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Global XMPP Deployment4.6%500 sites tested 3 DNS errors 23 with XMPP |
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China2.0%100 sites tested 2 DNS errors 2 with XMPP |
Germany3.0%100 sites tested 0 DNS errors 3 with XMPP |
Finland3.0%100 sites tested 0 DNS errors 3 with XMPP |
India3.0%100 sites tested 1 DNS error 3 with XMPP |
IETF*5.6%2025 sites tested 254 DNS errors 99 with XMPP |
South Korea1.0%100 sites tested 1 DNS error 1 with XMPP |
United Kingdom3.0%100 sites tested 1 DNS error 3 with XMPP |
United States9.1%100 sites tested 1 DNS error 9 with XMPP |
Japan2.0%100 sites tested 0 DNS errors 2 with XMPP |
| * See What do these numbers mean? for details about the IETF data set | Last update: 2008-10-11 Download stats as text. |
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What do these numbers mean?
This experiment attempts to answer the following question: If an average user had a working installation of XMPP on their machine, how useful would it be to them? What percentage of the services and sites the average user regularly accesses are XMPP-enabled? In other words, the experiment attempts to quantify the usefulness of XMPP to the average end user, given the current deployment of XMPP in the Internet.
The experiment does not track how many users or hosts use XMPP in the current Internet. It also does not track how many sites have configurations of XMPP that are not accessible by average users from the Internet.
The Extensible Messaging and Presence Protocol (XMPP) is an open XML technology for real-time communication, which powers a wide range of applications including instant messaging, presence, media negotiation, whiteboarding, collaboration, lightweight middleware, content syndication, and generalized XML routing.
The IETF statistics are based on a list of domain names that are derived from the email addresses of currently-active document authors of Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) documents. This data set was included to investigate if the organizations that IETF authors come from are more progressive in deploying XMPP, compared to the rest of the Internet.
How are these numbers generated?
The scripts that update this page retrieve the names of the web sites that are most popular across the globe, as well as in select countries, from alexa.com in regular intervals. They then check whether the DNS entry for each site name reflects that it uses XMPP. The numbers above show the percentage of these top sites that are XMPP-enabled, as well as the absolute numbers.
Note that although the DNS entry for a site may indicate that XMPP is available, this does not neccessarily mean that actually using XMPP with the site will succeed. I'll eventually add code to verify that XMPP can be used with sites that claim to enable it.
How representative are these numbers?
They're reasonably representative, but not perfect. One issue is that the sample sets are very small; Alexa typically offers lists of 100 to 500 top sites for free, depending on the country. More importantly, though, the sample sets are derived from web site names, because that's all Alexa offers. It is not clear that checking XMPP deployment based on a set of web site names is resulting in numbers that represent deployment of XMPP in the broader Internet.
Attention, operators: I'm interested in basing these statistics on a more meaningful data set. If you can provide me with a regularly-updated list of most-frequently-looked-up DNS names – or, for SPF or DKIM, a list of the domains that generate the most inbound email – please contact me. The larger your network and the longer the list, the better.
How have these numbers been changing over time?
Funny you should ask. The graphs below illustrate the weekly changes of XMPP deployment in the various sample sets since these measurements started in October 2007:
This graph shows the same data as the one above, but zooms in on the interesting area:
Download deployment trends as text: global cn de fi in jp kr uk us ietf
Acknowledgements
The original idea for these statistics came out of discussions on an "IPv6 clock" in Joe Touch's group of PhD students at USC/ISI around 1999 – we just never got around to implementing it.
Thanks to Jari Arkko for the affiliation information of IETF authors, obtained from his author statistics. Miguel Garcia explained how to track SIP deployment. Marcus Isomäki suggested to track XMPP deployment. Jim Fenton pointed out a critical bug in my DKIM tracking code. Frank Ellermann suggested to track SPF deployment.

