Re: Overall Netflix bandwidth usage numbers on a network?

2011-12-20 Thread David Temkin
Yes, sorry.  We will respond to all takers shortly; there was a flaw in 
our logic used to generate these numbers and wanted to ensure that we 
were painting an accurate picture.  We will have statistics out within a 
week, hopefully.


Thanks,
-Dave

On 12/16/11 9:55 AM, Paul Stewart wrote:

I'll take a guess they are back logged - they have been working on our traffic 
stats since a week before that posting made it to nanog list

--- Sent via IPhone

On 2011-12-16, at 9:16 AM, Dennis Burgessdmburg...@linktechs.net  wrote:


Same here.

---
Dennis Burgess, Mikrotik Certified Trainer
Link Technologies, Inc -- Mikrotik  WISP Support Services
Office: 314-735-0270 Website: http://www.linktechs.net
LIVE On-Line Mikrotik Training - Author of Learn RouterOS



-Original Message-
From: Blake Hudson [mailto:bl...@ispn.net]
Sent: Friday, December 16, 2011 8:11 AM
To: Dave Temkin
Cc: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: Overall Netflix bandwidth usage numbers on a network?

Requests to this address appear to go unanswered?

Dave Temkin wrote the following on 12/11/2011 6:29 PM:

Feel free to contact peering@netflixdotcom - we're happy to provide
you with delivery statistics for traffic terminating on your network.

Regards,
-Dave Temkin
Netflix

On 12/7/11 8:57 AM, Blake Hudson wrote:

Yeah, that's an interesting one. We currently utilize netflow for
this, but you also need to consider that netflix streaming is just
port 80 www traffic. Because netflix uses CDNs, its difficult to pin
down the traffic to specific hosts in the CDN and say that this
traffic was netflix, while this traffic was the latest windows update
(remember this is often a shared hosting platform). We've done our
own testing and have come to a good solution which uses a combination
of nbar, packet marking, and netflow to come to a conclusion. On a
~160Mbps link, netflix peaks out between 30-50Mbps around 8-10PM

each

evening. The rest of the traffic is predominantly other forms of HTTP
traffic (including other video streaming services).


Martin Hepworth wrote the following on 12/3/2011 2:36 AM:

Also checkout Adrian Cockcroft presentations on their architecture
which describes how they use aws and CDns etc

Martin







Re: Overall Netflix bandwidth usage numbers on a network?

2011-12-16 Thread Blake Hudson

Requests to this address appear to go unanswered?

Dave Temkin wrote the following on 12/11/2011 6:29 PM:
Feel free to contact peering@netflixdotcom - we're happy to provide 
you with delivery statistics for traffic terminating on your network.


Regards,
-Dave Temkin
Netflix

On 12/7/11 8:57 AM, Blake Hudson wrote:
Yeah, that's an interesting one. We currently utilize netflow for 
this, but you also need to consider that netflix streaming is just 
port 80 www traffic. Because netflix uses CDNs, its difficult to pin 
down the traffic to specific hosts in the CDN and say that this 
traffic was netflix, while this traffic was the latest windows update 
(remember this is often a shared hosting platform). We've done our 
own testing and have come to a good solution which uses a combination 
of nbar, packet marking, and netflow to come to a conclusion. On a 
~160Mbps link, netflix peaks out between 30-50Mbps around 8-10PM each 
evening. The rest of the traffic is predominantly other forms of HTTP 
traffic (including other video streaming services).



Martin Hepworth wrote the following on 12/3/2011 2:36 AM:
Also checkout Adrian Cockcroft presentations on their architecture 
which

describes how they use aws and CDns etc

Martin










RE: Overall Netflix bandwidth usage numbers on a network?

2011-12-16 Thread Dennis Burgess
Same here.

---
Dennis Burgess, Mikrotik Certified Trainer 
Link Technologies, Inc -- Mikrotik  WISP Support Services
Office: 314-735-0270 Website: http://www.linktechs.net
LIVE On-Line Mikrotik Training - Author of Learn RouterOS


 -Original Message-
 From: Blake Hudson [mailto:bl...@ispn.net]
 Sent: Friday, December 16, 2011 8:11 AM
 To: Dave Temkin
 Cc: nanog@nanog.org
 Subject: Re: Overall Netflix bandwidth usage numbers on a network?
 
 Requests to this address appear to go unanswered?
 
 Dave Temkin wrote the following on 12/11/2011 6:29 PM:
  Feel free to contact peering@netflixdotcom - we're happy to provide
  you with delivery statistics for traffic terminating on your network.
 
  Regards,
  -Dave Temkin
  Netflix
 
  On 12/7/11 8:57 AM, Blake Hudson wrote:
  Yeah, that's an interesting one. We currently utilize netflow for
  this, but you also need to consider that netflix streaming is just
  port 80 www traffic. Because netflix uses CDNs, its difficult to pin
  down the traffic to specific hosts in the CDN and say that this
  traffic was netflix, while this traffic was the latest windows update
  (remember this is often a shared hosting platform). We've done our
  own testing and have come to a good solution which uses a combination
  of nbar, packet marking, and netflow to come to a conclusion. On a
  ~160Mbps link, netflix peaks out between 30-50Mbps around 8-10PM
 each
  evening. The rest of the traffic is predominantly other forms of HTTP
  traffic (including other video streaming services).
 
