Re: Surcharge for providing Internet routes?

2010-05-09 Thread Andy Davidson

On 1 May 2010, at 21:43, ML wrote:

 Has anyone here heard of or do they themselves charge extra for
 providing a complete internet table to customers?
 
 Waive the surcharge for sufficiently large commits?

Compared with some kind of reduced/waived fee for partial, or default only, or 
static routes ?

I have seen some of my customers get charged a set up fee (NRC) for bgp (beyond 
the port fee).  Normally an indication to me that we're going to have problems 
with this supplier  And I have never seen this as an MRC, but I guess it 
could happen.  Run a mile if so.

Andy





Re: Surcharge for providing Internet routes?

2010-05-04 Thread Michael Dillon
 I don't think there is a universally agreed upon definition of what
 transit means other than it involves someone paying someone else.

Uhh, transit is an English word which comes from the Latin word
meaning it goes across. Transit has nothing to do with payment
at all. The only thing that everybody agrees on is that transit is
carrying packets across your network to another network.

Clearly, you could give away free transit if it helps you sell
T-shirts, or data center racks or some such, so payment is
just not relevant at all.

The problem is that full transit is such a common thing, that many people
just assume that transit means full transit and there, the misunderstandings
begin, especially with people that haven't had experience with ISPs who
make up their own rules instead of just copying the one down the road.

 I have no idea what the sales people call each in different
 countries, but domestic transit is not a misnomer as the ISP
 selling you this will be providing reacheability to their
 country specific customer base AND reacheability to their
 country specific peers.

Typically, sales people don't care about terminology and will happily
call free transit, paid peering if it helps them make a sale.

But fundamentally, peering is about carrying packets from your
neighbor's network to destinations on your own network in return
for the same thing the other way around. Again, payment is not
part of the definition of peering.

Peering always involves two networks who are neighbors.

Transit always involves three or more networks who are
not neighbors and who have a third party network in
between them. The packets all have to transit the third
party network.

Most everything else is either marketing, or the jostling and adjustment
that happens when you discover that your business model isn't actually
profitable because you didn't think through your pricing structures in
enough detail, and some companies more clever than you have locked
in contracts that you really should not have signed at that price point.

--Michael Dillon



RE: Surcharge for providing Internet routes?

2010-05-04 Thread George Bonser
 -Original Message-
 From: ML 
 Sent: Saturday, May 01, 2010 1:44 PM
 To: nanog@nanog.org
 Subject: Surcharge for providing Internet routes?
 
 Has anyone here heard of or do they themselves charge extra for
 providing a complete internet table to customers?
 
 Waive the surcharge for sufficiently large commits?
 

I had one provider once that wanted to charge me a surcharge simply for
the privilege of running BGP.  The had bgp charge on their list of
things.  Well, we were dual-homed to them and I asked how in the world
they expected to fail traffic over if we *didn't* run bgb.  They should
be requiring I run bgp, not charging extra for it if they intend to meet
their own SLA.  Static routing to a dead link is a surefire SLA killer.
The sales rep got a little red.

As for a full table, no, I have not paid extra for it.





Re: Surcharge for providing Internet routes?

2010-05-03 Thread Randy Bush
 Just to clarify, there are both domestic transit and country specific 
 paid peering products out there in Asia/Pacific region.

and europe.  and ...

randy



Re: Surcharge for providing Internet routes?

2010-05-03 Thread Patrick W. Gilmore
On May 3, 2010, at 10:43 AM, Will Hargrave wrote:
 On 3 May 2010, at 05:27, Matthew Petach wrote:
 In Asia, there is a popular, but incorrectly named product offering
 that many ISPs sell called domestic transit which they sell
 for price $X; for full routes you often pay $2X-$3X.  I grind my
 teeth every time I hear it, since transit doesn't mean to select
 parts of the internet in most people's eyes.  It's really a paid
 peering offering, but no matter how much I try to correct people,
 the habit of calling it domestic transit still persists.  :(
 
 
 This is relatively common in europe too - normally under the name 'partial 
 transit'.

At least they are naming it correctly.


 paid peering: [provider AS] + [providers customers] 
 partial transit: [provider AS] + [providers customers] + [providers peers]
 
 Pricing is typically 5-20% of the cost of full routes, and will provide in 
 the region of 40-120k routes.

And pricing it correctly!

Let's see, transit is at $1/Mbps, so I can get 120K prefixes for $0.05/Mbps? 
snicker

-- 
TTFN,
patrick


Re: Surcharge for providing Internet routes?

2010-05-03 Thread Bill Stewart
Back when I was on that side of the house, if you bought transit from
7018 and were managing your own routers, you got your choice of BGP or
static, and BGP could have full routes, our-customer routes, default
routes, and maybe some other variants.  No charge for any of those
options, but if you wanted full routes you'd need a hefty enough
router, and if you thought you wanted full routes on your T1 line we'd
offer you some hints about that not being a good idea.   Other than
that, full routes burned a bit of extra bandwidth, so if you had
usage-based pricing that might have some minor effects.

