Hi Eric,
Thanks for sharing that, I didn't know about that probe. I amazed by the
stability of its last mile RTT (see attached graph LM36492).
It looks like the probe is loosing connectivity to RIPE controllers once
in a while, do you know if this is caused by starlink or is it other
running experiments?
Cheers,
Romain
On 3/26/21 10:32 AM, Eric Kuhnke wrote:
> There are a number of instances where probes based on a satellite ISP
> may be wildly different in geographical location vs. IP location.
>
> For instance I have previously run systems in Afghanistan on
> geostationary satellite capacity, where the other end of the link was in
> Singapore. All of the IP adjacencies and transit, peer uplinks were in
> Singapore.
>
> This is fairly normal for anything geostationary. Systems based on o3b
> (a MEO satellite network owned by SES) can also have wildly divergent
> physical and logical locations.
>
> I have a probe running right now on a SpaceX Starlink beta test terminal
> ( https://atlas.ripe.net/probes/1001821/
> <https://atlas.ripe.net/probes/1001821/> ) which is logically in
> downtown Seattle, but is physically in a rural eastern suburb of
> Vancouver, BC.
>
> With the growth of Starlink, OneWeb, Kuiper and such in the future this
> issue will become more prevalent.
>
>
>
> On Thu, Mar 25, 2021 at 6:03 AM Massimo Candela <massimo@us.ntt.net
> <mailto:massimo@us.ntt.net>> wrote:
>
> [possibly OT]
>
> In 2018 we found 18 probes which were located so far from reality that
> the collected RTT towards targets of known locations was faster than
> the
> speed of light (I remember we did something about those). I suspect
> there are some cases more, just below speed of light. But not so
> many, I
> believe the vast majority of the probes are all set properly.
>
> With software probes there is also the problem of less users
> reporting a
> location at all (I don't have numbers, based on an observation in a
> past
> experiment. It may no longer be the case).
>
> I don't remember if there is something similar already in place, but I
> would suggest a process like:
> - if a probe doesn't have a location, set a location calculated by
> latency measurements AND ask the user to review the result at is first
> convenience;
> - for all the probes currently having a location, use latency
> measurements to mark the one possibly wrong and ask the user for update.
> - overall, use latency measurements to periodically review the probe's
> location. RTTs can be used to mark obviously wrong locations, without
> being too restrictive.
>
> For RTTs above a certain amount (the usual 10ms?), deactivate the RTT
> validation so users are still able to place probes in exotic locations.
>
> I don't think there is a use case for obfuscating probes more than at
> the city level. And if there is, these probes should be tagged as such.
>
> Ciao,
> Massimo
>
> On 25/03/2021 13:00, Ponikierski, Grzegorz via ripe-atlas wrote:
> > I would add to it additional problem that some hosts obfuscate probe
> > location even more. For example you can find probes which in
> reality are
> > located in US but are marked as CN or probes which are in reality in
> > Wisconsin but are marked in California. Of course these are extreme
> > cases. I guess most hosts just put a pin with probe location just
> > somewhere around where it's locate as long it's in the same city. I
> > don't remember, as a host of 3 probes, to get any precise
> > recommendations how to mark probe location. Personally I just put
> a pin
> > in city district where probe is locate.
> >
> > Regards,
> >
> > Grzegorz
>