Greetings all, Time for the "kooky routing idea of the year" post... Scenario: AS65000 is a bandwidth provider. One of their downstreams wishes to peer with AS65100, or to multihome with AS65100 as a second upstream. The obvious and 100% correct answer is for $downstream to register their own ASN, that anyone ready to multihome or peer can afford $500 up front and a few bucks per year. We all know this. However, $downstream wishes to advertise the routes without registering an ASN. AS65100 decides to advertise $downstream's prefixes as 65100 65000 ? exactly as if 65000 were sending only $downstream's routes to 65100. From a technical perspective, this works. Yes, there are issues with more-specifics and perhaps loop detection. The question: What would your reaction be if you were AS65000? Note that this is a political/admin question, _not_ a technical one. My thoughts:
From an administrative perspective, this can get messy, but is doable iff 65000 and 65100 agree in advance. The IP space analog is done routinely.
I'd not mind being either 65000 or 65100 -- _iff_ both ASNs agreed in advance. Cutting down on leaf ASNs without causing inconsistent ASNs seems like a reasonable goal. Wrapping self in flameproof insulation... Eddy -- Brotsman & Dreger, Inc. - EverQuick Internet Division Bandwidth, consulting, e-commerce, hosting, and network building Phone: +1 785 865 5885 Lawrence and [inter]national Phone: +1 316 794 8922 Wichita _________________________________________________________________ DO NOT send mail to the following addresses : blacklist@brics.com -or- alfra@intc.net -or- curbjmp@intc.net Sending mail to spambait addresses is a great way to get blocked.