TurnKey Internet operates from
multiple Data-Centers throughout the
United states and Europe. Each of our geographically redundant Data-Centers
connects to multiple redundant carriers, forming our network. In the event of
a fiber cut, service outage, or regional disaster that effects one carrier or
even an entire Data-Center, the TurnKey Internet network remains fully
intact and operational.
TurnKey Internet
utilizes the best of breed and latest in network equipment such as Juniper routers for our edge connectivity
and Cisco switches and routers for our
core network and customer connectivity. Using the best of breed in network
equipment ensures the absolute best performance and reliability available in
the industry today and helps protect you from remote security intrusions and
denial of service attacks.
TurnKey Internet utilizes multiple redundant network connections, in each of
our multiple Data-Centers located across the
United States and Europe. We offer a unique 100% availability proposition
to both the enterprise business and small to medium size business client
by leveraging our geographically diverse data-centers coupled with our
redundant capacity in each facility. No longer can something such as a
natural disaster or regional black-out take you out of business when you
host with TurnKey Internet's GeoHost™
services.
TurnKey Internet is among the few Data-Center and hosting providers that
maintain their own facilities with BGP4 routing architecture to provide high
availability and 'shortest path' methodology to Internet traffic. This means
we are not impacted the same way that most providers might be during
Internet crashes, peak usage congestion, or regional outages - and this lets
TurnKey Internet distribute traffic in ways to best ensure the fastest
speed, lowest latency and highest quality for you and your audience.
New York Redundant Carrier Connections
The New York
facility is directly connected at gigabit speeds to the primary network
which consists of multiple OC192 (9.6 Gbit each) diverse path fiber optic
SONET rings, and a direct backup OC48 (2.5 Gigabit) SONET ring which
connects to a separate carrier. The Edge network is made up of Juniper M
series routers, and the internal core network consists of redundant cisco
switches and routers which are specifically designed to meet the demanding
needs of today's high-traffic networks. In 2007 capacity upgrades were
completed which enable TurnKey Internet to offer 1000 Mbit (GigE) network
connections to server and colocation clients. Redundant in-building carrier
connections are made to several carrier backbones providing fault tolerance
and redundancy to:
2 Gbps Direct Loop to OC192 Backbone - TimeWarner Telecom
OC48 Sonet Ring Fiber - Global Crossing
Direct Peering - AOL/RoadRunner Direct Peering
London, UK Redundant Carrier Connections
The London data-center network is powered by redundant cisco routers and
switches which are specifically designed to meet the demanding needs of
today's high-traffic networks. Redundant in-building carrier connections are
made to several carrier backbones providing fault tolerance and redundancy
to:
4 Gbps Direct Fiber - Level3
2 Gbps Direct Fiber - Deutsche Telekom
2 Gbps Direct Fiber - LINX (Peering Point)
4 Gbps Direct Fiber - Tiscali™Communications
2 Gbps Direct Fiber - XChangePoint (Peering Point)
2 Gbps Direct Fiber - LoNAP (Peering Point)
Texas Redundant Carrier Connections
The network architecture utilizes the Enterprise routing and switching
engines from Juniper and Cisco. Juniper M20 routers are border routers,
Cisco 6500 series switches provide the distribution layer and Cisco 6500
switches provide aggregation layers, and Cisco 3500 and 2900 series switches
provide the final server connection layer. The network is fully meshed and
redundant with 10 backbone providers. The network consists of:
1 Gbps Direct Fiber - MCI/UUNET
1 Gbps Direct Fiber - Time Warner
1 Gbps Direct Fiber - Level 3
1 Gbps Direct Fiber - Verio
1 Gbps Direct Fiber - Global Crossing
2 Gbps Direct Fiber - Allegiance Telecom
2 Gbps Direct Fiber - AboveNet
1 Gbps Direct Fiber - Sprint
1 Gbps Direct Fiber - AT&T
1 Gbps Direct Fiber - Broadwing
T3 and T1 Access - EPGN
T3 and T1 Access - SBC
T3 and T1 Access - Time Warner
T3 and T1 Access - XO Communications
T3 and T1 Access - MCI
California Redundant Carrier Connections
The California data-center network core is powered by a Cisco Systems 12000
series GSR (Gigabit Switch-Router), which is specifically designed to meet
the demanding needs of today's high-traffic networks. The core network is
connected via Gigabit Ethernet to the edge network, which is 100-percent
switched by Cisco Catalyst 3500 and 6500 series equipment. Multiple Gigabit
Ethernet fiber backbones provide fault tolerance and redundancy to:
1 Gbps Direct Fiber - Verio
1 Gbps Direct Fiber - Global Crossing
1 Gbps Direct Fiber - MFN/Abovenet
1 Gbps Direct Fiber - PAIX (Palo Alto Internet eXchange)