Internet exchange point
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An Internet exchange point (IX or IXP) is a physical infrastructure that allows different Internet service providers (ISPs) to exchange Internet traffic between their networks (autonomous systems) by means of mutual peering agreements, which allow traffic to be exchanged without cost. IXPs reduce the portion of an ISP's traffic which must be delivered via their upstream transit providers, thereby reducing the Average Per-Bit Delivery Cost of their service. Furthermore, the increased number of paths learned through the IXP improves routing efficiency and fault-tolerance.
The primary purpose of an IXP is to allow networks to interconnect directly, via the exchange, rather than through one or more 3rd party networks. The advantages of the direct interconnection are numerous, but the primary reasons are cost, latency, and bandwidth. Traffic passing through an exchange is typically not billed by any party, whereas traffic to an ISP's upstream provider is. The direct interconnection, often located in the same city as both networks, avoids the need for data to travel to other cities (potentially on other continents) to get from one network to another, thus reducing latency. The third advantage, speed, is most noticeable in areas that have poorly developed long-distance connections. ISPs in these regions might have to pay between 10 or 100 times more for data transport than ISPs in North America, Europe or Japan. Therefore, these ISPs typically have slower, more limited connections to the rest of the internet. However, a connection to a local IXP may allow them to transfer data without limit, and without cost, vastly improving the bandwidth between customers of the two adjacent ISPs.
A typical IXP consists of one or more network switches, to which each of the participating ISPs connect. Prior to the existence of switches, IXPs typically utilized FOIRL hubs or FDDI rings, migrating to Ethernet and FDDI switches as those became available in 1993 and 1994. ATM switches were briefly used at a few IXPs in the late 1990s, accounting for approximately 4% of the market at their peak, and there was an abortive attempt by the Stockholm IXP, NetNod, to use SRP/DPT (an ill-fated conjoinment of FDDI and SONET), but Ethernet has prevailed, accounting for more than 95% of all existing Internet exchange switch fabrics. All Ethernet port speeds are to be found at modern IXPs, ranging from 10 Mbit/s ports in use in small developing-country IXes, to ganged 10 Gbit/s ports in major centers like Seoul, New York, London, Frankfurt, Amsterdam, and Palo Alto.
When an IXP incurs any operating costs, those costs are typically shared among all of its participants. At the more expensive exchanges, participants pay a monthly or annual fee, usually determined by the speed of the port or ports which they're using, or much less commonly by the volume of traffic which they're passing across the exchange (fees based on volume of traffic are unpopular because they provide a counterincentive to growth of the exchange). Some exchanges also have a setup fee, to offset the costs of the switch port and any media adaptors (GBICs, SFPs, XFPs, XENPAKs, et cetera) which the new participant requires, and the labor of configuring it to serve them.
[edit] Interchange of traffic across an Internet Exchange Point
A connection to an IXP does not by itself cause any traffic to be exchanged; it is a physical presence on a shared medium, nothing more.
In order to have Internet traffic flow between two participants on an IXP, the two participants must initiate BGP peering between themselves, and choose to announce routes over the peering relationship - either routes to their own addresses, or routes to addresses of other ISPs that they connect to, possibly via other mechanisms. The other party to the peering can then apply route filtering, where it chooses to accept those routes, and route traffic accordingly, or to ignore those routes, and use other routes to reach those addresses.
In many cases, an ISP will both have a direct link to another ISP and accept a route (normally ignored) to the other ISP through the IXP; if the direct link fails, traffic will then start flowing over the IXP. In this way, the IXP acts as a backup link.
