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RE: Stupid Question maybe?


From: "David Edelman" <dedelman () iname com>
Date: Wed, 19 Dec 2018 16:45:04 -0500

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You could be sure of two things when there were ambiguities in the routing tables:
 1- Every manufacturer knew how to handle them.
2 - Every manufacturer did it a different way.

I suspect that in most cases where two conflicting route entries existed, the router selected the first one that it 
encountered unless they were advertised using different protocols, then the priority associated with the protocol was 
used as a tie breaker.

Dave

- -----Original Message-----
From: NANOG <nanog-bounces () nanog org> On Behalf Of Owen DeLong
Sent: Wednesday, December 19, 2018 3:47 PM
To: Thomas Bellman <bellman () nsc liu se>
Cc: nanog () nanog org
Subject: Re: Stupid Question maybe?



On Dec 19, 2018, at 12:11 , Thomas Bellman <bellman () nsc liu se> wrote:

On 2018-12-19 20:47 MET, valdis.kletnieks () vt edu wrote:

There was indeed a fairly long stretch of time (until the CIDR RFC 
came out and specifically said it wasn't at all canon) where we 
didn't have an RFC that specifically said that netmask bits had to be contiguous.

How did routers select the best (most specific) route for an address?
If the routing table held both (e.g.) 10.20.30.0/255.255.255.64 and 
10.20.30.0/255.255.255.32, then 10.20.30.97 would match both, and have 
the same number of matching bits.

      /Bellman


The institution of the longest match rule came with the prohibition (deprecation) of discontiguous net masks.

Owen
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