nanog mailing list archives

Re: estimation of number of DFZ IPv4 routes at peak in the future


From: Joel Jaeggli <joelja () bogus com>
Date: Wed, 09 Mar 2011 08:51:08 -0800

On 3/9/11 1:55 AM, Antonio Querubin wrote:
On Wed, 9 Mar 2011, Joel Jaeggli wrote:

one of these curves is steeper than the other.

http://www.cidr-report.org/cgi-bin/plota?file=%2fvar%2fdata%2fbgp%2fv6%2fas2.0%2fbgp-active%2etxt&descr=Active%20BGP%20entries%20%28FIB%29&ylabel=Active%20BGP%20entries%20%28FIB%29&with=step


http://www.cidr-report.org/cgi-bin/plota?file=%2fvar%2fdata%2fbgp%2fas2.0%2fbgp-active%2etxt&descr=Active%20BGP%20entries%20%28FIB%29&ylabel=Active%20BGP%20entries%20%28FIB%29&with=step


If the slope on the second stays within some reasonable bounds of it's
current trajactory then everything's cool, you buy new routers on
schedule and the world moves on. The first one however will eventually
kill us.

A valid comparison really needs to use the same vertical scale.  That
first is only 2300 new entries in the last 12 months.  The other is
35000 new entries in the same period.

No it doesn't. I'm more concerned about the percentage rather than
absolute numbers and one of these things is doubling annually. I'll go
out on a limb and say I need 150k ipv6 routes in gear that's supposed to
last to 2016.

joel

Antonio Querubin
e-mail/xmpp:  tony () lava net




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