[15919] in North American Network Operators' Group

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RE: Asymmetric routing with tunnel.

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Bill St. Arnaud)
Mon Mar 30 15:51:34 1998

From: "Bill St. Arnaud" <bill.st.arnaud@canarie.ca>
To: <nanog@merit.edu>, "Jaeho Yang" <jhyang@nuri.net>
Cc: "Yves Poppe" <ypoppe@teleglobe.ca>
Date: Mon, 30 Mar 1998 15:20:46 -0500
In-Reply-To: <351DF7AC.2B2382B7@nuri.net>

Teleglobe is providing a similar type of service to Telstra's Internet
Service in Australia.

Contact Bob Collett at Teleglobe for more details

Bill

-------------------------------------------
Bill St Arnaud
Director Network Projects
CANARIE
bill.st.arnaud@canarie.ca
http://www.canarie.ca/bstarn

 

 



> -----Original Message-----
> From: owner-nanog@merit.edu [mailto:owner-nanog@merit.edu]On Behalf Of
> Jaeho Yang
> Sent: Sunday, March 29, 1998 2:27 AM
> To: nanog@merit.edu
> Subject: Asymmetric routing with tunnel.
>
>
> We have terrestrial link between korea and us. But we have many down
> traffic (US -> Korea),
> we consider satellite for getting more incoming bandwidth. I contacted
> serveral satellite service
> providers, but the major concern is integration with existing
> terrestrial link.
>
> Our connection point is located in PAIX(Digital IX). But one candidate
> is located in Mae-east.
>
> My idea is transmitting some traffic into Mae-east via making tunnel.
>
> The border router sends incoming mail, ftp, and news traffic into VPN
> box, which is connected
> with other port of router. The traffic was encapulated by VPN box. VPN
> box makes a tunnel
> with one of Mae-east, which has the similar VPN box configured with our
> one.
>
> The router of mae-east sends traffic into the router of Satellite
> Service provider.
> The satellite transmit our traffics...
>
> I'll verify my idea is feasible, and there are some reference sites..
>
> Thanks in advance.
>
> --J
>


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