[edit] List of IXPs and IXP-operators
Note: Some of the entries in the list represent IXPs whereas some represent organizations that operate one or more IXPs
[edit] Africa
- Angola
- Angola Internet Exchange (ANG-IX)
- Botswana
- Botswana Internet Exchange (BINX)
- Egypt
- Cairo Internet Exchange (CR-IX)
- Middle East Internet eXchange (MEIX)
- Ghana
- Ghana Internet Exchange (GIX)
- Kenya
- Mozambique
- Nigeria
- Internet Exchange Point of Nigeria (IXPN), Lagos Official website
- Ibadan Internet Exchange (IBIX), Ibadan Official website
- South Africa
- Cape Town Internet Exchange (CINX), Cape Town
- Johannesburg Internet Exchange (JINX), Johannesburg, Official web site
- The Hub Project, Cape Town
- Grahamstown Internet Exchange (GINX), Grahamstown, Official web site
- Tanzania
- Uganda
- Uganda Internet Exchange Point (UiXP) Official website
- Zimbabwe
- Zimbabwe Internet Exchange (ZINX) Official website
[edit] Asia
- Bangladesh
- Bangladesh Internet Exchange,Official Site, (BDIX), Dhaka
- China
- Hong Kong
- Hong Kong Internet Exchange (HKIX)
- Indonesia
- National Inter Connection Exchange (NICE)
- Indonesia Internet Exchange (IIX)
- Biznet Internet Exchange (BIX) site, Jakarta
- Napsindo International Internet Exchange (NAIIX)
- India
- India Internet Exchange (IN-IX)
- Japan
- Japan Network Access Point (JPNAP)
- JPNAP Osaka
- JPNAP6
- JPIX
- DIX-IE (NSPIXP2)
- NSPIXP-6
- Korea
- DACOM IX
- KINX
- Korean Internet Exchange (KIX)
- Malaysia
- Asia Internet Exchange Network Access Point Malaysia (ARIX)
- Kuala Lumpur Internet Exchange, Kuala Lumpur
- Malaysia Internet Exchange (MyIX)
- Nepal
- Nepal Internet Exchange (npIX), Kathmandu
- Philippines
- Manila Internet Exchange, Manila
- Philippine Internet Exchange (PhIX)
- Philippine Common Routing Exchange (PHNET CORE)
- Singapore
- Singapore Open eXchange (SOX)
- Taiwan
- Taiwan Network Access Point (TWNAP)
- TWIX
- Thailand
- National Internet Exchange by CAT (NIX-CAT)
- TOT National Internet Exchange by TOT (NIX-TOT)
- True National Internet Exchange (TIG-NIX)
- Shinawatra National Internet Exchange (NIX-ADC)
- Vietnam
- FPT
- HANOITELECOM
- SAIGONPOSTEL
- VietNam Internet eXchange(VNIX)
- VNPT
- VP TELECOM
- VIETTEL
[edit] Europe
Most major European IXPs are organized in the European Internet Exchange Association (Euro-IX) EURO-IX website.
- Austria
- Vienna Internet Exchange (VIX), Vienna
- Belgium
- Belgian National Internet Exchange (BNIX), Brussels
- Free Belgian Internet Exchange (FreeBIX), Brussels
- Bulgaria
- SIX
- Varna Internet Exchange
- Croatia
- Croatian Internet Exchange (CIX)
- Cyprus
- Cyprus Internet Exchange (CyIX)
- Czech Republic
- Denmark
- Estonia
- Finland
- Finnish Communication and Internet Exchange (FICIX), Helsinki, Espoo, Oulu
- Tampere Region Exchange (TREX), Tampere
- France
- Paris metropolitan area
- French National Internet Exchange IPv6 (FNIX6), Paris
- Metropolitan Area Ethernet (MAE), Paris
- Mix Internet Exchange and Transit (MIXT), Paris
- Paris Internet Exchange (PARIX), Paris
- Paris Operators for Universal Internet Exchange (POUIX), Paris
- Service for French Internet Exchange (SFINX), Paris
- Free Internet Exchange (FreeIX), Paris
- Paris NAP (PaNAP), Paris
- Out of Paris
- EuroGIX, Alsace
- Grenoble Network Initiative (GNI), Grenoble
- Lyon Internet Exchange (Lyonix), Lyon
- Marseille Internet eXchange (MAIX), Marseille
- PhibIX, Saint-Etienne
- Paris metropolitan area
- Germany
- Berlin Commercial Internet Exchange (BCIX), Berlin
- German Internet Exchange (DE-CIX), Frankfurt
- European Commercial Internet Exchange (ECIX), Berlin / Düsseldorf
- Frankfurt Internet Exchange (F-IX), Frankfurt
- Frankfurt Network Access Point (fraNAP), Frankfurt
- INXS Hamburg (INXS HBG), Hamburg
- WorkIX Hamburg (WORKIX), Hamburg
- INXS Munich (INXS MUC), Munich
- Kleyer Rebstöcker InternetExchange (KleyReX), Frankfurt
- MAE Frankfurt, Frankfurt
- Metropolitan Area Network Darmstadt (MANDA), Darmstadt
- Munich Commercial Internet Exchange (M-CIX), Munich
- Nürnberger Internet Exchange (N-IX), Nuremberg
- Greece
- Athens Internet Exchange (AIX), Athens
- Hungary
- Budapest Internet Exchange (BIX), Budapest
- Iceland
- Ireland