 
  Martin Hepworth wrote the following on 12/3/2011 2:36 AM:
  Also checkout Adrian Cockcroft presentations on their architecture
  which describes how they use aws and CDns etc
 
  Martin
 
 
 
 



Re: Overall Netflix bandwidth usage numbers on a network?

2011-12-16 Thread Paul Stewart
I'll take a guess they are back logged - they have been working on our traffic 
stats since a week before that posting made it to nanog list

--- Sent via IPhone

On 2011-12-16, at 9:16 AM, Dennis Burgess dmburg...@linktechs.net wrote:

 Same here.
 
 ---
 Dennis Burgess, Mikrotik Certified Trainer 
 Link Technologies, Inc -- Mikrotik  WISP Support Services
 Office: 314-735-0270 Website: http://www.linktechs.net
 LIVE On-Line Mikrotik Training - Author of Learn RouterOS
 
 
 -Original Message-
 From: Blake Hudson [mailto:bl...@ispn.net]
 Sent: Friday, December 16, 2011 8:11 AM
 To: Dave Temkin
 Cc: nanog@nanog.org
 Subject: Re: Overall Netflix bandwidth usage numbers on a network?
 
 Requests to this address appear to go unanswered?
 
 Dave Temkin wrote the following on 12/11/2011 6:29 PM:
 Feel free to contact peering@netflixdotcom - we're happy to provide
 you with delivery statistics for traffic terminating on your network.
 
 Regards,
 -Dave Temkin
 Netflix
 
 On 12/7/11 8:57 AM, Blake Hudson wrote:
 Yeah, that's an interesting one. We currently utilize netflow for
 this, but you also need to consider that netflix streaming is just
 port 80 www traffic. Because netflix uses CDNs, its difficult to pin
 down the traffic to specific hosts in the CDN and say that this
 traffic was netflix, while this traffic was the latest windows update
 (remember this is often a shared hosting platform). We've done our
 own testing and have come to a good solution which uses a combination
 of nbar, packet marking, and netflow to come to a conclusion. On a
 ~160Mbps link, netflix peaks out between 30-50Mbps around 8-10PM
 each
 evening. The rest of the traffic is predominantly other forms of HTTP
 traffic (including other video streaming services).
 
 
 Martin Hepworth wrote the following on 12/3/2011 2:36 AM:
 Also checkout Adrian Cockcroft presentations on their architecture
 which describes how they use aws and CDns etc
 
 Martin
 
 
 
 
 



RE: Overall Netflix bandwidth usage numbers on a network?

2011-12-16 Thread Don Bowman
From: Blake Hudson [mailto:bl...@ispn.net]



 Yeah, that's an interesting one. We currently utilize netflow for this,

 but you also need to consider that netflix streaming is just port 80

 www traffic. Because netflix uses CDNs, its difficult to pin down the

 traffic to specific hosts in the CDN and say that this traffic was

 netflix, while this traffic was the latest windows update (remember

 this is often a shared hosting platform). We've done our own testing

 and have come to a good solution which uses a combination of nbar,

 packet marking, and netflow to come to a conclusion. On a ~160Mbps

 link, netflix peaks out between 30-50Mbps around 8-10PM each evening.

 The rest of the traffic is predominantly other forms of HTTP traffic

 (including other video streaming services).



We (Sandvine) also have a product that does this measurement in the

IP network, per CDN, per device type (e.g. how much Netflix on xbox

is on Akamai vs Limelight). In addition it measures the delivered

quality per CDN.



Anyone can feel free to contact me off list for more information.



[cid:image001.jpg@01CCBBE1.BCF573A0]
inline: image001.jpg

Re: Overall Netflix bandwidth usage numbers on a network?

2011-12-12 Thread Patrick W. Gilmore
On Dec 12, 2011, at 12:18 AM, Joel jaeggli wrote:
 On 12/11/11 19:49 , Christopher Morrow wrote:
 On Sun, Dec 11, 2011 at 10:46 PM, Faisal Imtiaz fai...@snappydsl.net wrote:
 Simple, keep traffic off paid ip transit circuits
 
 (I think joel's point was: peer with amazon, done-and-done)
 
 also probably your relationships to akamai and level3

Netflix's EC2 instances do not speak to end users AFAIK.  I believe Akamai, 
LLNW,  L3 are the only companies that stream movies for Netflix.  Peer with 
the CDNs to save your transit.

Happy to be educated otherwise if someone knows more than I do.

Netflix's client is also _very_ intelligent.  If a user cannot get high enough 
quality from CDN_1, it will switch to CDN_2 without interrupting the stream.  
Which is nice if you have good connectivity to one but not the other CDN.  
(Note I spoke of good, not inexpensive connectivity.  The NF client doesn't 
know how much it costs you to show a video, only whether there is packet loss.)

-- 
TTFN,
patrick


 Faisal
 
 On Dec 11, 2011, at 10:21 PM, Joel Jaeggli joe...@bogus.com wrote:
 
 Netflix uses CDNs for content delivery and the platform runs in EC2. What 
 would peering with them achieve?
 
