Paper accepted @ 3rd Workshop on Engineering Computing Continuum Systems (EDCCS 2026)

Quantifying Inter-City Network Latency in Europe: A Measurement based Study for Time-Critical Cloud Services

3rd Workshop on Engineering Techniques for Distributed Computing Continuum Systems (EDCCS), 22-25 June 2026, Seoul, South Korea

Authors: Thomas Schleicher, Kurt Horvath, Dragi Kimovski, Bernd Spiess, Oliver Hohlfeld

Abstract: Time-critical cloud and edge services depend on predictable and low-latency wide-area connectivity, yet inter-city network behavior often deviates from expectations based on geographic distance alone. This paper presents an evaluation framework and results on inter-city network latency across major European metropolitan areas, treating latency as a non-functional property relevant to benchmarking and service placement in cloud computing. We develop a scalable measurement framework based on a distributed probing infrastructure, analyze round-trip latency, and assess spatial efficiency and temporal stability. Initial results reveal unexpectedly high latency on long-distance paths from the Iberian Peninsula toward Turkey. Distance-normalized analysis further exposes pronounced inefficiencies on short-distance paths between Greece and Turkey, suggesting non-distance-related network effects beyond geographic proximity. Temporal analysis shows elevated latency variance and instability on paths involving Turkey, while most other inter-city connections closely follow distance-based expectations and remain stable over time. These findings highlight the importance of distance-normalized and stability-aware metrics for evaluating wide-area cloud connectivity. The presented methodology and results provide practical insight for benchmarking, placement, and operation of latency-sensitive cloud services across geographically distributed infrastructures.