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Re: Should Virgin Media Throttle p2p traffic?
Voted no for following reasons.
1 - protocol shaping sucks in general, false positives. plus inspecting traffic resource intensive which itself can cause performance issues. 2 - no differential on light or heavy user, this system treats a heavy http user better than a light p2p user. 3 - useless if an area is congested and no or little p2p usage to throttle. That doesnt mean I think there should be no congestion management just that I think there is better ways of doing it than protocol shaping. ---------- Post added at 21:55 ---------- Previous post was at 21:52 ---------- Quote:
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Re: Should Virgin Media Throttle p2p traffic?
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Re: Should Virgin Media Throttle p2p traffic?
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---------- Post added at 22:02 ---------- Previous post was at 22:00 ---------- Quote:
Bear in mind VM are not been told to stop the shaping but rather to make the shaping match what is put on the website, so in affect either change the website to say what they whitelist and that rest is shaped, or to make shaping blacklist instead of whitelist. |
Re: Should Virgin Media Throttle p2p traffic?
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BTW Chrys, You should've received an email from Neil at samknows today. Did you get it? |
Re: Should Virgin Media Throttle p2p traffic?
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Re: Should Virgin Media Throttle p2p traffic?
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Oh wait, there's about 3,000 private customers in total in the UK on 100Mbps products apart from VM. In other words you can't get those levels of performance from anyone else, even with the peak shaping in mind. ---------- Post added at 22:42 ---------- Previous post was at 22:38 ---------- Quote:
VM would need to do some quite heavy duty upgrades to facilitate a Comcast-like system. Their current systems just aren't capable of dynamic service flow changes or such timely traffic monitoring while the Comcast systems were thanks to their running IPDR to police their 250GB/month cap and their more advanced QoS management from their PacketCable system to supply VoIP over the cable network. |
Re: Should Virgin Media Throttle p2p traffic?
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Re: Should Virgin Media Throttle p2p traffic?
If vm add any more things into the network they're just going to make it worse. The more things they put our traffic through the higher pings will be
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Re: Should Virgin Media Throttle p2p traffic?
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In answer to the other point yes, absolutely, done on the quick and cheap. They are doing it quite cleverly and in the cheapest feasible way however you misunderstand why it was done. It was done to relieve pressure from transit and peering not local networks. |
Re: Should Virgin Media Throttle p2p traffic?
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Re: Should Virgin Media Throttle p2p traffic?
I think that even with application shaping on the 50mbit and 100mbit connections, that Virgin Media are offering are excellent products for the price that they ask for. It wasn't that long in the past when 0.5mbit cost around £50 when it was first introduced. Comming from using 56k modems that was lucky to have a 3k download rate I think that users today are exteremly spoilt and want quite a lot for relativley nothing.
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Re: Should Virgin Media Throttle p2p traffic?
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Also worrying in that VM obviously consider their port utilisation issues to not be a problem if the management wasnt even put in place to control that. BT are selling a up to 40mbit product, VM's is superior on paper so there is no need to copy what BT are doing. They just need a better marketing team who can take advantage of BT's weaknesses. Consumers do have the cash, they spend horrific amounts on mobiles phones. gas, electric etc. |
Re: Should Virgin Media Throttle p2p traffic?
Perhaps Igni can tell us whether VM's current system is the same as Plusnet DSL's implementation? Using both services I know VOIP on Plusnet is absolutely faultless, the downside is p2p on their network is virtually dial-up at peak times.
I can't actually get Asterisk to get along with the Super Hub properly to test call quality on VM these days. From past experience there were lots of packet loss, jitter and other unpleasant stuff to make it unusable. If their new system is DPI I'd expect it to be perfect now when it comes across VOIP packets. |
Re: Should Virgin Media Throttle p2p traffic?
plusnet shape but they also do priority class's for different types of traffic. gold silver bronze etc.
so they will throttle specific things down such as p2p and as you say very severely. Then on top of that if their pipes are hitting saturation point then stuff in their bronze class will be further throttled by deliberatly dropping packets to maintain the higher class's. Things like VOIP are in their platinum class I think. Web browsing is in gold class, and if you on their PAYG product everything is gold. So plusnet's is more advanced. VM appear to have no system's in place that react to saturation and is a simple protocol shaping mechanism. My thoughts based on what I read here and elsewhere and what I know of plusnet's system (as they quite open about it). Plusnet even admit they shape unidentified traffic. They even do things like throttle gaming traffic to 2mbit but put it in a high priority class. This I guess means if they accidently mark traffic as gaming or someone fakes it, they will still be throttled but gamers wont find their packets been dropped as they in a high priority class. |
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