 Sent from my iPhone
 
 On Dec 11, 2011, at 18:06, Faisal Imtiaz fai...@snappydsl.net wrote:
 
 Which leads to a question to be asked...
 
 Is netflix willing to peer directly with ISP / NSP's ?
 
 Regards.
 
 Faisal Imtiaz
 Snappy Internet  Telecom
 
 
 On 12/11/2011 7:29 PM, Dave Temkin wrote:
 Feel free to contact peering@netflixdotcom - we're happy to provide 
 you with delivery statistics for traffic terminating on your network.
 
 Regards,
 -Dave Temkin
 Netflix
 
 On 12/7/11 8:57 AM, Blake Hudson wrote:
 Yeah, that's an interesting one. We currently utilize netflow for this, 
 but you also need to consider that netflix streaming is just port 80 
 www traffic. Because netflix uses CDNs, its difficult to pin down the 
 traffic to specific hosts in the CDN and say that this traffic was 
 netflix, while this traffic was the latest windows update (remember 
 this is often a shared hosting platform). We've done our own testing 
 and have come to a good solution which uses a combination of nbar, 
 packet marking, and netflow to come to a conclusion. On a ~160Mbps 
 link, netflix peaks out between 30-50Mbps around 8-10PM each evening. 
 The rest of the traffic is predominantly other forms of HTTP traffic 
 (including other video streaming services).
 
 
 Martin Hepworth wrote the following on 12/3/2011 2:36 AM:
 Also checkout Adrian Cockcroft presentations on their architecture 
 which
 describes how they use aws and CDns etc
 
 Martin
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 




Re: Overall Netflix bandwidth usage numbers on a network?

2011-12-12 Thread Simon Lockhart
On Mon Dec 12, 2011 at 03:10:20PM -0500, Patrick W. Gilmore wrote:
 I believe Akamai,
 LLNW,  L3 are the only companies that stream movies for Netflix.  Peer with
 the CDNs to save your transit.

That would be good if more than one of those CDNs peered openly.

Simon



Re: Overall Netflix bandwidth usage numbers on a network?

2011-12-12 Thread Raymond Dijkxhoorn

Hi!


I believe Akamai,
LLNW,  L3 are the only companies that stream movies for Netflix.  Peer with
the CDNs to save your transit.



That would be good if more than one of those CDNs peered openly.


So what one doesnt?

Akamai will peer with you anywhere and i doubt LLNW will give you trouble.

L3, well, they run a superb network and even more superb pricing, so why 
would they peer with anyone ;)


I still think, old fashioned me, that a CDN doesnt do go without peering 
but some feel otherwise.


Bye,
Raymond.



Re: Overall Netflix bandwidth usage numbers on a network?

2011-12-12 Thread Simon Lockhart
On Mon Dec 12, 2011 at 10:11:54PM +0100, Raymond Dijkxhoorn wrote:
 Akamai will peer with you anywhere and i doubt LLNW will give you trouble.

LLNW are restictive on peering.
 
 L3, well, they run a superb network and even more superb pricing, so why 
 would they peer with anyone ;)

And as I use L3 for transit, they'd never peer with me. Not that they peer
with anyone outside the cabal anyway.
 
 I still think, old fashioned me, that a CDN doesnt do go without peering 
 but some feel otherwise.

Quite so. I don't get why CDNs don't all peer openly. I guess most (i.e. those
which aren't Akamai) are more concerned with making money than with delivering
a good service to the end user.

Simon



Re: Overall Netflix bandwidth usage numbers on a network?

2011-12-12 Thread Jason Lixfeld

On 2011-12-12, at 4:22 PM, Simon Lockhart si...@slimey.org wrote:

 I guess most (i.e. those
 which aren't Akamai) are more concerned with making money than with delivering
 a good service to the end user.

Really?  I always thought that higher profits and buying transit were mutually 
exclusive relative to higher profits and openly peering.

So what you are saying is that one stands to make more by paying upstreams for 
bit swapping?  How's that work?

If the argument is that the opex required for maintaining peering relationships 
is too expensive relative to the direct and indirect cost of buying bandwidth, 
I love to be edumacated on how that math actually works because it makes 
absolutely no sense to me.

--

Sent from my mobile device


Peering vs. Transit vs. Profit [was: Overall Netflix bandwidth usage numbers on a network?]

2011-12-12 Thread Patrick W. Gilmore
On Dec 12, 2011, at 5:00 PM, Jason Lixfeld wrote:
 On 2011-12-12, at 4:22 PM, Simon Lockhart si...@slimey.org wrote:
 
 I guess most (i.e. those
 which aren't Akamai) are more concerned with making money than with 
 delivering
 a good service to the end user.
 
 Really?  I always thought that higher profits and buying transit were 
 mutually exclusive relative to higher profits and openly peering.
 
 So what you are saying is that one stands to make more by paying upstreams 
 for bit swapping?  How's that work?

You are assuming that peering with $ISP will lower someone's transit bill.  
That is demonstrably false in the case of Level 3 who (to a first approximation 
- please do not argue corner cases) pays no one for transit.

It is also likely false over some set of $ISP_n for some peers.  As a trivial 
example, if $NETWORK peers with your transit, not only would it not save them 
money to peer with you, it may cost them money if peering with you endangers 
the peering with your upstream.  This can happen if $NETWORK does not have 
enough traffic to qualify for peering with your upstream when your traffic is 
removed from the link.

