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Pastimes : Home on the range where the buffalo roam -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Sig who wrote (12276)4/4/2001 8:34:51 PM
From: A.L. Reagan  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 13572
 
That'll get us a router,software, a bank loan and some gas.

Sig (and Bo) you better save up for that new router, because even though we are (today) awash in auction routers at fire sale prices, along comes this:

Faster 'Net growth rate raises fears about routers
By CAROLYN DUFFY MARSAN
Network World, 04/02/01

Alarm bells are ringing in the Internet engineering community over an obscure statistic that indicates the 'Net is growing - in size and complexity - at a faster rate than today's routers can handle.

This recent finding has prompted the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) to embark on an overhaul of the communications protocol that handles routing across the Internet's backbone.

At stake for large companies may be the need to buy more powerful network gear earlier than originally intended.

"The sky is not falling, but the sky is hanging a little low," says Fred Baker, a routing pioneer with Cisco and a member of the IETF's Internet Architecture Board. "The issue needs to be addressed soon."

The statistic in question is the number of entries in the backbone's routing table, the master list of network destinations that is stored in backbone routers and used to determine the best path from one network to another. The size and traffic in the routing table are indicators of the overall health of the Internet, in particular how well the individual networks that comprise the Internet are communicating with each other.

After years of predictable growth, the size of the routing table and traffic in it exploded during the past six months, topping 104,000 entries in March, compared with 75,000 a year ago. Even more troubling is evidence that frequent updates to the routing table entries by network managers are causing instability in the Internet's backbone routing infrastructure.

Nobody knows how big or how active the routing table can get before the Internet's core routers start crashing. But current projections show that if the growth goes unchecked, the Internet could face a router processing-power crunch in as soon as 18 months.

"It's not the size of the table, but the number of updates per second that kills a router stone dead," explains Geoff Huston, a Telstra official who tracks this statistic for the IETF. "By the time the table gets to around 200,000 entries, we may be pushing a default-free router well beyond its processing capability."

In addition, the churn in the Internet's routing table means that it is taking longer to propagate accurate routing information globally across the Internet.

The time it takes the Internet to process a route withdrawal or a route announcement is getting longer, Huston says. "This is again a processor overload issue."

What's driving the increase in routing table entries is the rising popularity of multihoming on corporate networks. Multihoming is the term used to describe a network configuration in which one Internet server is connected to two different ISPs for improved reliability and redundancy. A multihomed network requires a separate entry in the routing table for each ISP.

Most large companies and dot-coms multihome their networks. Huston estimates that 70% of the announcements in today's routing table are related to multihoming.

Multihoming is popular because the cost of transmission circuits is plummeting, making it less expensive to buy Internet access services from two or more ISPs. At the same time, companies are more concerned about the reliability of their networks and less willing to trust one service provider.

"Half of the companies that are multihomed should have gotten better service from their providers," says Patrik Faltstrom, a Cisco engineer and co-chair of the IETF's Applications Area. "ISPs haven't done a good enough job explaining to their customers that they don't need to multihome."

For network managers with multihomed networks, the growing size and complexity of the Internet's routing table means they may need to buy bigger, more expensive routers and upgrade them more frequently, experts say. That's because routers must store a view of the routing table for each ISP they use. The router processing problem is worse for backbone providers, which store hundreds of views of the routing table in their routers.

"When you talk about the size of the routing tables, it's a symptom that you're talking about, like a cough,'' Baker says. "The issue isn't that the routing tables are too big or multihoming is bad. It's that these trends are driving equipment costs and putting more burdens on the routing protocols."

In response, the IETF plans to revamp the 6-year-old standard used in multihoming and backbone routing: the Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) 4. Network managers run BGP4 on routers to load balance and back up their Internet traffic across multiple ISPs.

The IETF is concerned about whether BGP4 "can scale up to carrying millions or even tens of millions of distinct routing entries," Huston says. "I believe we can scale up BGP to about two to three times of today without too much drama. . . . We could tweak BGP to scale up to 10 to 20 times the size of today if we had better use of route attributes that allow selective aggregation."