- Internet Neutral Exchange (INEX), Dublin
- Italy
- Kazakhstan
- Latvia
- Latvian Internet Exchange (LIX), Riga
- Riga Internet Exchange (RIX), Riga
- Luxembourg
- Malta
- Malta Internet Exchange (MIX Malta), Msida
- Netherlands
- Amsterdam Internet Exchange (AMS-IX), Amsterdam
- Friese Internet Exchange (FR-IX), Leeuwarden
- Groningen Internet Exchange (GN-IX), Groningen
- Nederlands-Duitse Internet Exchange (NDIX), Enschede
- Netherlands Internet Exchange (NLix), Amsterdam, Ede, Schiphol Rijk, Aalsmeer, Oude Meer, Hilversum, Almere
- Rotterdam Internet Exchange (R_iX), Rotterdam
- Norway
- Norwegian Internet Exchange (NIX), Oslo
- Poland
- Portugal
- GIGAbit Portuguese Internet Exchange (GIGAPIX), Lisbon Official website
- Romania
- Romanian Network for Internet Exchange (RoNIX), Bucharest
- Interlan Internet Exchange (Interlan), Bucharest Official website
- Russia
- Chelyabinsk Peering Point Ural, Chelyabinsk, created around 2001 [6], stalled on around 2004 [7]
- Moscow Internet Exchange (MSK-IX), Moscow
- NSK-IX, Novosibirsk
- Samara Internet Exchange (Samara-IX), Samara
- North-West Internet Exchange (NW-IX), Saint Petersburg
- Saint Petersburg Internet Exchange (SPB-IX), Saint Petersburg
- Ural IX, Ekaterinburg[citation needed]
- Slovakia
- Slovak Internet Exchange (SIX), Bratislava
- Slovenia
- Spain
- Catalunya Neutral Internet Exchange (CATNIX), [[SlBarcelona
- Nap de las Americas (TERREMARK), Madrid
- España Internet Exchange (ESPANIX), Madrid
- Galicia Neutral Internet Exchange (GALNIX), Santiago de Compostela
- Punto Neutro Vasco (EuskoNIX), Donostia
- Sweden
- Switzerland
- CERN Internet Exchange Point (CIXP), Geneva
- Swiss Internet Exchange (SWISSIX), Zürich
- Telehouse Internet Exchange (TIX), Zürich
- Turkey
- Turkish Information Exchange (TURNET)
- Ukraine
- United Kingdom
- London Internet Exchange (LINX) site, London
- London Internet Providers Exchange (LIPEX) site, London
- London Network Access Point (LONAP) site, London
- Manchester Network Access Point (MaNAP) site, Manchester
- Manchester Commercial Internet Exchange (mcix) site, Manchester
- Meridian Gate Internet Exchange (MERIEX), London
- Packet Exchange, London Official website
- Redbus Internet Exchange (RBIEX), London
- Sovereign House Exchange (SovEx), London (dead)
[edit] Middle East
- Israel
- Israeli Internet Exchange (IIX)
- Egypt
- Cairo Internet Exchange (CAIX)
- Middle East Internet eXchange (MEIX)
[edit] Oceania
- Australia
- Equinix, Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane
- PIPE Networks, Brisbane, Sydney, Melbourne, Adelaide, Hobart, Canberra
- AUSIX, Melbourne
- Brisbane Internet Exchange (BIX), Brisbane (dead)
- Lismore Internet Exchange (LIX), Lismore
- MEL BONE, Melbourne (dead)
- Melbourne NAPette, Melbourne
- Newcastle Internet Exchange (NIX), Newcastle (dead)
- South Australian Internet Exchange (SAIX), Adelaide (dead)
- Sydney Internet Exchange (SIX), Sydney (dead)
- Victorian Internet Exchange (VIX), Victoria
- Western Australian Internet Exchange (WAIX), Perth
- Wollongong Internet Exchange (WIX), Wollongong (dead)
- New Zealand
Entries above marked "dead" were part of the failed AUSBONE or appear to have faded from view.
[edit] North America
- Canada
- BC Internet Exchange (BCIX)
- Ottawa Internet Exchange (Ottix)
- Quebec Internet Exchange (QIX)
- Toronto Internet Exchange (TorIX)
- United States
- AADS - AT&T NAP Chicago, Illinois
- Any2 - Any2 Exchange - Los Angeles, One Wilshire Building
- AtlantaIX - Atlanta Internet Exchange
- Big APE - Big Apple Peering Exchange New York City, New York
- Boston MXP
- ChIX - Chicago Internet eXchange
- Equinix Internet Exchanges
- HIX - Hawaii Internet eXchange
- LAIIX
- MAE-Central
- MAE-East
- MAE-West
- Northern Lights Local Exchange Point (NLLXP) - Minneapolis, Minnesota
- NAP of the Americas (NOTA) - Terremark - Miami, Florida
- NWAX - Portland
- NYIIX
- SFMIX - San Francisco
- SIX - Seattle
- Switch and Data's Peering And Internet eXchanges (PAIX)
- Voice Peering Fabric - distributed IXP for the exchange of VoIP traffic
- Puerto Rico
- Internet Exchange of Puerto Rico (IX.PR)
[edit] South America
- Argentina
- CABASE
- Brazil
- PTT-METRO
- Chile
- NAP.cl