So peering does not always equal profit.  Would that life were so simple! =)


 If the argument is that the opex required for maintaining peering 
 relationships is too expensive relative to the direct and indirect cost of 
 buying bandwidth, I love to be edumacated on how that math actually works 
 because it makes absolutely no sense to me.

Peering is not free.  I can easily see the cost of bringing up a port to 
someone with 10 Mbps costing more than it saves for some perfectly valid 
network topologies.  And that's just the most obvious example.  The one above 
is another obvious example.

There are reasons not to peer.  Assuming there are not is a bad way to enter a 
negotiation.  Put yourself in the place of the other network, figure out what 
their pain points are - performance, complexity, stability, cost, slot density, 
spare cycles (human and machine), etc., etc.  To be successful in a 
negotiation, I submit it is useful to help them eliminate one or more of those 
pain points, i.e. make it worth their while.

Remember, my company's peering policy (at public exchanges) is YES.  Since I 
wrote the policy, you can probably guess my view on peering.  But if simply I 
assumed no one ever had a reason to say no, I wouldn't get very far.

There are two sides to every story.  Sometimes the other side is confused, or 
even flat out wrong, but not always.  And even when the other side is wrong, it 
may not be useful to bash them over the head with the truth.

-- 
TTFN,
patrick

P.S. I also think giving good service is one vital component of making more 
money.  But maybe I'm silly.




Re: Overall Netflix bandwidth usage numbers on a network?

2011-12-12 Thread Matthew Petach
On Mon, Dec 12, 2011 at 2:00 PM, Jason Lixfeld ja...@lixfeld.ca wrote:

 On 2011-12-12, at 4:22 PM, Simon Lockhart si...@slimey.org wrote:

 I guess most (i.e. those
 which aren't Akamai) are more concerned with making money than with 
 delivering
 a good service to the end user.

 Really?  I always thought that higher profits and buying transit were 
 mutually exclusive relative to higher profits and openly peering.

 So what you are saying is that one stands to make more by paying upstreams 
 for bit swapping?  How's that work?

 If the argument is that the opex required for maintaining peering 
 relationships is too expensive relative to the direct and indirect cost of 
 buying bandwidth, I love to be edumacated on how that math actually works 
 because it makes absolutely no sense to me.

I'm somewhat assuming you're trolling here.  :/

but just in case...

the lost revenue from peering with someone when you could be
charging them transit prices is the tradeoff being referred to
here; Level3 isn't in the business of paying upstreams for
bandwidth.  (well, other than comcast, but that's a different
thread entirely.  And yes, I suppose that would be me trolling.
Bad Matt!)

Matt



Re: Overall Netflix bandwidth usage numbers on a network?

2011-12-11 Thread Dave Temkin
Feel free to contact peering@netflixdotcom - we're happy to provide you with delivery statistics for 
traffic terminating on your network.


Regards,
-Dave Temkin
Netflix

On 12/7/11 8:57 AM, Blake Hudson wrote:
Yeah, that's an interesting one. We currently utilize netflow for this, but you also need to consider that 
netflix streaming is just port 80 www traffic. Because netflix uses CDNs, its difficult to pin down the 
traffic to specific hosts in the CDN and say that this traffic was netflix, while this traffic was the 
latest windows update (remember this is often a shared hosting platform). We've done our own testing and 
have come to a good solution which uses a combination of nbar, packet marking, and netflow to come to a 
conclusion. On a ~160Mbps link, netflix peaks out between 30-50Mbps around 8-10PM each evening. The rest 
of the traffic is predominantly other forms of HTTP traffic (including other video streaming services).



Martin Hepworth wrote the following on 12/3/2011 2:36 AM:

Also checkout Adrian Cockcroft presentations on their architecture which
describes how they use aws and CDns etc

Martin









Re: Overall Netflix bandwidth usage numbers on a network?

2011-12-11 Thread Faisal Imtiaz

Which leads to a question to be asked...

Is netflix willing to peer directly with ISP / NSP's ?

Regards.

Faisal Imtiaz
Snappy Internet  Telecom


On 12/11/2011 7:29 PM, Dave Temkin wrote:
Feel free to contact peering@netflixdotcom - we're happy to provide 
you with delivery statistics for traffic terminating on your network.


Regards,
-Dave Temkin
Netflix

On 12/7/11 8:57 AM, Blake Hudson wrote:
Yeah, that's an interesting one. We currently utilize netflow for 
this, but you also need to consider that netflix streaming is just 
port 80 www traffic. Because netflix uses CDNs, its difficult to pin 
down the traffic to specific hosts in the CDN and say that this 
traffic was netflix, while this traffic was the latest windows update 
(remember this is often a shared hosting platform). We've done our 
own testing and have come to a good solution which uses a combination 
of nbar, packet marking, and netflow to come to a conclusion. On a 
~160Mbps link, netflix peaks out between 30-50Mbps around 8-10PM each 
evening. The rest of the traffic is predominantly other forms of HTTP 
traffic (including other video streaming services).