(If we were managing your routers, you usually weren't in the
dual-homing business, or at least we'd be charging you more for a
fatter router and managing the extra complexity of whatever you needed
done locally, but all of that was just router management pricing, not
network pricing.)


-- 

 Thanks; Bill

Note that this isn't my regular email account - It's still experimental so far.
And Google probably logs and indexes everything you send it.



Re: Surcharge for providing Internet routes?

2010-05-02 Thread Nick Hilliard

On 1 May 2010, at 22:42, Steve Bertrand st...@ipv6canada.com wrote:


On 2010.05.01 16:43, ML wrote:

Has anyone here heard of or do they themselves charge extra for
providing a complete internet table to customers?


... I've never heard of it, but iow, I'd pay more if I could get my
upstreams to provide the full table...


I've seen the opposite-namely getting a substantial discount for  
moving from a default route feed to a dfz bgp feed.  The rationale was  
that the default route ip connection was provisioned using hsrp on the  
provider side and came with a much stricter sla.


Nick
 
  



Re: Surcharge for providing Internet routes?

2010-05-02 Thread Matthew Petach
On Sat, May 1, 2010 at 1:43 PM, ML m...@kenweb.org wrote:
 Has anyone here heard of or do they themselves charge extra for
 providing a complete internet table to customers?

 Waive the surcharge for sufficiently large commits?

In Asia, there is a popular, but incorrectly named product offering
that many ISPs sell called domestic transit which they sell
for price $X; for full routes you often pay $2X-$3X.  I grind my
teeth every time I hear it, since transit doesn't mean to select
parts of the internet in most people's eyes.  It's really a paid
peering offering, but no matter how much I try to correct people,
the habit of calling it domestic transit still persists.  :(

Matt\



Re: Surcharge for providing Internet routes?

2010-05-02 Thread Dorian Kim
On Sun, May 02, 2010 at 08:27:56PM -0700, Matthew Petach wrote:
 In Asia, there is a popular, but incorrectly named product offering
 that many ISPs sell called domestic transit which they sell
 for price $X; for full routes you often pay $2X-$3X.  I grind my
 teeth every time I hear it, since transit doesn't mean to select
 parts of the internet in most people's eyes.  It's really a paid
 peering offering, but no matter how much I try to correct people,
 the habit of calling it domestic transit still persists.  :(

I don't think there is a universally agreed upon definition of what 
transit means other than it involves someone paying someone else.

Just to clarify, there are both domestic transit and country specific 
paid peering products out there in Asia/Pacific region.

I have no idea what the sales people call each in different
countries, but domestic transit is not a misnomer as the ISP
selling you this will be providing reacheability to their 
country specific customer base AND reacheability to their
country specific peers.

-dorian



Re: Surcharge for providing Internet routes?

2010-05-02 Thread Owen DeLong

On May 2, 2010, at 9:27 PM, Dorian Kim wrote:

 On Sun, May 02, 2010 at 08:27:56PM -0700, Matthew Petach wrote:
 In Asia, there is a popular, but incorrectly named product offering
 that many ISPs sell called domestic transit which they sell
 for price $X; for full routes you often pay $2X-$3X.  I grind my
 teeth every time I hear it, since transit doesn't mean to select
 parts of the internet in most people's eyes.  It's really a paid
 peering offering, but no matter how much I try to correct people,
 the habit of calling it domestic transit still persists.  :(
 
 I don't think there is a universally agreed upon definition of what 
 transit means other than it involves someone paying someone else.
 
Hurricane Electric routinely offers free transit on IPv6, and, we give
free transit to many organizations on IPv4 as well.

To us, transit means giving them routes that are not originated by
our ASN or ASNs which are customers of our ASN.

Owen




Surcharge for providing Internet routes?

2010-05-01 Thread ML
Has anyone here heard of or do they themselves charge extra for
providing a complete internet table to customers?

Waive the surcharge for sufficiently large commits?




Re: Surcharge for providing Internet routes?

2010-05-01 Thread Seth Mattinen
On 5/1/2010 13:43, ML wrote:
 Has anyone here heard of or do they themselves charge extra for
 providing a complete internet table to customers?


I've never heard of nor experienced that before.

~Seth



Re: Surcharge for providing Internet routes?

2010-05-01 Thread aaron
Never heard of it.  We don't do it.


--Original Message--
From: ML
To: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Surcharge for providing Internet routes?
Sent: May 1, 2010 3:43 PM

Has anyone here heard of or do they themselves charge extra for
providing a complete internet table to customers?

Waive the surcharge for sufficiently large commits?




Sent from my Verizon Wireless BlackBerry



Re: Surcharge for providing Internet routes?

2010-05-01 Thread Steve Bertrand
On 2010.05.01 16:43, ML wrote:
 Has anyone here heard of or do they themselves charge extra for
 providing a complete internet table to customers?