Selective aggregation would reduce the number and frequency of changes to the routing tables. For example, when the Internet's backbone loses a link today, hundreds of messages are sent to the routing tables saying that individual routes are down. In the future, BGP might be able to announce this message once. Similarly, routers can communicate only with a neighbor or the whole Internet using BGP4. In the future, routers might also be able to communicate with the other routers along one path of the Internet.

To tackle these questions of how best to revamp BGP4, the IETF has launched a new effort called Prefix Taxonomy Ongoing Measurement and Inter Network Experiment (Ptomaine). The BGP4 redesign should be done in about a year.

The need to revamp BGP "is a problem we've been playing ostrich with for years,'' says Randy Bush, co-chair of the IETF's operations and management area and vice president of IP Networking at Verio. "An upgrade to BGP will give network managers improved tools that allow them to meet their redundancy and reliability needs with multihoming and balance their traffic without being bad 'Net citizens'' by overloading the routing tables.

Ultimately, the IETF may need to develop a new framework for routing, in which load balancing and other traffic engineering messages used in multihomed networks are carried by protocols other than BGP.

nwfusion.com

Geez, and here I mighta thought the Internet was done growing and we already have all the routers we need for the next 4-5 years. Now we find out we need new, more complex routers, like real soon.

Hmmm, must be an isolated incident. <g>



To: Sig who wrote (12276)4/5/2001 11:05:00 AM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 13572
 
Tech Company Executives See Wealth Plunge

Thursday April 5 10:32 AM ET

By Thi Nguyen

<<NEW YORK (Reuters) - If you're disappointed with your investment in tech stocks, here's something that might give you a little comfort -- most tech company chief executives have seen huge declines in their personal wealth.

Microsoft Corp.'s. (NasdaqNM:MSFT - news) Bill Gates (news - web sites), No. 1 on the Forbes magazine list of the 400 wealthiest Americans in 2000, lost about $39 billion over the last year as his stake in the company dropped in value, according to Kevin Schwenger at Thomson Financial's insiderSCORES.com.

That's twice Ecuador's Gross Domestic Product.

The value of Gates' 700 million shares in the world's largest software maker dropped by roughly half from $79 billion a year ago. Over the year, Gates sold about 4 percent of his holdings, Schwenger said.

Microsoft Chief Executive Officer Steven Ballmer, lost about $12 billion, more than Kenya's annual GDP (news - web sites).

Amazon.com Inc. (NasdaqNM:AMZN - news) Chief Executive Jeffrey Bezos had the biggest percentage loss in terms of his personal wealth. The 117 million shares owned by the founder of the world's biggest Internet retailer dropped 84 percent in value to a mere $1.2 billion, down from $7.7 billion a year ago.

And who knows what Michael Dell of Dell Computer Corp.(NasdaqNM:DELL - news) had in mind when he was buying 63 million more shares in the personal computer maker he founded, even as the shares fell.

Though his stake in the company increased by 23 percent, Dell still saw the value of his holdings drop by $6 billion, or 41 percent in the last year.

Even Oracle Corp.'s (NasdaqNM:ORCL - news) Larry Ellison, No. 2 on Forbes' list, who sold half of his shares in the company, saw the value of the shares he retained in the world's second-largest software maker reduced by $16 billion, or 61 percent.

Other tech executives who saw their wealth evaporate included Gateway Inc.'s (NYSE:GTW - news)'s Theodore Waitt, who lost $4.7 billion even after selling 13 percent of his shares over the year, and Scott McNealy of Sun Microsystems (NasdaqNM:SUNW - news), who lost about $2.2 billion, or 67 percent, of the value of his stock holdings.

The non-tech CEOs did better.

Warren Buffett (news - web sites), Forbes' No. 4 wealthiest American, who recently said he had not bought any technology stocks despite the Nasdaq Composite index declining 67 percent from its all-time record close in March last year, saw the value of his stake in Berkshire Hathaway Inc. (NYSE:BRKa - news), an investment company, rise 14 percent. That was a gain of $4 billion on the 477,000 shares, or the 30 percent stake, he holds.

Buffett hasn't bought or sold any stock in the company for the last five years.>>