Martin Hepworth wrote the following on 12/3/2011 2:36 AM:
Also checkout Adrian Cockcroft presentations on their architecture 
which

describes how they use aws and CDns etc

Martin












Re: Overall Netflix bandwidth usage numbers on a network?

2011-12-11 Thread Joel Jaeggli
Netflix uses CDNs for content delivery and the platform runs in EC2. What would 
peering with them achieve?

Sent from my iPhone

On Dec 11, 2011, at 18:06, Faisal Imtiaz fai...@snappydsl.net wrote:

 Which leads to a question to be asked...
 
 Is netflix willing to peer directly with ISP / NSP's ?
 
 Regards.
 
 Faisal Imtiaz
 Snappy Internet  Telecom
 
 
 On 12/11/2011 7:29 PM, Dave Temkin wrote:
 Feel free to contact peering@netflixdotcom - we're happy to provide you 
 with delivery statistics for traffic terminating on your network.
 
 Regards,
 -Dave Temkin
 Netflix
 
 On 12/7/11 8:57 AM, Blake Hudson wrote:
 Yeah, that's an interesting one. We currently utilize netflow for this, but 
 you also need to consider that netflix streaming is just port 80 www 
 traffic. Because netflix uses CDNs, its difficult to pin down the traffic 
 to specific hosts in the CDN and say that this traffic was netflix, while 
 this traffic was the latest windows update (remember this is often a shared 
 hosting platform). We've done our own testing and have come to a good 
 solution which uses a combination of nbar, packet marking, and netflow to 
 come to a conclusion. On a ~160Mbps link, netflix peaks out between 
 30-50Mbps around 8-10PM each evening. The rest of the traffic is 
 predominantly other forms of HTTP traffic (including other video streaming 
 services).
 
 
 Martin Hepworth wrote the following on 12/3/2011 2:36 AM:
 Also checkout Adrian Cockcroft presentations on their architecture which
 describes how they use aws and CDns etc
 
 Martin
 
 
 
 
 
 
 



Re: Overall Netflix bandwidth usage numbers on a network?

2011-12-11 Thread Valdis . Kletnieks
On Sun, 11 Dec 2011 19:21:49 PST, Joel Jaeggli said:
 Netflix uses CDNs for content delivery and the platform runs in EC2. What
 would peering with them achieve?

I suspect Faisal's *real* question is Who at Netflix do I talk to in order to 
discuss
mutually beneficial traffic engineering?


pgpdlV6fIFIdZ.pgp
Description: PGP signature


Re: Overall Netflix bandwidth usage numbers on a network?

2011-12-11 Thread Faisal Imtiaz
Simple, keep traffic off paid ip transit circuits

Faisal

On Dec 11, 2011, at 10:21 PM, Joel Jaeggli joe...@bogus.com wrote:

 Netflix uses CDNs for content delivery and the platform runs in EC2. What 
 would peering with them achieve?
 
 Sent from my iPhone
 
 On Dec 11, 2011, at 18:06, Faisal Imtiaz fai...@snappydsl.net wrote:
 
 Which leads to a question to be asked...
 
 Is netflix willing to peer directly with ISP / NSP's ?
 
 Regards.
 
 Faisal Imtiaz
 Snappy Internet  Telecom
 
 
 On 12/11/2011 7:29 PM, Dave Temkin wrote:
 Feel free to contact peering@netflixdotcom - we're happy to provide you 
 with delivery statistics for traffic terminating on your network.
 
 Regards,
 -Dave Temkin
 Netflix
 
 On 12/7/11 8:57 AM, Blake Hudson wrote:
 Yeah, that's an interesting one. We currently utilize netflow for this, 
 but you also need to consider that netflix streaming is just port 80 www 
 traffic. Because netflix uses CDNs, its difficult to pin down the traffic 
 to specific hosts in the CDN and say that this traffic was netflix, while 
 this traffic was the latest windows update (remember this is often a 
 shared hosting platform). We've done our own testing and have come to a 
 good solution which uses a combination of nbar, packet marking, and 
 netflow to come to a conclusion. On a ~160Mbps link, netflix peaks out 
 between 30-50Mbps around 8-10PM each evening. The rest of the traffic is 
 predominantly other forms of HTTP traffic (including other video streaming 
 services).
 
 
 Martin Hepworth wrote the following on 12/3/2011 2:36 AM:
 Also checkout Adrian Cockcroft presentations on their architecture which
 describes how they use aws and CDns etc
 
 Martin
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 



Re: Overall Netflix bandwidth usage numbers on a network?

2011-12-11 Thread Christopher Morrow
On Sun, Dec 11, 2011 at 10:46 PM, Faisal Imtiaz fai...@snappydsl.net wrote:
 Simple, keep traffic off paid ip transit circuits


(I think joel's point was: peer with amazon, done-and-done)

 Faisal

 On Dec 11, 2011, at 10:21 PM, Joel Jaeggli joe...@bogus.com wrote:

 Netflix uses CDNs for content delivery and the platform runs in EC2. What 
 would peering with them achieve?

 Sent from my iPhone

 On Dec 11, 2011, at 18:06, Faisal Imtiaz fai...@snappydsl.net wrote:

 Which leads to a question to be asked...

 Is netflix willing to peer directly with ISP / NSP's ?

 Regards.

