On Sat, Apr 18, 2009 at 04:01:41PM +0000, Paul Vixie wrote:
> > Date: Sat, 18 Apr 2009 10:09:00 +0000
> > From: bmann...@vacation.karoshi.com
> > 
> >     ... well...  while there is a certain childlike obession with the
> >     byzantine, rube-goldburg, lots of bells, knobs, whistles type
> >     machines... for solid, predictable performance, simple clean
> >     machines work best.
> 
> like you i long for the days when a DELNI could do this job.  nobody
> makes hubs anymore though.  but the above text juxtaposes poorly against
> the below text:

        i never said i longed for DELNI's  (although there is a naive
        beauty in such things)  

        i make the claim that simple, clean design and execution is best.
        even the security goofs will agree.   

> but either way it's not a DELNI any more.  what i see is inevitable
> complexity and various different ways of layering that complexity in.  the
> choice of per-peering VLANs represents a minimal response to the problems
> of shared IXP fabrics, with maximal impedance matching to the PNI's that
> inevitably follow successful shared-port peerings.
> 

        complexity invites failure - failure in unusual and unexpected
        ways.  small & simple systems are more nimble, faster and more 
resilient.
        complex is usually big, slow, fraught w/ little used code paths, a 
veritable
        nesting ground for virus, worm, half-baked truths, and poorly tested
        assumptions.

        one very good reason folks move to PNI's is that they are simpler to do.
        More cost-effective -AT THAT performance point-.

        I worry (to the extent that I worry about such things at all these days)
        that the code that drives the Internet these days is bloated, slow, and
        generally trying to become the "swiss-army-knife" application of critial
        infrastructure joy.  witness BGP.  more knobs/whistles than you can 
shake
        a stick at.   the distinct lack of restraint by code developers in their
        desire to add every possible feature is argueably the primary reason the
        Internet is so riddled with security vulnerabilities.

        I'll get off my soap-box now and let you resume your observations that 
        complexity as a goal in and of itself is the olny path forward.  What
        a dismal world-view.

--bill

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