Re: From Europe to Australia via right way

2015-04-02 Thread Piotr



It's close to Sydney, 203.18.241.0/24

What's the reason, there are some telecoms,isp  that have paths 
eastbound, southbound but in routing table they prefer longer path via US ?


regards,
Piotr


W dniu 2015-04-02 o 01:45, Matt Perkins pisze:

Some times you can get luck and go through SE-ME-WE3 (we it's not cut)
but most path's are via the US.
What is your destination network in Australia.

Matt





Re: From Europe to Australia via right way

2015-04-02 Thread Elmar K. Bins
piotr.1...@interia.pl (Piotr) wrote:

 What's the reason, there are some telecoms,isp  that have paths eastbound,
 southbound but in routing table they prefer longer path via US ?

Come on - you do know that it's called policy routing for a reason?
Costs, reserved bw/s for high-rollers, capacity...

(Sometimes sheer stupidity, too)

Elmar.


Re: From Europe to Australia via right way

2015-04-02 Thread joel jaeggli
On 4/2/15 10:08 AM, McDonald Richards wrote:
 If you want a direct path then SMW3 remains the only cable for the final
 leg from Singapore to Perth and it's capacity is only a few hundred
 gigabits. There are at least 2 proposed new systems racing to get into
 the water between Singapore and Perth to try and address this gap in
 supply and demand.

it's also another 2000 miles from perth to syd...

 On Wed, Apr 1, 2015 at 8:59 PM, Dorian Kim dor...@blackrose.org
 mailto:dor...@blackrose.org wrote:
 
 I don’t believe anyone has significant IP network capacity going EU
 - Australia in that direction, esp. since once you get to
 Singapore, the options to get to Australia are limited.
 
 Even for networks that do have EU to Asia connectivity via Indian
 Ocean or land route to north Asia, the preferred path would be via
 US and transpac.
 
 -dorian
 
 
  On Apr 1, 2015, at 5:51 PM, joel jaeggli joe...@bogus.com
 mailto:joe...@bogus.com wrote:
 
  On 4/1/15 3:14 AM, Piotr wrote:
  Hello,
 
  There is some telecom, isp which have route from EU to AU via east or
  south east (via Russia, Red sea or  other ways) ? Now i have path
 via US
  and looking something in opposite direction.
 
  telstra ntt reliance retn all have eastbound paths from europe.
 
  thanks for some info, contact.
  Piotr
 
 
 
 
 




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Re: From Europe to Australia via right way

2015-04-02 Thread Mark Tinka


On 2/Apr/15 16:23, Jared Mauch wrote:
 I think this stability is key, I’ve been watching a testing team go round and
 round with a telco that seems to think that 1 second hits is acceptable 
 through
 this area and they are unwilling to resolve it and seem to be begging “please
 just accept the circuit”.

What kind of failover hit times are they looking for? 50ms?

Mark.


Re: From Europe to Australia via right way

2015-04-02 Thread Jared Mauch

 On Apr 2, 2015, at 10:27 AM, Mark Tinka mark.ti...@seacom.mu wrote:
 
 
 
 On 2/Apr/15 16:23, Jared Mauch wrote:
 I think this stability is key, I’ve been watching a testing team go round and
 round with a telco that seems to think that 1 second hits is acceptable 
 through
 this area and they are unwilling to resolve it and seem to be begging “please
 just accept the circuit”.
 
 What kind of failover hit times are they looking for? 50ms?

Seeing multiple hit times within a 24h period isn’t really acceptable and keeps
these paths from being viable.

They are claiming they are within 50ms.

- Jared




Re: From Europe to Australia via right way

2015-04-02 Thread Mark Tinka


On 2/Apr/15 16:32, Jared Mauch wrote:
 Seeing multiple hit times within a 24h period isn’t really acceptable and 
 keeps
 these paths from being viable.

Agreed.


 They are claiming they are within 50ms.

Which makes sense if the end-to-end path is less than 50ms re: seeing
hitless failovers on the IP routers.

If the end-to-end path is crossing continents, a local failure which is
repaired within 50ms will still cause a longer/noticeable outage for the
IP routers connected at either end of said circuit.

