On Thu, 24 Jul 1997, Howard C. Berkowitz wrote:
MCB desired to level the load over their various server farms and links to NSP-1. They had fixated on BGP as the way to do what they thought they wanted to do, which was to affect the MED passed to peers of NSP-1 based on loading of their servers. They also wanted to affect NSP-1's interior routing so they could advertise more specific routes to each of their server farms, again based on _their_ load. Several million a year in revenues were involved.
We went through that phase with senior management in one or two of our divisions. It's surprising how some folks interpret "It doesn't do that" to mean "Ask me again".
IMHO, on looking at what they were trying to do, it wasn't even a routing problem. What they wanted was probably best done with DNS load control.
Distributed Director is looking better all the time, if only they'd drop the price down to semi-managable. *sigh*
They simply did not realize that what they wanted in routing would have marginal effect on the direct peers of NSP-1, and none on non-adjacent AS. Their fundamental mental model was an enterprise network where they were in control. And their next level of detail assumed everything could be controlled with IP routing.
Bwaahahahah but I *do* control the Internet ;)
The concept that other traffic flowed in NSP-1, and that they could not control the routing of other AS with whom they had no business relationship, simply didn't penetrate.
So if the ISP has to set general policies,they need to protect themselves against the NCBs of the world. Paranoid filtering isn't enough if the customer is demanding something not possible. A part of making multihoming practical is managing customer expectations and educating enterprise network designers (or encouraging them to _have_ designers).
Good point. I really just wanted to get a combination of things across, firstly that it's doable, and I think we probably are doing it in the most logical way, second of all, the routing infrastructure needs to change or routing aggragation will break, and lastly that even though it isn't always true, it is possible that the ISP is the least "victimized" in an incorrect set-up. But then, I think you've all got the easy jobs, since I have to deal with most of the same issues (over 130 business units will do that), as well as Appletalk, IPX and all the st00pid MS network garbage ;) [1] Paul "Arcserve backup is killing one of my internal 7513s" Robertson [1] Yes, it's a troll, save the list follow-ups and flame directly ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Paul D. Robertson gatekeeper@gannett.com