HP_Exarkun
Well-Known Member
And we are down again. Logging on to another ISP to continue gaming. THANKS!!!
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Just some questions. So the old network ran on top of the MTN network. What does that mean? You used MTN as breakouts onto the undersea cables and used their data centres to manage the network?
Secondly, the new network does not run on MTN at all right? What does that mean? You guys own all points of your network under the Afrihost name?
I don't really know how ISP networks work![]()
Promise I didn't make it up: http://mybroadband.co.za/vb/showthread.php?t=775062
Just got off the phone with Axxess support: engineers are investigating but no know cause/eta yet.....
My Afrihost capped account I use for my business is completely down since about 16:00. I switched to my WebAfrica test account and all was well again. Any reason for this?
I thought it was a problem on the line but no problems there.
EDIT: Exactly my problem as OCP mentioned but I'm at home now on my other Afrihost account and its working.
After 6 AGAIN, and another evening of nothing.
Origin and Steam does not connect. Blizzard games do not connect. Surfing is slower than dialup.
This is on both AfriRed and AfriGreen.
Connect with a guest account to another ISP and everything is flying like normal.
As far as I understand, there is no authentication happening, so there would be no connection at all if you're routing via the South.
We basically used the MTN core infrastructure for all aspects of the network, from the breakout from Telkom, including local and international links.
For the new network, we are using multiple partners for backhaul and international peering, Where MTN had their own infrastructure, this is more of an aggregated network, so we use multiple partners for the best performance.
Does that make sense?
My side, afrinormal authenticates, no throughput.
Answer if you have time. Don't want to distract!
So with this setup there can't be a central fault that would affect the entire system like you guys had with MTN?
I have another question. Hopefully you can answer this. What routes does the new network use? Undersea cables is what I mean. Is it just EASSy and WACS again? Does your engineering team decide these routes or your partners?
I ask since I'm having a bit of fun with this: http://www.submarinecablemap.com/
For example, traffic to the US, do you guys know/plan exactly what route it takes to minimise ping and so on? Or is it a matter of "Get it to a sea cable and let it sort itself". Like now, I notice in trace routes we always seem to ping London which is probably the WACS line, right?
Apparently there is this line (http://www.submarinecablemap.com/#/submarine-cable/south-atlantic-express-saex) that is meant to be finished in 2017. If this were to cut pings to the US, would you guys choose to use this or would it be a partners decision? If this is Afrihost's decision to make and this cable were to reduce pings to the US, would you even consider it or just stick with the routes you have now?
Just to add in another question quickly. I see there is an ACE cable. What would determine your use of WACS over ACE for example? http://www.submarinecablemap.com/#/submarine-cable/africa-coast-to-europe-ace
We are going to be less centralised than we were, we will have more kit in local regions to have greater redundancy.
In terms of routing, I don't have all that info, but as I said it will be spread across a number of providers for the best performance. For the moment, all traffic going overseas from the South goes over WACS. With the new network, we could determine the best route based on the destination - though there are not that many cables to choose from. Ideally we would be able to choose from cables terminating in the US, UK or Asia. Currently all our international traffic terminates in Europe. This is just hypothetical though, I think all the current undersea cables in SA terminate in Europe for the moment. Some others are planned, not sure how far away we are. A US terminating cable would be absolutely amazing for gaming and video streaming latency.
Might mean they are making some progress. Let's hope so![]()
The US one would at best be through Brazil, which should bring it to about 220ms latency.
Back to topic of undersea cables: Will the breakout be in Cape Town for western side of South Africa and another cable for eastern side of South Africa? Will reduce latency for those in the east.
Umm no, that's how it's been since around 15h00![]()
A US terminating cable would be absolutely amazing for gaming and video streaming latency.
Yeah that's why I was looking at that SAEx line. Even though it stops off at Brazil, it seems to be the shortest route to the US. Interesting to see if you guys consider it when it has completed construction.
Cool, thanks for all the info![]()