nanog mailing list archives

Re: community real-time BGP hijack notification service


From: Avi Freedman <freedman () freedman net>
Date: Fri, 12 Sep 2008 11:33:36 -0400 (EDT)


Hi Erik -

There's a great button about Usenet -

"Reading Usenet is like drinking from a firehose;
 Posting to Usenet is like shouting from a mountaintop;
 Archiving Usenet is like saving used toilet tissue."

BGP may be somewhat more important, useful, and the results consumable
in the short-term, but for long-term archiving I think it devolves to
being more interested to researchers and other ubernerds who can use
the libraries and the very valuable data store and service that RIPE
provides (which is appreciated)!

I was thinking more for the medium term "what's normal" that goes
back beyond whatever's in the routing table this second, probably
for a few weeks to months max in most cases.

And I think for actual diagnosis what's needed is a great tool to
ask network and business questions of historic BGP data.  That's the
context in which I mention Renesys tools+data.

So I'd say to help the networkers of the world, it's probably more
about tools than history.

Thanks,

Avi

RIS provides data in a searchable MySQL database for three months.

All we've ever collected is kept in a raw data format. This archive 
starts in 1999, and we maintain a library to read the data.
This data is free to use for any purpose and we will not remove any of 
our raw data as it gets older.

We are also carefully looking into whether we should reduce or increase 
the amount of data in our MySQL database - as that's easy to search for 
our users.

However, any increase obviously comes with increased resource usage - so 
this is something that requires careful thinking and planning.
Another option is to store aggregated info on older data, instead of 
keeping every update that ever occured.

But, this is just an idea that crosses our minds from time to time - I'm 
not making promises on what we will implement :)

Of course, any ideas on how much more history would help you, are very 
welcome.

cheers,
-- 
Erik Romijn                 RIPE NCC software engineer




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