nanog mailing list archives

Re: Creating a Circuit ID Format


From: "Justin M. Streiner" <streinerj () gmail com>
Date: Tue, 22 Aug 2017 16:50:40 -0400 (EDT)

On Tue, 22 Aug 2017, James Bensley wrote:

In my opinion the circuit ID should be an abitrary (but unique) value
and nothing more. As Nick suggested start at 1 and go up. If your
company is called ABC Ltd then maybe have your first circuit ID as
ABC00000001 and count up from there, it's as simple as that.

For me, all the circuit ID should be is a record number/ID of a
database entry and nothing more (or a search string). Some people like
to have circuit IDs which include circuit types, or circuit speeds, or
interface type, but as you asked, do you then change the circuit ID if
the circuit speed changes, or the interface types changes, or the
medium etc?

Agreed. I designed something similar at a previous employer, and it just used a date-coded ID with sequence number (ex: UOP 20170822.0001), and then all of the cross-connect details were recorded in a place that was better suited to capturing that sort of information. That would also allow us to re-use fiber paths when we upgraded 1G links to 10G, etc.

This also included IDs that could reference other circuit IDs - including circuit IDs from other providers - so we could tie non-dark elements together, such as waves through DWDM gear end up riding on separate dark fiber paths on either side of the mux.

The biggest obstacle was getting people to label fiber jumpers in the field, but that obstacle went away as people get a better understanding of it and having all of the cross-connects documented saved lots of time and frustration when having to search through a large patch field at 3 AM...

jms


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