I've been testing out thousandeyes for the past 1,5-2 month(s) and I'm very happy with it. Depending on what you want to do with it, it can be expensive but for my current employer it's worth the investment due to the extra visibility it provides. -- Kostas (Konstantinos) Koutalis Sent from my OnePlus 6 On Thu, Jul 18, 2019, 03:17 TJ Trout <tj@pcguys.us> wrote:
Anyone know of a hosted alternative to bgpmon? I'm testing Qrator but I can't determine if it will notify in real-time of a prefix hijack?
On Sun, Jun 16, 2019 at 9:23 AM Matt Corallo <nanog@as397444.net> wrote:
There's also https://github.com/NLNOG/bgpalerter (which I believe they're trying to turn into a website frontend based on RIS, but I run it with patches for as_path regexes and it works pretty well).
On Jun 16, 2019, at 07:40, Michael Hallgren <mh@xalto.net> wrote:
RIS Live API is a choice for this.
mh Le 16 juin 2019, à 13:21, Brian Kantor <brian@ampr.org> a écrit:
That would be wonderful. Thank you! - Brian
On Sun, Jun 16, 2019 at 03:59:29AM -0700, Mike Leber wrote:
I'm sure if it doesn't do exactly that already, we can add it shortly.
Some of planned functionality for hijack detection is already live. That's one of the main reasons for creating this service.
Mike.
On 6/16/19 2:48 AM, Brian Kantor wrote:
On Sun, Jun 16, 2019 at 02:25:40AM -0700, Mike Leber wrote:
As a beta service you can try out rt-bgp.he.net. This is a real time bgp monitoring service we are developing.
It's interesting, but I don't see any way to do what I primarily use the existing BGPMon for: watch for hijacks.
That is, set up one or more prefixes to be continuously monitored and have the monitor send me an email alert when that prefix or a subnet of it begins to be announced by someone new.
For example, if I have told it to monitor 44.0.0.0/8 and someone somewhere begins announcing it, or perhaps 44.1.0.0/16, I'd very much like to know about that, along with details of who and where.
Then if that announcement is authorized, I can tell the monitoring service that this new entry is NOT a hijack, and it won't bug me about it again.
Can it be persuaded to do this? - Brian