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To: w2j2 who wrote (551)11/17/1997 2:28:00 PM
From: Maverick  Respond to of 1629
 
Even a $10M
upgrade won't fix
congested Internet
exchange points
Increase in packet loss has
MAEs scrambling for answers.

By Sandra Gittlen and Denise
Pappalardo
Network World Fusion, 11/7/97

What does $10 million get you?
Maybe only a Band-Aid if you're
operating some of the busiest
Internet exchange points in the
world.

That is what WorldCom, Inc. is
spending to fix MAE-East and
MAE-West, its two metropolitan
area exchange (MAE) points that
are buckling under the demand of
Internet service providers. But
according to most industry
observers, WorldCom's two-year
$10 million antidote will not be the
cure.

The dramatic growth of the Internet
increasingly translates into intense
packet loss, frequent switch
rebooting and overall network
congestion at the more than one
dozen MAEs and network access
points in operation. And that means
headaches for businesses that depend on the 'Net.

Dwight Gibbs, chief technical fool for Web-based financial
advisory firm Motley Fool, knows this firsthand. His users
accuse him of poor quality of service when Web pages are slow
to appear. He then shows them trace routes he has done to
track where slowdowns occur and points to congestion at the
MAEs, he said.



To: w2j2 who wrote (551)11/17/1997 2:31:00 PM
From: Maverick  Respond to of 1629
 
MAE-East congestion seems a good opportunity for ASND
WorldCom and the ISPs have identified the problems as
head-of-line blocking, which causes pipes into the exchange
point to jam up, resulting in packets being dropped, and
congestion. Dropped packets mean ISPs have to dedicate more
resources to retransmitting, which, in turn, wastes bandwidth.
Nowhere is the dramatic growth of the Internet felt more
strongly than at WorldCom's MAE-East, in Vienna, Va.; the
busiest MAE.

Packet loss at MAE-East has recently approached 40%. As a
result ISPs that link to the MAE to exchange traffic with other
ISPs are screaming for upgrades. WorldCom, which got the job
of fixing the MAEs when it bought original architect MFS
Communications Co., Inc., has answered the call with more
Digital Equipment Corp. FDDI GIGAswitches, but most
observers believe FDDI's days are numbered.

Past and present

Less than four years ago, MAE-East had a single GIGAswitch.
Today, it has seven - three of them deployed this year as the
first part of the MAEs' overhaul.

To put further packet loss at bay, MAE technicians recently
revamped the MAE-East architecture. What was simply a ring
of GIGAswitches strung together has been rearchitected to a
mesh formation with one switch at the core.

"We've also dispersed high-load customers to reduce the
stress on a single switch," said Larry Walberg, director of global
network operations at WorldCom.

Despite these fixes, WorldCom believes MAE-East still will
reach full capacity by January, said Dan Lasater, vice president
of broadband applications at WorldCom. But if even one
exchange point is going to reach full capacity in a handful of
months, why invest millions in FDDI?

This question has many scratching their heads.

There are really only three technology choices for MAE and
NAP operators today -- ATM, Gigabit Ethernet and IP over
Synchronous Optical Network (SONET), said Tim Weingarten,
research associate at BancAmerica Robertson Stephens, a San
Francisco-based consulting firm.



To: w2j2 who wrote (551)11/17/1997 2:32:00 PM
From: Maverick  Respond to of 1629
 
MAE-East congestion, Part III
These technologies support wire-speed switching, unlike
FDDI, he said. When the MAEs and NAPs were first
constructed, FDDI was a good, solid choice, Weingarten said.
But not today. FDDI can only switch at 100M bit/sec. If you are
connecting to a MAE with an OC-3 or OC-12 connection, you
will not get 155M bit/sec or 622M bit/sec respectively, he said.

Although the second installment of the $10 million will fund
research to determine which of these technologies is viable,
principal MAE architect Steve Feldman said WorldCom is not
ready to commit to a single architecture but is considering all the
options.

ISPs that are dependent on the MAEs are not happy with
WorldCom's choices thus far. "There has to be more thought put
into the scaling of the interconnects," said Rodney Joffe, chief
technical officer for Phoenix-based ISP Genuity, Inc.

Joffe contends that WorldCom is already too late to solve the
problem. "They should already be up and running with a test
bed."

"The MAEs suck," said Motley Fool's Gibbs. He has been
dealing with the MAE problems for many months now and is
excited when UUNET Technologies, Inc., his ISP, enters into
private peering with his customers' ISPs.

In fact, private peering is quite popular among the top-tier ISPs.
Private peering arrangements are typically two dedicated T-3
connections between two ISPs. Each ISP takes responsibility
for one of the T-3 lines. Here, ISPs can exchange traffic without
going through any of the public exchange points.

However, all maintain public peering connections to MAEs and
NAPs around the country.