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The hosts monitored are seen in the table below.

IP name

Alias

City

Institution

 

glbb.jp

JP.GLBB

Okinawa

Speedtest

 

www.kek.jp

JP.KEK

Tsukuba

KEK

 

ns.osaka-u.ac.jp

JP.U-OSAKA

Osaka

Osaka University

 

ping.riken.jp

JP.RIKEN

Wako-Shi

RIKEN

 

www.u-tokyo.ac.jp

JP.U-Tokyo

Tokyo

Tokyo University

 

ns.jp.apan.net

NET.APAN

Tokyo

APAN

 

The map below shows the location of the hosts.

Immediate impacts of earthquake on Japanese hosts seen from SLAC

All of the 6 hosts that PingER monitors in Japan stayed up  at the time of the earthquake.Looking from SLAC there were big increases in the average RTTs and minimum RTTs for some Japanese sites (but not all), see below. The [spreadsheet|^japan-earthquake.xlsx] gives more details.

Further pinpointing of causes for increased RTTs

RIKEN seen from the world

Looking at RIKEN (a monitoring mode and so easy to select on and also one of the most affected as seen from SLAC) seen from the world looking at avg RTT and min RTT we saw:

  • No effect seen from Africa, E. Asia, Europe, L. America, M. East 
  • Big effect from N. America (Canada 163ms=>264ms, US 120ms=>280ms) 
  • India CDAC Mumbia no effect, Pune 380ms=> 460ms, VSNL Mumbia 360ms=>400ms 
  • Sri Lanka no effect 
  • Pakistan (we have lots of monitors so should be interesting).  
    • NIIT sees no effect (nb not on PERN) 
    • The PERN (Pakistan Education and Research Network) nodes starting with 111. (apart from UAAR see later, this needs more investigation) see 420ms=>500ms 
    • The PERN nodes starting with 121. See no effect         

Conclusion It is not the site RIKEN that has gone bad, rather it is some of the routes

RIKEN Looking at Japan

Japanese hosts seen from JP.RIKEN.N3 (RIKEN) see no impact on RTT

It looks the problem is in the route to Japan not within Japan itself. I wonder if the undersea earthquake has disrupted some  cables? This appears to be in line with the information from [http://www.renesys.com/blog/2011/03/japan-quake.shtml|http://www.renesys.com/blog/2011/03/japan-quake.shtml] and [http://www.networkworld.com/news/2011/031411-quake-damage-to-japan-cables.html?source=NWWNLE_nlt_network_architecture_2011-03-15|http://www.networkworld.com/news/2011/031411-quake-damage-to-japan-cables.html?source=NWWNLE_nlt_network_architecture_2011-03-15]. .

Undersea Cables

A map of the cables from Telegeography is seen below:

The following quote from Telegeography on 4/11/2011 confirms our early suspicions that the initial impact was probably due to rerouting of traffic as some undersea route were affected.

The massive earthquake off the coast of Japan damaged several undersea cables, some of which are still awaiting repair. Despite these outages, communications between Japan and the rest of the world were largely unaffected, due to the large array of undersea cables linked to Japan. ‘The earthquake temporarily knocked out approximately 30% of Japan’s international capacity,’ according to TeleGeography Research Director Alan Mauldin. ‘The deployment of multiple new trans-Pacific cables and intra-Asian cables over the past three years proved instrumental in preventing this disaster from also disrupting communications.’

Longer term impacts

However, we were not monitoring a Japanese host near the epicenter.

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