 Faisal Imtiaz
 Snappy Internet  Telecom


 On 12/11/2011 7:29 PM, Dave Temkin wrote:
 Feel free to contact peering@netflixdotcom - we're happy to provide you 
 with delivery statistics for traffic terminating on your network.

 Regards,
 -Dave Temkin
 Netflix

 On 12/7/11 8:57 AM, Blake Hudson wrote:
 Yeah, that's an interesting one. We currently utilize netflow for this, 
 but you also need to consider that netflix streaming is just port 80 www 
 traffic. Because netflix uses CDNs, its difficult to pin down the traffic 
 to specific hosts in the CDN and say that this traffic was netflix, while 
 this traffic was the latest windows update (remember this is often a 
 shared hosting platform). We've done our own testing and have come to a 
 good solution which uses a combination of nbar, packet marking, and 
 netflow to come to a conclusion. On a ~160Mbps link, netflix peaks out 
 between 30-50Mbps around 8-10PM each evening. The rest of the traffic is 
 predominantly other forms of HTTP traffic (including other video 
 streaming services).


 Martin Hepworth wrote the following on 12/3/2011 2:36 AM:
 Also checkout Adrian Cockcroft presentations on their architecture which
 describes how they use aws and CDns etc

 Martin












Re: Overall Netflix bandwidth usage numbers on a network?

2011-12-11 Thread Faisal Imtiaz
Thanks for the explanation...did not consider that before...will investigate.., 
any tips that can be shared will be welcome.
:)

Faisal

On Dec 11, 2011, at 10:49 PM, Christopher Morrow morrowc.li...@gmail.com 
wrote:

 On Sun, Dec 11, 2011 at 10:46 PM, Faisal Imtiaz fai...@snappydsl.net wrote:
 Simple, keep traffic off paid ip transit circuits
 
 
 (I think joel's point was: peer with amazon, done-and-done)
 
 Faisal
 
 On Dec 11, 2011, at 10:21 PM, Joel Jaeggli joe...@bogus.com wrote:
 
 Netflix uses CDNs for content delivery and the platform runs in EC2. What 
 would peering with them achieve?
 
 Sent from my iPhone
 
 On Dec 11, 2011, at 18:06, Faisal Imtiaz fai...@snappydsl.net wrote:
 
 Which leads to a question to be asked...
 
 Is netflix willing to peer directly with ISP / NSP's ?
 
 Regards.
 
 Faisal Imtiaz
 Snappy Internet  Telecom
 
 
 On 12/11/2011 7:29 PM, Dave Temkin wrote:
 Feel free to contact peering@netflixdotcom - we're happy to provide you 
 with delivery statistics for traffic terminating on your network.
 
 Regards,
 -Dave Temkin
 Netflix
 
 On 12/7/11 8:57 AM, Blake Hudson wrote:
 Yeah, that's an interesting one. We currently utilize netflow for this, 
 but you also need to consider that netflix streaming is just port 80 www 
 traffic. Because netflix uses CDNs, its difficult to pin down the 
 traffic to specific hosts in the CDN and say that this traffic was 
 netflix, while this traffic was the latest windows update (remember this 
 is often a shared hosting platform). We've done our own testing and have 
 come to a good solution which uses a combination of nbar, packet 
 marking, and netflow to come to a conclusion. On a ~160Mbps link, 
 netflix peaks out between 30-50Mbps around 8-10PM each evening. The rest 
 of the traffic is predominantly other forms of HTTP traffic (including 
 other video streaming services).
 
 
 Martin Hepworth wrote the following on 12/3/2011 2:36 AM:
 Also checkout Adrian Cockcroft presentations on their architecture which
 describes how they use aws and CDns etc
 
 Martin
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 



Re: Overall Netflix bandwidth usage numbers on a network?

2011-12-11 Thread Joel jaeggli
On 12/11/11 19:49 , Christopher Morrow wrote:
 On Sun, Dec 11, 2011 at 10:46 PM, Faisal Imtiaz fai...@snappydsl.net wrote:
 Simple, keep traffic off paid ip transit circuits
 
 (I think joel's point was: peer with amazon, done-and-done)

also probably your relationships to akamai and level3

 Faisal

 On Dec 11, 2011, at 10:21 PM, Joel Jaeggli joe...@bogus.com wrote:

 Netflix uses CDNs for content delivery and the platform runs in EC2. What 
 would peering with them achieve?

 Sent from my iPhone

 On Dec 11, 2011, at 18:06, Faisal Imtiaz fai...@snappydsl.net wrote:

 Which leads to a question to be asked...

 Is netflix willing to peer directly with ISP / NSP's ?

 Regards.

 Faisal Imtiaz
 Snappy Internet  Telecom


 On 12/11/2011 7:29 PM, Dave Temkin wrote:
 Feel free to contact peering@netflixdotcom - we're happy to provide you 
 with delivery statistics for traffic terminating on your network.

