חזרה לעמוד הקודם

IIX Users

Currently peering with the IIX

(in order of connecting):

Currently peering with the IIX
Link Size Type IPv6 Backup Link Redundancy
Machba (Israeli Universities Consortium) 10Gb/s 10GE Active
Netvision 013 \ Cellcom 100GE 100GE Active 100Gb/s
Bezeq International 100Gb/s 100GE Active 100Gb/s
Partner \ 012 100Gb/s 100GE Active 100Gb/s
Interspace 200Mb/s GE
Internet Binat 20Gb/s 10GE Active Yes
Gilat Telecom 40Gb/s 40GE Active 40Gb/s
GOV.IL – Tehila 1Gb/s GE Active
AT&T 1Gb/s GE Active
R.L. Internet 10Gb/s 10GE
Internet Rimon 40Gb/s 10GE Active
CCC 20Gb/s 10GE Active Yes
Hot Net 200Gb/s 100GE Active 200Gb/s
CellAct Communication 100Mb/s GE Active 100Mb/s Yes
Interhost 100Gb/s 100GE Active
VoiceCenter 100Mb/s GE Active
ITC 100Gb/s 100GE Active 100Gb/s
Connect972 40Gb/s 10GE Active
Bezeq 200Gb/s 100GE Active Yes
CLOUD LEASE Ltd. 40Gb/s 40GE Active
Tamares Telecom 200Gb/s 100GE Active   Yes

Note:

  • Backup line – 2nd peer on standby, not forwarding traffic.
  • Redundancy – 2nd peer where both peers are active and forwarding traffic.

Adding up the speed figures of the Shared GigE connected Peers in the above table, may result in a figure that is larger than the nominal IIX GigE trunks speed. This does not imply “overbooking”, or oversubscription of the access lines.

Traffic distribution in multiplexed networks is statistical. The correct way to check for trunk utilization would, therefore, be to go over some statistics.