1,240 research outputs found

    On the latency and routing impacts of remote peering to the Internet

    Get PDF
    Remote peering (RP) has crucially altered the Internet topology and its economics. In creasingly popular thanks to its lower costs and simplicity, RP has shifted the member base of Internet eXchange Points (IXPs) from strictly local to include ASes located any where in the world. While the popularity of RP is well understood, its implications on Internet routing and performance are not. In this thesis, we perform a comprehensive measurement study of RP in the wild, based on a representative set of IXPs (including some of the largest ones in the world, covering the five continents). We first identify the challenges of inferring remote peering and the limitations of the existing methodologies. Next, we perform active measurements to identify the deployment of remote IXP inter faces and announced prefixes in these IXPs, including a longitudinal analysis to observe RP growth over one and a half years. We use the RP inferences on IXPs to investigate whether RP routes announced at IXPs tend to be preferred over local ones and what are their latency and latency variability impacts when using different interconnection meth ods (remote peering, local peering, and transit) to deliver traffic. Next, we asses the RP latency impact when using a remote connection to international IXPs and reaching prefix destinations announced by their members. We perform measurements leveraging the in frastructure of a large Latin American RP reseller and compare the latency to reach IXP prefixes via RP and four Transit providers. Finally, we glimpse some of the RP impli cations on Internet routing. We evaluate how RP can considerably affect IXP members’ connection stability, potentially introduce routing detours caused by prefix announcement mispractices and be the target of traffic engineering by ASes using BGP communities

    Human experience in the natural and built environment : implications for research policy and practice

    Get PDF
    22nd IAPS conference. Edited book of abstracts. 427 pp. University of Strathclyde, Sheffield and West of Scotland Publication. ISBN: 978-0-94-764988-3

    On the latency impact of remote peering

    Get PDF
    Internet Exchange Points (IXPs) play an essential role in the Internet, providing a fabric for thousands of Autonomous Systems (ASes) to interconnect. Initially designed to keep local traffic local, IXPs now interconnect ASes all over the world, and the premise that IXP routes should be shorter and faster than routes through a transit provider may not be valid anymore. Using BGP views from eight IXPs (three in Brazil, two in the U.S., and one each in London, Amsterdam, and Johannesburg), a transit connection at each of these locations, and latency measurements we collected in May 2021, we compare the latency to reach the same addresses using routes from remote peers, local peers, and transit providers. For four of these IXPs, at least 71.4% of prefixes advertised by remote peers also had a local peering route, BGP generally preferred the remote route due to its shorter AS path, but the local route had lower latency than the remote route in the majority of cases. When a remote route was the only peering route available at an IXP, it had slightly lower latency than a corresponding transit route available outside the IXP for >57.6% of the prefixes for seven of the eight IXPs

    A Captive Care Guide, Teaching Curriculum and Animal Care References for Amphibians and Reptiles in a Secondary Education Classroom

    Full text link
    The objective of this project is to create teaching curriculum as w ell as ancillary resources regarding the use of native, captive bred and/or commonly used pet trade amphibian and reptile species in a secondary education classroom. The project will include a detailed list of reptile and amphibian veterinarians from around the state, a discussion regarding disposal of captives and rescues, information on housing, life expectancy, adult size, nutrition, good and bad choices of species to have in classrooms and/or nature center (both wild and captive list), and disclaimers (school policies, state and regional permits and policies, health and safety for your protection and the protection of the animal) all with emphasis on the instructor being the advocate for the animal as well as an emphasis for common or captive bred species being used instead of rare species.Master of ScienceBiologyUniversity of Michigan-Flinthttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/143442/1/HarrisE.pd

    The global information technology report 2014

    Get PDF
    Executive summary When The Global Information Technology Report (GITR) and the Networked Readiness Index (NRI) were created more than 13 years ago, the attention of decision makers was focused on how to develop strategies that would allow them to benefit from what Time Magazine had described as “the new economy”: a new way of organizing and managing economic activity based on the new opportunities that the Internet provided for businesses. At present, the world is slowly emerging from one of the worst financial and economic crises in decades, and policymakers, business leaders, and civil society are looking into new opportunities that can consolidate growth, generate new employment, and create business opportunities. Information and communication technologies (ICTs) continue to rank high on the list as one of the key sources of new opportunities to foster innovation and boost economic and social prosperity, for both advanced and emerging economies. For more than 13 years, the NRI has provided decision makers with a useful conceptual framework to evaluate the impact of ICTs at a global level and to benchmark the ICT readiness and usage of their economies
    corecore