 Regards,
 -Dave Temkin
 Netflix

 On 12/7/11 8:57 AM, Blake Hudson wrote:
 Yeah, that's an interesting one. We currently utilize netflow for this, 
 but you also need to consider that netflix streaming is just port 80 www 
 traffic. Because netflix uses CDNs, its difficult to pin down the 
 traffic to specific hosts in the CDN and say that this traffic was 
 netflix, while this traffic was the latest windows update (remember this 
 is often a shared hosting platform). We've done our own testing and have 
 come to a good solution which uses a combination of nbar, packet 
 marking, and netflow to come to a conclusion. On a ~160Mbps link, 
 netflix peaks out between 30-50Mbps around 8-10PM each evening. The rest 
 of the traffic is predominantly other forms of HTTP traffic (including 
 other video streaming services).


 Martin Hepworth wrote the following on 12/3/2011 2:36 AM:
 Also checkout Adrian Cockcroft presentations on their architecture which
 describes how they use aws and CDns etc

 Martin









 




Re: Overall Netflix bandwidth usage numbers on a network?

2011-12-11 Thread Shaun Ewing
On 12/12/2011, at 4:18 PM, Joel jaeggli wrote:

 also probably your relationships to akamai and level3

Probably want to add Limelight to that list as well (do Netflix even use Akamai 
these days?)

-Shaun

smime.p7s
Description: S/MIME cryptographic signature


Re: Overall Netflix bandwidth usage numbers on a network?

2011-12-11 Thread Peter Beckman

On Sun, 11 Dec 2011, Christopher Morrow wrote:


On Sun, Dec 11, 2011 at 10:46 PM, Faisal Imtiaz fai...@snappydsl.net wrote:

Simple, keep traffic off paid ip transit circuits



(I think joel's point was: peer with amazon, done-and-done)


 DirectConnect seems to be a good way to get a dedicated 1G or 10G link
 with AWS:

 http://aws.amazon.com/directconnect/

 It's not settlement-free peering, but it's an option if you can't
 negotiate something.  Maybe it will reduce costs in some use cases.

Beckman
---
Peter Beckman  Internet Guy
beck...@angryox.com http://www.angryox.com/
---



Re: Overall Netflix bandwidth usage numbers on a network?

2011-12-03 Thread Martin Hepworth
Also checkout Adrian Cockcroft presentations on their architecture which
describes how they use aws and CDns etc

Martin

On Saturday, 3 December 2011, Jonathan Towne jto...@slic.com wrote:
 Wow.. not sure how I missed that option.  Exactly why I posted before
dumping
 a bunch of time into a bottomless bucket!

 Thanks.. :)

 -- Jonathan Towne


 On Sat, Dec 03, 2011 at 12:56:34AM +, Andrew Mulholland scribbled:
 # Surely this is what Netflow is for.
 #
 #
 # no need to re-invent the wheel.
 #
 #
 # Andrew
 #
 #
 # On Sat, Dec 3, 2011 at 12:47 AM, Jonathan Towne jto...@slic.com wrote:
 #
 #  Been lurking for a while and posed a question to a few folks without
much
 #  response, figured someone here might've done something like this
already.
 # 
 #  So, before I go about building wheels that already exist:
 # 
 #  I'm interested in doing a bit of a passive survey of bandwidth usage
on
 #  my network (smallish isp, a few thousand DSL/FTTx customers) to
understand
 #  the percentage of average/overall traffic generated by Netflix
streaming.
 # 
 #  What I have available is a few gigabit transport switches providing
me with
 #  mirror ports, a juniper MX series router running 10.4 code, plenty of
BSD
 #  machines and libpcap-fu.
 # 
 #  What I'm looking for is either a timed-average or moments-glance
number
 #  of the traffic.  For instance, on an interface moving 150mbit/sec
total,
 #  50mbit/sec of it is attributed to Netflix right now.  I'm pretty
handy with
 #  RRDtool, so that isn't out of the question, either.
 # 
 #  I've really only spent dinnertime considering this, but have come up
with
 #  two potential approaches so far, and haven't actively investigated
either
 #  of them:
 # 
 #  * firewall terms and counters on the MX router + snmp
 #  * writing a quick libpcap application to filter and count in a
completely
 #   out-of-band way on one of my monitoring hosts
 # 
 #  Some challenges I can see:
 # 
 #  * Nailing down the streaming source for Netflix, that is, IP ranges
etc.
 #  * Making assumptions about CDN source IPs that could be used for
something
 #   else, and further, should I care?
 # 
 #  Happy to hear thoughts about this, helpful or not!  I know Netflix
 #  themselves
 #  have probably done plenty of studies like this, but pretty likely not
 #  limited
 #  to my customer base.  Not aiming for anything creepy or crazy, just
some
 #  vague understanding of what's going on, and the ability to do some
trending
 #  for future planning.
 # 
 #  -- Jonathan Towne
 # 
 # 



-- 
-- 
Martin Hepworth
Oxford, UK


Overall Netflix bandwidth usage numbers on a network?

2011-12-02 Thread Jonathan Towne
Been lurking for a while and posed a question to a few folks without much
response, figured someone here might've done something like this already.

So, before I go about building wheels that already exist:

I'm interested in doing a bit of a passive survey of bandwidth usage on
my network (smallish isp, a few thousand DSL/FTTx customers) to understand
the percentage of average/overall traffic generated by Netflix streaming.

What I have available is a few gigabit transport switches providing me with
mirror ports, a juniper MX series router running 10.4 code, plenty of BSD
machines and libpcap-fu.

