nanog mailing list archives

Re: validating reachability via an ISP


From: Baldur Norddahl <baldur.norddahl () gmail com>
Date: Thu, 29 Mar 2018 08:53:45 +0000

Also the only traffic you will be receiving on the other provider will be
from parties that did not pick up the more specific prefix. It should
therefore be really obvious. You should not receive any traffic at all, not
even from the transit provider.

Regards,

Baldur


Den tor. 29. mar. 2018 10.41 skrev Baldur Norddahl <
baldur.norddahl () gmail com>:

If your prefix is larger than /24 you can test with a more specific prefix
such as a /24. Announce the test prefix on just one transit provider. Then
check with BGP services such as the looking glass service provided by the
NLNOG RING network.

There will be no interruption in the traffic as it will follow the less
specific prefix everywhere the test prefix was not picked up.

If you only have a /24 you will need to test in a service window.

Regards

Baldur


Den tor. 29. mar. 2018 01.24 skrev Andy Litzinger <
andy.litzinger.lists () gmail com>:

Hi all,
  I have an enterprise network and do not provide transit. In one of our
datacenters we have our own prefixes and rely on two ISPs as BGP neighbors
to provide global reachability for our prefixes.  One is a large regional
provider and the other is a large global provider.

Recently we took our link to the global provider offline to perform
maintenance on our router.  Nearly immediately we were hit with alerts
that
our prefix was unreachable and BGPMon alerted that nearly 80 AS's noted
our
route had been withdrawn.  We were not unreachable from every AS, but we
certainly were from some of the largest.

The root cause is that the our prefix is not being adequately
re-distributed globally by the regional ISP.  This is unexpected and we
are
working through this with them now.

My question is, how can I monitor global reachability for a prefix via
this
or any specific provider I use over time?  Are there various route-servers
I can programmatically query for my prefix and get results that include AS
paths? Then I could verify that an "acceptable" number of paths exist that
include the AS of the all the ISPs I rely upon.  And what would an
"acceptable" number of alternate paths be?


thanks in advance,
  -andy




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