North American Network Operators' Group

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

See NANOG (medicine) for the protein.

NANOG is the North American Network Operators' Group, which runs meetings, talks, surveys and an influential mailing list for Internet service providers. Sometimes referred to as "North American Noise and Off-topic Gripes". The main method of communication is the NANOG mailing list (known informally as nanog-l), a free mailing list to which anyone may subscribe (or post).

Contents

[edit] Meetings

NANOG meetings are held three times each year, and include presentations, tutorials, and BOFs (Birds of a Feather meetings). The meetings are informal, and membership is open. Conference participants typically include senior engineering staff from tier 1 and tier 2 ISPs. Participating researchers present short summaries of their work for operator feedback.

[edit] Organization

NANOG meetings are organized by Merit Network, Inc., a non-profit Michigan organization, and are hosted by Merit and other organizations around the U.S. and Canada. Overall leadership is provided by the NANOG Steering Committee which established in 2005.

[edit] History

NANOG evolved from the NSFNET "Regional-Techs" meetings, where technical staff from the regional networks met to discuss operational issues of common concern with the Merit engineering staff. At the February 1994 regional techs meeting in San Diego, the group revised its charter to include a broader base of network service providers, and subsequently adopted NANOG as its new name.

[edit] Funding

Funding for NANOG originally came from the National Science Foundation, as part of two projects Merit undertook in partnership with NSF and other organizations: the NSFNET Backbone Service and the Routing Arbiter project. All NANOG funds now come from conference registration fees and donations from vendors.

[edit] Scope

NANOG meetings provide a forum for the exchange of technical information, and promote discussion of implementation issues that require community cooperation. Coordination among network service providers helps ensure the stability of overall service to network users. The group's original charter is available on the official NANOG website.

[edit] Topics

The NANOG Program Committee publishes a Call for Presentations as well as proposes topics that address current operational issues. The committee's criteria for selecting talks are outlined on the Call for Presentations: the talks focus on large-scale backbone operations, ISP coordination, or technologies that are already deployed or soon to be deployed in core Internet backbones and exchange points. Popular topics include traffic engineering, applications of new protocols, routing policy specification, queue management and congestion, routing scalability, caching, and inter-provider security, to name a few.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links