Lia Hestina

Measuring the Internet in Indonesia, one RIPE Atlas Probe at a Time

Lia Hestina

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In July, I was fortunate enough to attend the third Indonesia Network Operators Group conference, IDNOG 3, which was held in Jakarta.


 

IDNOG is a vibrant community and their conferences offer a great opportunity to learn about the latest best practices and projects in the region as well as connect with new people from all kinds of backgrounds.

I was there as a representative of RIPE Atlas , the RIPE NCC’s global Internet measurement platform. I’m originally from Indonesia, and my personal dream when I started working with the RIPE Atlas team was to deploy RIPE Atlas probes in every province in Indonesia. That shouldn’t be difficult, I thought – but I was proven wrong.

Getting probes deployed in Indonesia without having a local contact has been nearly impossible. Fortunately, with the help of communities like IDNOG, and thanks to our recent collaboration with APNIC, it’s now much easier to find local volunteers who are willing to host a probe, in addition to generally staying in touch with the Internet community in Indonesia.

Although not many attendees at the event had heard about RIPE Atlas, they were engaged and wanted to know more about the project.

It was also great to have the support of the conference organisers who helped connect me with 16 people interested in hosting a probe as well as potential hosts who were interested in hosting a RIPE Atlas anchor . Anchors act as enhanced probes that provide large amounts of regional measurement data and are generally hosted in data centres.

At IDNOG 3

There was a lot of interest in RIPE Atlas amog attendees at IDNOG 3

Advantages of becoming a RIPE Atlas probe host

Although the data collected by probes is publicly available to everyone, probe hosts earn credits, which you can spend on extra features that let you:

  • Customise measurements
  • Monitor your networks
  • Set up status checks using RIPE Atlas data that plugs into your existing monitoring services (such as Icinga or Nagios)
  • Perform “quick look” measurements for easy, real-time pings and traceroutes
  • Test your IPv6 connectivity
  • Test DNS services

Learn more about how people are using RIPE Atlas .

Just like many communities who learn about RIPE Atlas for the first time, attendees at IDNOG 3 had some concerns about security when they approached me. I made it clear that the probes don’t listen to the hosts’ local, private traffic – they only talk to the RIPE NCC’s central RIPE Atlas infrastructure and perform measurements towards the public Internet. Hosts can also put their probe behind a firewall, as long as that firewall does not prevent the probe from talking to the outside world.

So what are you waiting for? Apply for a probe today !

Activity in Indonesia

As of publication, there are 42 active probes in Indonesia. We saw a spike in the number of probes in August 2015, thanks to a local RIPE Atlas ambassador who helped distribute probes, and the growth continued when APNIC 40 took place in Jakarta the next month. However, the total number of connected probes hasn’t grown since these events.

RIPE Atlas Probes in Indonesia

RIPE Atlas probe distribution in Indonesia

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