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France-IX

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
France-IX
Full nameFrance-IX
AbbreviationFrance-IX
FoundedJune 2010
LocationParis Marseille Lyon
Websitewww.franceix.net
Members496 as of July 2021[1]
Peak1,5 Tbits/s as of July 2021[2]

France-IX is a Paris-based Internet exchange point (IXP) founded in June 2010 as a membership organisation. As of 21 July 2021 it interconnects more than 496 members,[1] making it the largest IXP in France.

History

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France-IX was initially discussed by Raphael Maunier (then with Neo Telecoms) and Maurice Dean (then working for Google) in 2008 in Dublin. The project of setting up the internet exchange, initially called PhoenIX, was launched in December 2008. Wouter van Hulten (working for Interxion) proposed the creation of a new association named France-IX in May 2009, to unite the various IXP activities in Paris at the time under one organisation. Christian Kaufmann (working for Akamai) and Nicolas Strina (then working for Jaguar Network) soon joined the initiative.[3]

Following the presentation, a survey was sent to the community of internet networks whose results were published during the FRnOG 14 in June 2009. Around that time, the working group got the official financial and logistics support from Jaguar Network, Google, Akamai, Interxion and Neo Telecoms and was renamed France-IX.

The first international presentation of this project was made during RIPE 59 in Lisbon.

Organisation

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France-IX is composed of a non-profit association where each member holds one vote, and a commercial company, 100% owned by the association, in charge of daily operations. When a network subscribes to France-IX services, it becomes a de facto member of the association and holds the right to vote during the general assemblies. There are currently 496 members.

As of July 26, 2021, France-IX has eight board members, (Stéphane Bortzmeyer, Philippe Duby, Christian Kaufmann, Florence Lavroff, Sarah Nataf, Rebecca Stanic, Mark Tinka, Gregoir Villain). France-IX has 28 employees.

Network

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As of July 26, 2021, France-IX network has 24 points of presence (PoP).

  • Equinix-Telecity PA6 Condorcet
  • Equinix-Telecity PA7 Courbevoie
  • Scaleway Datacenter DC2 Vitry-sur-Seine
  • Scaleway Datacenter DC3 Vitry-sur-Seine
  • Interxion PAR1 Aubervilliers
  • Interxion PAR2 Aubervilliers
  • Interxion PAR5 Saint-Denis
  • Telehouse 2 Paris
  • Telehouse 3 Magny-les-Hameaux
  • Data4 Nozay
  • Interxion MRS1 Marseille
  • Interxion MRS2 Marseille
  • Jaguar Network MRS01 Marseille
  • LyonIX 1 Villeurbanne
  • LyonIX 2 Vénissieux
  • LyonIX 3 Limonest
  • LyonIX 4 Collombier-Saugnieu
  • LyonIX 5 Bron
  • LyonIX 6 Lyon
  • LyonIX 7 Lyon
  • LyonIX 8 Saint-Trivier-sur-Moignans
  • GrenoblIX 1 Cogent, 33 rue Joseph Chanrion, 38000 Grenoble
  • GrenoblIX 2 Eolas, 73 rue du Général Mangin, 38000 Grenoble
  • AnnecIX 1 Shelter SYANE, 2-8 rue des Garennes, 74960 Annecy

Ports of connection

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Services are available through two types of ports and several bandwidth options.

Port Traffic
10 Gbit/s
100 Gbit/s
400 Gbit/s

Services

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France-IX offers the following professional services:

  • Public peering: Unicast & multicast IPv4, unicast IPv6
  • Interconnections with 5 internet exchange point in France, in Italy and in Luxembourg
  • Private peering, multipass peering, PNI VLAN, PNI WAVE, Cloud access
  • NTP Synchronization
  • Routes servers (with the communities feature)
  • Webportal: private login per member, personal detailed traffic statistics.
  • 24/7 NOC

Community

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France-IX community comes from all around the world. Any organisation which owns an Autonomous System Number (also known as ASN) can be connected to France-IX. The connected members of the internet exchange point have various profiles:

  • Operators / Services Providers / Internet Access Providers
  • CDN (Content Delivery Network)
  • Hosting companies
  • Cloud providers
  • Gamers
  • Online media
  • Corporations
  • DNS
  • Search engine

Partners

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France-IX concluded five interconnections with other internet exchanges to foster the exchange of internet traffic in France and Europe.

  • SFINX based in Paris and operated by the French academic network (RENATER)
  • Lyonix based in Lyon, France, and operated by Rezopole
  • LU-CIX based in Luxemburg
  • TouIX based in Toulouse, France
  • TopIX based in Torino, Italy [4]

In 2012, France-IX rolled out a reseller program and counts seven resellers as of August 1, 2015.[5][6][7]

Events

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  • France-IX was the host for the 26th Euro-IX Forum, which took place between 12 April 2015 and 14 April 2015 in Marseille.[8]
  • France-IX led three training sessions to help Comoros[9] and Guinea build their own national internet exchange points.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b "France-IX: Current Members". Retrieved 2021-07-26.
  2. ^ "France-IX: Bandwidth Statistics". Retrieved 2021-07-21.
  3. ^ "Présentation de France-IX" (in French). Selfserveur. Archived from the original on 19 October 2015. Retrieved 31 October 2015.
  4. ^ "France-IX, Top-IX link Internet exchange points".
  5. ^ "IX Reach adds 15 members to France-IX internet exchange".
  6. ^ "EtherReach Global-IX | Hibernia Networks". Archived from the original on 2013-08-03.
  7. ^ "Remote IX - Phibee Télécom, solutions sur mesure pour vos systèmes d'informations et de communication".
  8. ^ "Euro-IX Forum". Archived from the original on 2015-12-08.
  9. ^ "Comoros undergoes IXP training - ITWeb Africa". Archived from the original on 2014-08-20.
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