Peering

Peering is a network interconnection arrangement in which two independent networks (Autonomous Systems) exchange traffic directly with each other, without using third-party transit providers.

The goal of peering is to improve performance, reduce latency, and optimize traffic costs by shortening the path data must travel.

What Peering Means in Practice

In operational terms, peering:

  • Establishes a direct connection between networks
  • Allows traffic exchange without intermediaries
  • Reduces dependency on upstream transit providers
  • Improves routing efficiency and stability

Peering typically occurs at Internet Exchange Points (IXPs) or through private interconnections.

Peering vs Transit (Critical Distinction)

AspectPeeringTransit
Traffic exchangeDirectThrough provider
Cost modelOften settlement-free or lower costPaid
Routing pathShorterLonger
ControlHigherLower
  • Peering: exchange traffic between the networks’ own users
  • Transit: pay a provider to reach the entire internet

Both are necessary in a complete network strategy.

Types of Peering

1. Public Peering

  • Occurs at Internet Exchange Points (IXPs)
  • Multiple networks connect through shared infrastructure
  • Cost-effective and scalable

2. Private Peering

  • Direct connection between two networks
  • Higher performance and capacity
  • Used for large traffic volumes

Benefits of Peering

1. Reduced Latency

Shorter routing paths lead to faster data delivery.

2. Increased Bandwidth Efficiency

Traffic bypasses congested transit paths.

3. Cost Optimization

Less reliance on paid transit providers.

4. Improved Stability

Fewer intermediaries reduce failure points.

Peering and CDN / Traffic-Intensive Workloads

Peering is critical for:

  • CDN performance (edge delivery speed)
  • Video streaming platforms
  • Gaming services
  • Large-scale SaaS applications

Poor peering leads to:

  • Increased latency
  • Packet loss
  • Congestion

Peering and Routing

Peer relationships influence:

  • BGP routing decisions
  • Traffic paths between networks
  • Load distribution across links

Routing policies determine whether traffic prefers:

  • Peering routes
  • Transit routes

Limitations of Peering

Peering is not universal:

  • Only exchanges traffic between participating networks
  • Does not guarantee access to all destinations
  • Requires negotiation and technical alignment
  • May involve capacity constraints

A network still needs transit providers for full internet reachability.

What Peering Is Not

❌ Not full internet connectivity

❌ Not automatic or universal

❌ Not a replacement for transit

❌ Not guaranteed performance without proper capacity

❌ Not purely a technical decision (also commercial)

Peering is part of a broader network strategy.

Business Value of Peering

For clients:

  • Faster content delivery
  • Lower latency
  • More stable connections
  • Better user experience

For providers:

  • Reduced transit costs
  • Improved network performance
  • Competitive advantage in network quality

Our Approach to Peering

We treat peering as:

  • A core element of network design
  • A critical factor for:
    • CDN performance
    • Traffic-intensive workloads
    • Latency optimization

We ensure:

  • Presence at major Internet Exchange Points
  • Strategic private peering relationships
  • Sufficient capacity on peering links

We always consider:

  • Traffic patterns
  • Geographic distribution
  • Performance requirements

Peering delivers value when:
Traffic takes the shortest, most efficient path between networks.

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