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Europe-to-US congestion and packet loss on he.net network, and their NOC@ won't even respond
- Subject: Europe-to-US congestion and packet loss on he.net network, and their NOC@ won't even respond
- From: rs at seastrom.com (Rob Seastrom)
- Date: Sun, 01 Dec 2013 07:27:42 -0500
- In-reply-to: <CAEmG1=onvwhbkMqQ8oDcz-VXO+yC7zhWEaYHAeYMO4P0w+66kg@mail.gmail.com> (Matthew Petach's message of "Sat, 30 Nov 2013 23:19:49 -0800")
- References: <[email protected]> <CAEmG1=onvwhbkMqQ8oDcz-VXO+yC7zhWEaYHAeYMO4P0w+66kg@mail.gmail.com>
Matthew Petach <mpetach at netflight.com> writes:
> Using a 1/10th of a second interval is rather anti-social.
> I know we rate-limit ICMP traffic down, and such a
> short interval would be detected as attack traffic,
> and treated as such.
This should be obvious to everyone here but just in case, there's also
a huge difference between hammering the control plane of every router
along the path due to TTL expiration (mtr) and trying to smoke out
intermittent performance problems between end points with a few
hundred packets/second of various sizes of icmp or udp *between those
end points*. Folks should expect the former to be rate limited - a
reasonable control plane policing policy is not optional these days.
-r