Hello Amir,
This discussion is very interesting, I didn't know about this problem, it has implications to our work on routing security, thanks!
Your welcome..., since long time ago I wanted to expose our
findings in English.
On Sat, May 18, 2019 at 11:37 AM Alejandro Acosta <alejandroacostaalamo@gmail.com> wrote:
If you learn, let's say, up to /22 (v4), and someone hijacks one /21
you will learn the legitimate prefix and the hijacked prefix. Now, the
owner of the legitimate prefix wants to defends their routes announcing
/23 or /24, of course those prefixes won't be learnt if they are filtered.
I wonder if this really is a consideration to avoid filtering small prefixes (e.g. /24):
My position is exactly the opposite.
- attackers are quite likely to do sub-prefix hijacks (or say a specific /24), so I'm not sure this `hits' defenders more than it `hits' attackers
Yes, you are right, but anyhow -IMHO- this still better than not
learning small prefixes at all.
- I think we're talking only/mostly about small providers here, right? as larger providers probably will not have such problems of tables exceeding router resources.I expect such small providers normally connect thru several tier-2 or so providers... if these upper-tier providers get hijacked, the fact you've prevented this at the stub/multihome ISP may not help much - we showed how this happens with ROV in our NDSS paper on it:
You are right here.
Thanks for the link, I will take a look.
Alejandro,
Amir Herzberg
Comcast professor for security innovationDept. of Computer Science and Engineering, University of Connecticut
Foundations of Cybersecurity: https://www.researchgate.net/project/Lecture-notes-on-Introduction-to-Cyber-Security