The Amsterdam Internet Exchange (AMS-IX) is an
Internet exchange point based in
Amsterdam
Amsterdam ( , ; ; ) is the capital of the Netherlands, capital and Municipalities of the Netherlands, largest city of the Kingdom of the Netherlands. It has a population of 933,680 in June 2024 within the city proper, 1,457,018 in the City Re ...
, in the
Netherlands
, Terminology of the Low Countries, informally Holland, is a country in Northwestern Europe, with Caribbean Netherlands, overseas territories in the Caribbean. It is the largest of the four constituent countries of the Kingdom of the Nether ...
. Established in the early 1990s, AMS-IX is a non-profit, neutral and independent
peering point.
History
In February 1994, a
layer 2 shared infrastructure, used between academic institutes, was connected with
CERN to exchange traffic. Other
Internet service provider
An Internet service provider (ISP) is an organization that provides a myriad of services related to accessing, using, managing, or participating in the Internet. ISPs can be organized in various forms, such as commercial, community-owned, no ...
s were allowed to connect and the name AMS-IX was first used. In 1997, the AMS-IX Association was founded by twenty of the connected Internet service providers and carriers.
In 2002, the
Neutral Internet Exchange
NL-ix (with the last two letters typeset in lowercase) - formerly known as Neutral Internet Exchange - is an Internet Exchange in Europe
Europe is a continent located entirely in the Northern Hemisphere and mostly in the Eastern He ...
was founded as an alternative or backup for the Amsterdam Internet Exchange.
in November 2008 The total amount of data transferred by month was 75,940 TB (Avg. incoming and outgoing) . By April 2009, it had grown to 124,550 TB, 64% more in a 5-month period. , AMS-IX connected 396 members on 684 ports
and had peak incoming traffic of 1.513
Tbit/s and of outgoing traffic 1.512 Tbit/s (compared to 0.833 Tbit/s average incoming and outgoing in January 2012.
) In November 2016, AMS-IX broke through the 5 Tbit/s ceiling.
These traffic speeds made the Amsterdam Internet Exchange the
second largest Internet exchange in the world in 2010, when measured by number of connected members and by Internet traffic, next to the
Deutscher Commercial Internet Exchange (traffic).
In September 2013, the board voted to create a legal framework to facilitate an expansion into the United States. An AMS-IX press release said that:
SURFnet, a member of the exchange, had expressed its objection to the proposal, citing the possibility that such interception would be demanded.
AMS-IX has increased its average internet traffic from about 5 Tbps in March 2020 to about 7 Tbps in March 2021.
Co-locations
AMS-IX members are able to connect at 16 locations, all located within the greater Amsterdam/Rotterdam area:
* Digital Realty AMS5 (Formerly
Interxion Schiphol Rijk)
* Digital Realty AMS9 (formerly Interxion Science Park, Vancis, SARA)
* Digital Realty AMS17
* Digital Realty AMS18 (formerly Telecity AMS4)
* Equinix AM1/2 (South East)
* Equinix AM3 (Science Park)
* Equinix AM5 (formerly TeleCity AMS5)
* Equinix AM6 (formerly TeleCity AMS6)
* Equinix AM7 (formerly TeleCity AMS2)
* euNetworks (Amsterdam Amstel Business Park)
*
GlobalSwitch (
Slotervaart)
* Greenhouse Datacenters
* Iron Mountain (formerly
Evoswitch Haarlem
Haarlem (; predecessor of ''Harlem'' in English language, English) is a List of cities in the Netherlands by province, city and Municipalities of the Netherlands, municipality in the Netherlands. It is the capital of the Provinces of the Nether ...
)
*
NIKHEF (
Science Park Amsterdam)
* NorthC Amsterdam (Formerly Datacenter Group)
* SmartDC (Rotterdam)
Third-party network transport links also offer access to AMS-IX peering VLAN via "Reseller Program". Under the program, reseller could arrange one physical connection toward AMS-IX platform (now solely a 10G connection, but in prospect of going to 100G), and multiplexes "virtual-link" of other parties that connect to AMS-IX peering VLAN.
Partnerpage AMS-IX site
visited on 26 feb 2015
Network
The AMS-IX platform is continually evolving due to its rapid growth in traffic and number of connected member ports. Up until the end of 2009, it was using a redundant hub-spoke architecture using a core switch and multiple edge switches. This double-star topology had the advantage of being able to perform maintenance on the network without any impact on customer traffic, and to anticipate on fiber and equipment problems by (automatically) switching to the backup topology as soon as a failure in one of the active components occurs. The active switching topology star is determined by means of the VSRP protocol. This topology is AMS-IX version 3.
However, since 2009; AMS-IX platform has migrated from a pure Layer2 network to a VPLS/MPLS network (using Brocade hardware) in order to cope with future growth (this is AMS-IX version 4).
AMS-IX members connect to the platform with 1, 10, 100 Gbit/s Ethernet connections, or using multiple gigabit or 10 gigabit aggregated ports, utilizing the 802.3ad standard. Gigabit Ethernet and lower speed ports are directly connected to Brocade - Foundry Networks BigIron 15000 or RX-8 network switches. 10 gigabit member ports are connected to Glimmerglass Systems photonic switches which maintain an optical connection to the stub switch on the currently active side of the network, following the VSRP protocol. For each 10-gigabit port there is an active and a backup stub switch, for which BigIron RX-8, RX-16 or NetIron MLX-16 switches are used. The core consists of two Brocade NetIron MLX-32 switches, to which all edge switches are connected using 10 gigabit aggregated connections and WDM technology.
With the new VPLS/MPLS setup; the BigIron RX and legacy BigIron 15000 are no longer in-use. AMS-IX has migrated all the hardware to the MPLS-capable MLX platform. Stub switch is either MLX-8, MLX-16 or MLX-32.
Since May 2011, AMS-IX engineers have started testing 100GE along with LimeLight Network.
See also
* List of Internet exchange points
* Netherlands Internet Exchange (NL-ix)
References
External links
*
{{Telecommunication companies of India
1994 establishments in the Netherlands
1997 establishments in the Netherlands
Economy of Amsterdam
Internet in the Netherlands
Internet exchange points in the Netherlands