[95034] in North American Network Operators' Group
Re: Measurement data on transit traffic in IP routers?
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Andrew Lee)
Sun Feb 18 10:57:45 2007
Date: Sun, 18 Feb 2007 10:54:10 -0500
From: Andrew Lee <leea@grnoc.iu.edu>
To: Chris Develder <chris.develder@intec.ugent.be>
Cc: nanog@merit.edu
In-Reply-To: <45D82E76.6020803@intec.ugent.be>
Errors-To: owner-nanog@merit.edu
Hi Chris
Your statement makes something of a presumption as to the architecture
of a network. In many networks, edge aggregation devices do not
participate in backbone routing, but simply pass the traffic they are
aggregating into the core.
One fairly well instrumented network that does have this edge/core
collapsed model is the Internet2 network. You can find a lot of traffic
and other data for the network at:
http://noc.net.internet2.edu/i2network/live-network-status.html
You should be able to extract all the info you need from there.
/Andrew
Chris Develder wrote, On 2/18/07 5:46 AM:
>
> Hi All,
>
> In preparation of a course, I'm looking for reference material (paper,
> report, talk...) giving real world data on the amount of transit traffic
> (ie. not locally dropped or added, but passing through to other
> (backbone) routers) in a "typical" edge router of a core network, esp.
> ratio of local vs passthrough traffic (is it 30%, 40%...?) -- I don't
> need absolute figures, just realistic estimates of that ratio.
>
> Any help in locating such references would be highly appreciated.
>
> Kind regards,
> Chris
>