Mark.


Re: From Europe to Australia via right way

2015-04-02 Thread Martin Hepworth
There's a new AAE-1 cable currently being laid (sunk!) that comes online
early 2016 that will help. But right now alot of traffic cuts across the US
as it's still the 'best' route for reasons other that latency as others
have already mentioned.

The new AAE-1 will have 40Tbps connections from Europe to Hong Kong so
hopefully the routes will start to migrate in 2016 and give us an Easterly
route to APAC that has enough capacity to be stable in that direction



-- 
Martin Hepworth, CISSP
Oxford, UK

On 2 April 2015 at 15:03, Jared Mauch ja...@puck.nether.net wrote:

 On Thu, Apr 02, 2015 at 10:43:25AM +0200, Elmar K. Bins wrote:
  piotr.1...@interia.pl (Piotr) wrote:
 
   What's the reason, there are some telecoms,isp  that have paths
 eastbound,
   southbound but in routing table they prefer longer path via US ?
 
  Come on - you do know that it's called policy routing for a reason?
  Costs, reserved bw/s for high-rollers, capacity...

 Sure, you can use static routes as well[1].

 For those that are interested you can take a look
 at http://www.submarinecablemap.com/ to get an idea of what path
 might be feasible.  I will say that telecom costs tend to be
 related to political stability, so when computing shortest
 path cost often comes into play.

 Also, What I'm often reminding people is low-latency isn't
 always the right solution, because loss is more important.  I am
 less concerned about another 25-100ms if there is little jitter
 and zero loss.

 - Jared

 [1] - https://twitter.com/jaredmauch/status/583227901555961856

 --
 Jared Mauch  | pgp key available via finger from ja...@puck.nether.net
 clue++;  | http://puck.nether.net/~jared/  My statements are only
 mine.



Re: From Europe to Australia via right way

2015-04-02 Thread Jared Mauch

 On Apr 2, 2015, at 10:15 AM, Martin Hepworth max...@gmail.com wrote:
 
 The new AAE-1 will have 40Tbps connections from Europe to Hong Kong so
 hopefully the routes will start to migrate in 2016 and give us an Easterly
 route to APAC that has enough capacity to be stable in that direction

I think this stability is key, I’ve been watching a testing team go round and
round with a telco that seems to think that 1 second hits is acceptable through
this area and they are unwilling to resolve it and seem to be begging “please
just accept the circuit”.

- Jared

Re: From Europe to Australia via right way

2015-04-02 Thread Jared Mauch
On Thu, Apr 02, 2015 at 10:43:25AM +0200, Elmar K. Bins wrote:
 piotr.1...@interia.pl (Piotr) wrote:
 
  What's the reason, there are some telecoms,isp  that have paths eastbound,
  southbound but in routing table they prefer longer path via US ?
 
 Come on - you do know that it's called policy routing for a reason?
 Costs, reserved bw/s for high-rollers, capacity...

Sure, you can use static routes as well[1].

For those that are interested you can take a look
at http://www.submarinecablemap.com/ to get an idea of what path
might be feasible.  I will say that telecom costs tend to be
related to political stability, so when computing shortest
path cost often comes into play.

Also, What I'm often reminding people is low-latency isn't
always the right solution, because loss is more important.  I am
less concerned about another 25-100ms if there is little jitter
and zero loss.

- Jared

[1] - https://twitter.com/jaredmauch/status/583227901555961856

-- 
Jared Mauch  | pgp key available via finger from ja...@puck.nether.net
clue++;  | http://puck.nether.net/~jared/  My statements are only mine.


Re: From Europe to Australia via right way

2015-04-02 Thread McDonald Richards
If you want a direct path then SMW3 remains the only cable for the final
leg from Singapore to Perth and it's capacity is only a few hundred
gigabits. There are at least 2 proposed new systems racing to get into the
water between Singapore and Perth to try and address this gap in supply and
demand.