... I've never heard of it, but iow, I'd pay more if I could get my
upstreams to provide the full table...

Is there a market? I doubt it.

Steve



Re: Surcharge for providing Internet routes?

2010-05-01 Thread Patrick W. Gilmore
On May 1, 2010, at 5:42 PM, Steve Bertrand wrote:
 On 2010.05.01 16:43, ML wrote:
 Has anyone here heard of or do they themselves charge extra for
 providing a complete internet table to customers?
 
 ... I've never heard of it, but iow, I'd pay more if I could get my
 upstreams to provide the full table...
 
 Is there a market? I doubt it.

Every upstream I've dealt with in the US  western Europe provides a full 
table if you ask.  Kinda the point of being an upstream.

There are some countries where Bee-Gee-Pee is not understood, and they 
therefore do not speak it.

If you buy transit from someone and they charge for setting up BGP and sending 
you a full table in the US, Canada, and most of Europe, I'd find another 
provider.  That one probably isn't clueful enough to provide good service.

In other parts of the planet, well, they probably still aren't clueful enough. 
:)  But when the game is fixed, if it's the only game in town, you sometimes 
have to play anyway.

-- 
TTFN,
patrick




Re: Surcharge for providing Internet routes?

2010-05-01 Thread Steve Bertrand
On 2010.05.01 17:42, Steve Bertrand wrote:
 On 2010.05.01 16:43, ML wrote:
 Has anyone here heard of or do they themselves charge extra for
 providing a complete internet table to customers?
 
 ... I've never heard of it, but iow, I'd pay more if I could get my
 upstreams to provide the full table...

clarification...

...I'd pay a bit more if they would do BGP with me in the first place,
let alone the size of the table I received...

I think I was originally looking at the OP's question incorrectly...

-sb



Re: Surcharge for providing Internet routes?

2010-05-01 Thread deleskie
I've never heard of this either.

-jim
--Original Message--
From: aa...@wholesaleinternet.net
To: ML
To: nanog@nanog.org
ReplyTo: aa...@wholesaleinternet.net
Subject: Re: Surcharge for providing Internet routes?
Sent: May 1, 2010 6:00 PM

Never heard of it.  We don't do it.


--Original Message--
From: ML
To: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Surcharge for providing Internet routes?
Sent: May 1, 2010 3:43 PM

Has anyone here heard of or do they themselves charge extra for
providing a complete internet table to customers?

Waive the surcharge for sufficiently large commits?




Sent from my Verizon Wireless BlackBerry



Sent from my BlackBerry device on the Rogers Wireless Network



Re: Surcharge for providing Internet routes?

2010-05-01 Thread Alex H. Ryu

Do you mean Full routes for BGP ?

Sometimes there are extra charge for BGP, but never heard about full
routes or not.

How can they guarantee whether they provide Full routes or not ?
If some routes are missing, are they going to provide the credit for it ?

Full routes from BGP is always best-effort basis.
So I don't think they can charge it based on whether it is full routes
or not.
They may charge for running BGP with you, but not for full routes or not.

Alex



ML wrote:
 Has anyone here heard of or do they themselves charge extra for
 providing a complete internet table to customers?
 
 Waive the surcharge for sufficiently large commits?
 
 
 
 




Re: Surcharge for providing Internet routes?

2010-05-01 Thread Matthew S. Crocker

We provide full tables to customers that ask, 99% of the time they don't know 
what they are asking for and don't really need it.  full tables doesn't cost 
anything more but we only do it for our 100+meg customers. I don't for example 
do BGP with T1 level customers.

-Matt

- Original Message -

 From: Patrick W. Gilmore patr...@ianai.net
 To: NANOG list nanog@nanog.org
 Sent: Saturday, May 1, 2010 5:46:22 PM
 Subject: Re: Surcharge for providing Internet routes?
 
 On May 1, 2010, at 5:42 PM, Steve Bertrand wrote:
  On 2010.05.01 16:43, ML wrote:
  Has anyone here heard of or do they themselves charge extra for
  providing a complete internet table to customers?
  
  ... I've never heard of it, but iow, I'd pay more if I could get my
  upstreams to provide the full table...
  
  Is there a market? I doubt it.
 
 Every upstream I've dealt with in the US  western Europe provides a
 full table if you ask.  Kinda the point of being an upstream.
 
 There are some countries where Bee-Gee-Pee is not understood, and
 they therefore do not speak it.
 
 If you buy transit from someone and they charge for setting up BGP and
 sending you a full table in the US, Canada, and most of Europe, I'd
 find another provider.  That one probably isn't clueful enough to
 provide good service.
 
 In other parts of the planet, well, they probably still aren't clueful
 enough. :)  But when the game is fixed, if it's the only game in town,
 you sometimes have to play anyway.
 
 -- 
 TTFN,
 patrick

-- 
Matthew S. Crocker
President
Crocker Communications, Inc.
PO BOX 710
Greenfield, MA 01302-0710
http://www.crocker.com
P: 413-746-2760