Penguin

Differences between current version and predecessor to the previous major change of NZIX.

Other diffs: Previous Revision, Previous Author, or view the Annotated Edit History

Newer page: version 5 Last edited on Sunday, May 15, 2005 12:51:45 am by CraigBox
Older page: version 3 Last edited on Wednesday, December 11, 2002 5:57:20 pm by LindsayDruett Revert
@@ -1,15 +1,11 @@
 __N__ew __Z__ealand __I__nternet E__x__change. 
  
-This is where [ISP]'s used to peer and exchange traffic. NZIX was in the [Waikato], on the ground floor of the Computer Science Department of WaikatoUniversity 
+This is where [ISP]'s used to peer and exchange traffic. NZIX was in the [Waikato], on the ground floor of the Computer Science Department of WaikatoUniversity.  
  
-NZIX was largely owned by [TelecomNewZealand] and was maintained by the [NOC] staff at [WaikatoUniversity]
+While NZIX was the end point for NZGate international access, which was handed to [TelecomNewZealand] in 1996, it was operated independently by WaikatoUniversity. Like other IXes, the equipment on it was owned by IX participants, individually "peering" with each other
  
+Unlike WIX & APE, NZIX started out using various IGPs for exchanging routes, including RIP, OSPF & IGRP, the latter left over from a decade of Tuia operations. IGRP was well past its use-by date by this time (not supporting classless routing, and having ghastly convergence times), but there were legacy Cisco boxes out there that couldn't manage OSPF (the IGP of choice). The less said about those exchanging routes via RIP the better. The IGP approach worked OK as long as NZIX was the only place where overseas carriers were peering, bit it started to get ugly as soon as peering points (both public such as APE & WIX, and bilateral arrangements such as those between Clear and Telecom) started to multiply.  
  
-Completly replaced by [APE] and [WIX] mid 2001  
-  
+Completly replaced by [APE] and [WIX] mid 2001.  
  
 NZIX was fully decommissioned at 10:45am on 26th of August 2002, and was dismantled an hour later without leaving any physical evidence of existance. The last router was a [Cisco] 4000 series router, [HNCR1], owned by Netway Services (part of [TelecomNewZealand]). 
-  
-  
-----  
-<?plugin BackLinks?>