GNM-IX - GNM-IX

GNM-IX is a geographically distributed Internet Exchange platform built on GNM’s own backbone infrastructure, enabling efficient traffic exchange, traffic localization, and scalable interconnection across Europe, Asia, and North America.
Company ProfileVisit Website
GNM

Peering
Interconnection


GNM-IX operates as a set of strategically placed Internet Exchange points integrated into GNM’s transport and access network.

This distributed architecture enables networks to connect locally or across regions while maintaining predictable latency, unified operational control, and consistent service quality. It avoids a centralized traffic exchange model and instead localizes and routes traffic along the shortest possible path — locally between networks connected at the same node, directly between neighboring nodes for regional traffic, and efficiently across the backbone for inter-regional connectivity.

With peak traffic exceeding 10.7 Tbps and more than 700 connected networks, GNM-IX represents a mature and actively utilized interconnection platform. It is designed to support a wide range of interconnection scenarios — from regional peering to multi-location exchange architectures — as part of GNM’s broader connectivity ecosystem, alongside IP Transit, Ethernet, and transport services.

GNM-IX operates as a unified Internet Exchange fabric deployed across multiple exchange locations and tightly integrated with GNM’s backbone infrastructure.

All exchange nodes function within a single, controlled logical Layer-2 environment, ensuring consistent behavior and predictable performance across the platform.

Traffic exchange is handled within a unified switching fabric spanning multiple exchange locations, delivering predictable latency, high throughput, and operational consistency. Networks may connect at a single access point or across multiple sites while maintaining a unified peering architecture.

The platform supports scalable peering models, enabling participants to expand their interconnection footprint without redesigning core routing architecture or introducing additional operational complexity.

Location: Amsterdam, The Netherlands

Data Centers (1)
Advertisement

Peering Data

Our data relating to internet exchanges is sourced from internet exchange operators, network operators, data center operators, PeeringDB and manual research. To dive deeper in to peering data, we highly recommend checking out PeeringDB.