traffic and
        > >not enough capacity.. IP backbones fail pretty badly when faced with 
        > >extreme congestion.
        >
        > Remember the end-to-end principle.  IP backbones don't fail with 
extreme
        > congestion, IP applications fail with extreme congestion.
        
        Hmm I'm not sure about that... a 100% full link dropping packets causes 
many problems: 
        L7: Applications stop working, humans get angry
        L4: TCP/UDP drops cause retransmits, connection drops, retries etc
        L3: BGP sessions drop, OSPF hellos are lost.. routing fails
        L2: STP packets dropped.. switching fails 
        
        I believe any or all of the above could occur on a backbone which has 
just failed massively and now has 20% capacity available such as occurred in SE 
Asia
        
        > Should IP applications respond to extreme congestion conditions 
better? 
        alert('Connection dropped')
        "Ping timed out"
        
        kinda icky but its not the applications job to manage the network
        
        > Or should IP backbones have methods to predictably control which IP 
        > applications receive the remaining IP bandwidth?  Similar to the 
telephone
        > network special information tone -- All Circuits are Busy.  Maybe 
we've
        > found a new use for ICMP Source Quench.
        
        yes and no.. for a private network perhaps, but for the Internet 
backbone where all traffic is important (right?), differentiation is difficult 
unless applied at the edge and you have major failure and congestion i dont see 
what you can do that will have any reasonable effect. perhaps you are a 
government contractor and you reserve some capacity for them and drop 
everything else but what is really out there as a solution? 
        
        FYI I have seen telephone networks fail badly under extreme congestion. 
CO's have small CPUs that dont do a whole lot - setup calls, send busy signals 
.. once a call is in place it doesnt occupy CPU time as the path is locked in 
place elsewhere. however, if something occurs to cause a serious amount of busy 
ccts then CPU usage goes thro the roof and you can cause cascade failures of 
whole COs 
        
        telcos look to solutions such as call gapping to intervene when they 
anticipate major congestion, and not rely on the network to handle it
        
        > Even if the IP protocols recover "as designed," does human impatience 
mean 
        > there is a maximum recovery timeout period before humans start making 
the
        > problem worse?
        
        i'm not sure they were designed to do this.. the arpanet wasnt intended 
to be massively congested.. the redundant links were in place to cope with loss 
of a node and usage was manageable. 
        
        Steve
        




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