What I'm looking for is either a timed-average or moments-glance number
of the traffic.  For instance, on an interface moving 150mbit/sec total,
50mbit/sec of it is attributed to Netflix right now.  I'm pretty handy with
RRDtool, so that isn't out of the question, either.

I've really only spent dinnertime considering this, but have come up with
two potential approaches so far, and haven't actively investigated either
of them:

* firewall terms and counters on the MX router + snmp
* writing a quick libpcap application to filter and count in a completely
  out-of-band way on one of my monitoring hosts

Some challenges I can see:

* Nailing down the streaming source for Netflix, that is, IP ranges etc.
* Making assumptions about CDN source IPs that could be used for something
  else, and further, should I care?

Happy to hear thoughts about this, helpful or not!  I know Netflix themselves
have probably done plenty of studies like this, but pretty likely not limited
to my customer base.  Not aiming for anything creepy or crazy, just some
vague understanding of what's going on, and the ability to do some trending
for future planning.

-- Jonathan Towne



Re: Overall Netflix bandwidth usage numbers on a network?

2011-12-02 Thread Andrew Mulholland
Surely this is what Netflow is for.


no need to re-invent the wheel.


Andrew


On Sat, Dec 3, 2011 at 12:47 AM, Jonathan Towne jto...@slic.com wrote:

 Been lurking for a while and posed a question to a few folks without much
 response, figured someone here might've done something like this already.

 So, before I go about building wheels that already exist:

 I'm interested in doing a bit of a passive survey of bandwidth usage on
 my network (smallish isp, a few thousand DSL/FTTx customers) to understand
 the percentage of average/overall traffic generated by Netflix streaming.

 What I have available is a few gigabit transport switches providing me with
 mirror ports, a juniper MX series router running 10.4 code, plenty of BSD
 machines and libpcap-fu.

 What I'm looking for is either a timed-average or moments-glance number
 of the traffic.  For instance, on an interface moving 150mbit/sec total,
 50mbit/sec of it is attributed to Netflix right now.  I'm pretty handy with
 RRDtool, so that isn't out of the question, either.

 I've really only spent dinnertime considering this, but have come up with
 two potential approaches so far, and haven't actively investigated either
 of them:

 * firewall terms and counters on the MX router + snmp
 * writing a quick libpcap application to filter and count in a completely
  out-of-band way on one of my monitoring hosts

 Some challenges I can see:

 * Nailing down the streaming source for Netflix, that is, IP ranges etc.
 * Making assumptions about CDN source IPs that could be used for something
  else, and further, should I care?

 Happy to hear thoughts about this, helpful or not!  I know Netflix
 themselves
 have probably done plenty of studies like this, but pretty likely not
 limited
 to my customer base.  Not aiming for anything creepy or crazy, just some
 vague understanding of what's going on, and the ability to do some trending
 for future planning.

 -- Jonathan Towne




Re: Overall Netflix bandwidth usage numbers on a network?

2011-12-02 Thread Jonathan Towne
Wow.. not sure how I missed that option.  Exactly why I posted before dumping
a bunch of time into a bottomless bucket!

Thanks.. :)

-- Jonathan Towne


On Sat, Dec 03, 2011 at 12:56:34AM +, Andrew Mulholland scribbled:
# Surely this is what Netflow is for.
# 
# 
# no need to re-invent the wheel.
# 
# 
# Andrew
# 
# 
# On Sat, Dec 3, 2011 at 12:47 AM, Jonathan Towne jto...@slic.com wrote:
# 
#  Been lurking for a while and posed a question to a few folks without much
#  response, figured someone here might've done something like this already.
# 
#  So, before I go about building wheels that already exist:
# 
#  I'm interested in doing a bit of a passive survey of bandwidth usage on
#  my network (smallish isp, a few thousand DSL/FTTx customers) to understand
#  the percentage of average/overall traffic generated by Netflix streaming.
# 
#  What I have available is a few gigabit transport switches providing me with
#  mirror ports, a juniper MX series router running 10.4 code, plenty of BSD
#  machines and libpcap-fu.
# 
#  What I'm looking for is either a timed-average or moments-glance number
#  of the traffic.  For instance, on an interface moving 150mbit/sec total,
#  50mbit/sec of it is attributed to Netflix right now.  I'm pretty handy with
#  RRDtool, so that isn't out of the question, either.
# 
#  I've really only spent dinnertime considering this, but have come up with
#  two potential approaches so far, and haven't actively investigated either
#  of them:
# 
#  * firewall terms and counters on the MX router + snmp
#  * writing a quick libpcap application to filter and count in a completely
#   out-of-band way on one of my monitoring hosts
# 
#  Some challenges I can see:
# 
#  * Nailing down the streaming source for Netflix, that is, IP ranges etc.
#  * Making assumptions about CDN source IPs that could be used for something
#   else, and further, should I care?
# 
#  Happy to hear thoughts about this, helpful or not!  I know Netflix
#  themselves
#  have probably done plenty of studies like this, but pretty likely not
#  limited
#  to my customer base.  Not aiming for anything creepy or crazy, just some
#  vague understanding of what's going on, and the ability to do some trending
#  for future planning.
# 
#  -- Jonathan Towne
# 
#