Fwd: MPLS acceptable latency?

eric-list at truenet.com eric-list at truenet.com
Thu Nov 15 20:38:42 UTC 2012


<bold>My humble opinion</bold>
SLAs are more for accountants and lawyers.  Get the right tech support on 
the phone and you can solve most issues without all the hassle.  SLAs 
really are minimal if you can contact the right people and work through the 
problem.  +1 to Level3 and Cogent as I have had some of the best trouble 
shooting for even minimal problems...

----------------------------------------
 From: "david peahi" <davidpeahi at gmail.com>
Sent: Thursday, November 15, 2012 3:31 PM
To: nanog at nanog.org
Subject: Fwd: MPLS acceptable latency?

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: david peahi <davidpeahi at gmail.com>
Date: Thu, Nov 15, 2012 at 12:15 PM
Subject: Re: MPLS acceptable latency?
To: Mikeal Clark <mikeal.clark at gmail.com>

Assuming no configuration errors, this underscores the need to negotiate
SLAs, and serious SLA penalties, with the telcos, and to always request a
telco network map, with the telco path that data will be transitting
end-to-end.. My rule of thumb in network design is that data over copper 
or
fiber takes 10 ms per 1000 miles, which is governed by the speed of light.
Network devices along the path add serialization/de-serialization delay,
but with modern network devices this delay is negligible. So according to
this rule of thumb 85 ms is almost enough time for data to traverse the 
USA
3 times.
I have found that telcos have been setting round trip SLAs so high that
they are meaningless (e.g. 50 ms for a GigE MEF ELAN service, 20 ms for
"Gold" MEF EVPL service), and border on being  fraudulent. In one case I
also noted 100 ms round trip times between sites less than 1 mile away, 
and
discovered that every packet was being sent back to east Texas from
Southern California, almost a 5000 mile detour.



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