On Wed, Apr 1, 2015 at 8:59 PM, Dorian Kim dor...@blackrose.org wrote:

 I don’t believe anyone has significant IP network capacity going EU -
 Australia in that direction, esp. since once you get to Singapore, the
 options to get to Australia are limited.

 Even for networks that do have EU to Asia connectivity via Indian Ocean or
 land route to north Asia, the preferred path would be via US and transpac.

 -dorian


  On Apr 1, 2015, at 5:51 PM, joel jaeggli joe...@bogus.com wrote:
 
  On 4/1/15 3:14 AM, Piotr wrote:
  Hello,
 
  There is some telecom, isp which have route from EU to AU via east or
  south east (via Russia, Red sea or  other ways) ? Now i have path via US
  and looking something in opposite direction.
 
  telstra ntt reliance retn all have eastbound paths from europe.
 
  thanks for some info, contact.
  Piotr
 
 
 




Re: From Europe to Australia via right way

2015-04-02 Thread Rod Beck
Low latency routes like this would be very attractive to financial firms 
trading in both Europe and Asia. My hunch is that most of these circuits are 
linear - unprotected. And if you get damage in Siberia or Northern China 
repairs could be mighty slow.

Roderick Beck
Sales Director/Europe and the Americas
Hibernia Networks
http://www.hibernianetworks.com


From: NANOG nanog-boun...@nanog.org on behalf of Jared Mauch 
ja...@puck.nether.net
Sent: Thursday, April 2, 2015 4:23 PM
To: Martin Hepworth
Cc: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: From Europe to Australia via right way

 On Apr 2, 2015, at 10:15 AM, Martin Hepworth max...@gmail.com wrote:

 The new AAE-1 will have 40Tbps connections from Europe to Hong Kong so
 hopefully the routes will start to migrate in 2016 and give us an Easterly
 route to APAC that has enough capacity to be stable in that direction

I think this stability is key, I’ve been watching a testing team go round and
round with a telco that seems to think that 1 second hits is acceptable through
this area and they are unwilling to resolve it and seem to be begging “please
just accept the circuit”.

- Jared
This e-mail and any attachments thereto is intended only for use by the 
addressee(s) named herein and may be proprietary and/or legally privileged. If 
you are not the intended recipient of this e-mail, you are hereby notified that 
any dissemination, distribution or copying of this email, and any attachments 
thereto, without the prior written permission of the sender is strictly 
prohibited. If you receive this e-mail in error, please immediately telephone 
or e-mail the sender and permanently delete the original copy and any copy of 
this e-mail, and any printout thereof. All documents, contracts or agreements 
referred or attached to this e-mail are SUBJECT TO CONTRACT. The contents of an 
attachment to this e-mail may contain software viruses that could damage your 
own computer system. While Hibernia Networks has taken every reasonable 
precaution to minimize this risk, we cannot accept liability for any damage 
that you sustain as a result of software viruses. You should carry out your own 
virus checks before opening any attachment.


From Europe to Australia via right way

2015-04-01 Thread Piotr

Hello,

There is some telecom, isp which have route from EU to AU via east or 
south east (via Russia, Red sea or  other ways) ? Now i have path via US 
and looking something in opposite direction.


thanks for some info, contact.
Piotr




From Europe to Australia via right way

2015-04-01 Thread Piotr

Hello,

There is some telecom, isp which have route from EU to AU via east or 
south east (via Russia, Red sea or  other ways) ? Now i have path via US 
and looking something in opposite direction.


thanks for some info, contact.
Piotr


Re: From Europe to Australia via right way

2015-04-01 Thread Tom Paseka
you won't find internet packets going that way though (most of the time).
You can buy a L2vpn, p2p, etc, that will though.

On Wed, Apr 1, 2015 at 2:51 PM, joel jaeggli joe...@bogus.com wrote:

 On 4/1/15 3:14 AM, Piotr wrote:
  Hello,
 
  There is some telecom, isp which have route from EU to AU via east or
  south east (via Russia, Red sea or  other ways) ? Now i have path via US
  and looking something in opposite direction.

 telstra ntt reliance retn all have eastbound paths from europe.

  thanks for some info, contact.
  Piotr
 





Re: From Europe to Australia via right way

2015-04-01 Thread Matt Perkins
Some times you can get luck and go through SE-ME-WE3 (we it's not cut) 
but most path's are via the US.

