
1.
a brief overview of the current status of cloud services in taiwan
taiwan does have local cloud/idc and international cloud supply chains: local telecom operators (such as chunghwa telecom, taiwan mobile, far eastone, etc.) and several idcs provide bare metal and cloud hosts; international cloud providers set up exit points in taiwan through pop/cdn or partners. knowing this will help with subsequent testing and selection.
small segmentation: before making a decision, list the candidate suppliers and prepare the test target ip or domain name (the supplier provides the test ip) to facilitate item-by-item verification.
2.
preparation and tool list
necessary tools: local terminal (linux/mac/windows), ping, traceroute/tracert, mtr, iperf3, speedtest-cli, browser access to looking glass, bgp.he.net, peeringdb, and test ip or mirror provided by the supplier.
small segments: install winmtr on windows; ensure mtr and iperf3 are available on linux/mac; prepare ssh and console accounts for subsequent deployment verification.
3.
step 1: verify node coverage (geography and computer room)
step 1: ask the supplier for its node list and public network export ip in each county/computer room in taiwan. step 2: perform ping on each node ip (example: ping -c 10 1.2.3.4), record the delay and packet loss rate (goal: delay <20ms, packet loss <1% is ideal).
small segmentation: use traceroute (linux: traceroute -n 1.2.3.4; windows: tracert -d 1.2.3.4) to check the hop count and whether it passes through the local switching node (such as tpix); if the hop count suddenly increases or the cross-border jump is premature, the node may not be local.
4.
step 2: assess international link docking capabilities
step 1: use mtr to perform continuous route tracking on overseas targets (such as hong kong, singapore, and los angeles, usa): mtr -r -c 100 target_ip. observe where high latency or packet loss begins. step 2: use iperf3 to do a bandwidth test (requires peer support): iperf3 -c server_ip -t 30 -p 4 to measure the uplink/downlink throughput.
small segmentation: if it is found that large packet loss occurs at the same hop between the local egress and the international node, it indicates that the quality of the international egress or link is insufficient; the supplier should be required to provide multiple redundant international links or bgp multi-line egress.
5.
step 3: check the bgp and peering relationship
step 1: view the advertised prefix and neighbor of the vendor asn at bgp.he.net or ripe (example search for asn). step 2: check its exchange point (ix) in peeringdb to see if there is a direct peering network to the target region (such as asia pacific operators).
small segmentation: if the provider has multiple peering partners in tpix or other taiwanese ix, international access is usually more stable; if the provider only relies on a few upstream isps, the risk is higher.
6.
step 4: on-site deployment and verification (from application to online)
step 1: select the computer room/availability zone in the provider console, select the image and create an instance. step 2: configure security group/firewall, elastic ip and record public ip. step 3: after logging in to the instance, follow steps 3 and 4 to perform ping, traceroute, iperf, and download/upload tests on the public ip.
small segments: record each test result and compare it with the supplier's sla (network delay, packet loss, availability). if it does not meet the requirements, immediately communicate with technical support and request a trouble ticket.
7.
step five: key questions to ask when contacting suppliers
question list: 1) are local computer rooms and specific locations provided? 2) which international backbone/submarine cables are exported to? 3) is bgp multi-line and is there public looking glass? 4) peak traffic billing method and sla terms.
small segment: require suppliers to provide link statistics (peak packet loss/delay) in the past three months and explain emergency links and handover delays. these are key points in business negotiations.
8.
comprehensive decision-making and routine monitoring recommendations
decision points: comprehensive scoring based on node coverage, international link redundancy, actual test results, sla and price; give priority to suppliers that have actual computer rooms in taiwan and have equivalents in major ixs. after deployment, it is recommended to use monitoring (prometheus+blackbox, zabbix) to continuously collect ping/traceroute and iperf scheduled tasks.
small segments: set alarm thresholds (packet loss >1%, latency 20% above baseline, or bandwidth less than 80% committed) and test the failover process.
9.
q: are there any local cloud server providers in taiwan?
answer: yes. there are many local telecoms and idcs in taiwan that provide cloud or bare metal services, and international cloud providers can also provide services through local pops/partners; the actual node location and link conditions shall prevail when selecting.
10.
q: how to quickly determine whether a supplier’s international link is reliable?
answer: after obtaining the test ip and asn from it, use ping, mtr, traceroute, and iperf3 to do the delay/packet loss/throughput test; then check its peering and upstream status through bgp.he.net, peeringdb, and looking glass, and make a comprehensive evaluation based on the sla.
11.
q: how to troubleshoot and respond to international link problems after deployment?
answer: first do ping/mtr locally to locate the problem. if the problem lies at the supplier's exit, submit a work order with a test screenshot and request to switch to bgp or bypass it; if necessary, require a temporary l3 backup line or enable a third-party cdn to reduce the impact.
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