I mean that, if there is rule no allow some prefixes, all ISP should follow this rule. All! It's the issue. Else, we have just what we have tiday - everything work, but some stohastic filtering add a lot of unpredicted behaviour into the routing. I know a lot of such specifics (class B / 24, see 144.206.* for example) which (1) work OK, (2) surely some part of the routing follow 144.206/16, but at some point /24 speciics appear and routing became just as it should be). Today, the only 2 rules are: (1) some blocks (195.* etc) can't use more than /20 (npot /19) specifics; it began a few years ago due to the Sprint policy; (2) Less than /24 announces are not mainly allowed. If someone want more (and no doubt many ISP want), let's they follow some negotiated rulesa and ask another to follow this rules, too. Alex R (now not ISP network engeneer, through). On Sun, 5 Dec 1999, Yakov Rekhter wrote:
Date: Sun, 05 Dec 1999 05:53:57 -0800 From: Yakov Rekhter <yakov@cisco.com> To: Alex P. Rudnev <alex@virgin.relcom.eu.net> Cc: nanog@merit.edu Subject: Re: Verio Decides what parts of the internet to drop
Alex,
may be - but it shoudl be written in the RFC, not in the VERIO's policy. The global policy must be THE SAME over the global Internet.
What would make such a policy "THE SAME over the global Internet" ?
Yakov.
Aleksei Roudnev, (+1 415) 585-3489 /San Francisco CA/