What is your destination network in Australia.

Matt


On 2/04/2015 10:10 am, Tom Paseka wrote:

you won't find internet packets going that way though (most of the time).
You can buy a L2vpn, p2p, etc, that will though.

On Wed, Apr 1, 2015 at 2:51 PM, joel jaeggli joe...@bogus.com wrote:


On 4/1/15 3:14 AM, Piotr wrote:

Hello,

There is some telecom, isp which have route from EU to AU via east or
south east (via Russia, Red sea or  other ways) ? Now i have path via US
and looking something in opposite direction.

telstra ntt reliance retn all have eastbound paths from europe.


thanks for some info, contact.
Piotr







--
/* Matt Perkins
Direct 1300 137 379Spectrum Networks Ptd. Ltd.
Office 1300 133 299m...@spectrum.com.au
   Level 6, 350 George Street Sydney 2000
Spectrum Networks is a member of the Communications Alliance  TIO
*/



Re: From Europe to Australia via right way

2015-04-01 Thread Rod Beck
Yes,  I believe PCCW had the route at one time.

Roderick Beck
Sales Director/Europe and the Americas
Hibernia Networks
http://www.hibernianetworks.com
Budapest and New York
36-30-859-5144
rod.b...@hibernianetworks.com


From: NANOG nanog-bounces+rod.beck=hibernianetworks@nanog.org on behalf 
of Piotr piotr.1...@interia.pl
Sent: Wednesday, April 1, 2015 12:14 PM
To: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: From Europe to Australia via right way

Hello,

There is some telecom, isp which have route from EU to AU via east or
south east (via Russia, Red sea or  other ways) ? Now i have path via US
and looking something in opposite direction.

thanks for some info, contact.
Piotr
This e-mail and any attachments thereto is intended only for use by the 
addressee(s) named herein and may be proprietary and/or legally privileged. If 
you are not the intended recipient of this e-mail, you are hereby notified that 
any dissemination, distribution or copying of this email, and any attachments 
thereto, without the prior written permission of the sender is strictly 
prohibited. If you receive this e-mail in error, please immediately telephone 
or e-mail the sender and permanently delete the original copy and any copy of 
this e-mail, and any printout thereof. All documents, contracts or agreements 
referred or attached to this e-mail are SUBJECT TO CONTRACT. The contents of an 
attachment to this e-mail may contain software viruses that could damage your 
own computer system. While Hibernia Networks has taken every reasonable 
precaution to minimize this risk, we cannot accept liability for any damage 
that you sustain as a result of software viruses. You should carry out your own 
virus checks before opening any attachment.


Re: From Europe to Australia via right way

2015-04-01 Thread Dorian Kim
I don’t believe anyone has significant IP network capacity going EU - 
Australia in that direction, esp. since once you get to Singapore, the options 
to get to Australia are limited.

Even for networks that do have EU to Asia connectivity via Indian Ocean or land 
route to north Asia, the preferred path would be via US and transpac.

-dorian


 On Apr 1, 2015, at 5:51 PM, joel jaeggli joe...@bogus.com wrote:
 
 On 4/1/15 3:14 AM, Piotr wrote:
 Hello,
 
 There is some telecom, isp which have route from EU to AU via east or
 south east (via Russia, Red sea or  other ways) ? Now i have path via US
 and looking something in opposite direction.
 
 telstra ntt reliance retn all have eastbound paths from europe.
 
 thanks for some info, contact.
 Piotr
 
 
 



Re: From Europe to Australia via right way

2015-04-01 Thread joel jaeggli
On 4/1/15 3:14 AM, Piotr wrote:
 Hello,
 
 There is some telecom, isp which have route from EU to AU via east or
 south east (via Russia, Red sea or  other ways) ? Now i have path via US
 and looking something in opposite direction.

telstra ntt reliance retn all have eastbound paths from europe.

 thanks for some info, contact.
 Piotr
 




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