Re: Cost per prefix [was: request for help w/ ATT and terminology]

From: Patrick W. Gilmore (no email)
Date: Sun Jan 20 2008 - 17:10:32 EST

  • Next message: Alex Rubenstein: "RE: An Attempt at Economically Rational Pricing: Time Warner Trial"

    On Jan 20, 2008, at 3:34 PM, William Herrin wrote:

    >> The difference is much, much, much greater than that. Can the switch
    >> do ACLs? Policy routing? SFlow with the same sampling rate? Same
    >> number of BGP session?
    >
    > Is there some alternate piece of cheap hardware that supports the DFZ
    > prefix count at high data rates but doesn't have those features? If
    > the answer is no (and I'm pretty sure the answer is no), then the
    > prefix count remains the proper attribution for the cost delta.

    We still disagree.

    I notice you cut out the next two sentences:

    <quote>
    In short, if the table were 50K prefixes instead of 250K, would these
    pieces of equipment be equivalent? The answer is a blatant "no".
    </quote>

    If we take out the "proper attribution for the cost delta" out of the
    equation and the equipment is still not considered equal, I submit
    your idea of "proper attribution" is, well, not proper.

    To be clear, of course there are some people who could use either if
    the table were 50K prefixes. But the majority of routers in the DFZ
    cannot be replaced by cheap 1U (or whatever) switches which can do a
    few 10s of 1000s of prefixes. (Besides, the people who _can_ use them
    can use them today with properly configured filters, perhaps on the
    upstream router's side. Which, of course, means the upstream router
    cannot be one of those cheap switches. :)

    Perhaps you should justify numbers with nine zeros a little better
    before asking me to justify why they are wrong.

    -- 
    TTFN,
    patrick
    

  • Next message: Alex Rubenstein: "RE: An Attempt at Economically Rational Pricing: Time Warner Trial"





    Hosted Email Solutions

    Invaluement Anti-Spam DNSBLs



    Powered By FreeBSD   Powered By FreeBSD