On Mon, 1 Feb 1999, Rusty Zickefoose wrote: :1. Ignore routing aggregation - Everybody announces the sub-net. : This works, but runs counter to a long standing goal of the : community - reducing the size of the routing table. My understanding of this setup is that they do not have portable space and have been allocated a block from you, and one from their other provider. If this is the case: Wouldn't this depend on what they were using multihoming for? If the customer site were able to send communities to their other provider that would tag the routes that you had assigned them as no-export, you wouldn't be crowding the global table. If you also recieved their other peers route, you would not export that route into the global table. You would continue announcing your supernet, as would the other provider theirs, and there is no pollution in the tables. :3. Local announcement only : May be the result of 2 above, but again - proves the point. Is this what I just described? : :My question is, would the creation of a "multi-homed" flag in the BGP :protocol be worth while discussing? How is this different than the multi_exit descriptor? (CCO is down as I write this so I can't look it up.) -- jamie.reid Chief Reverse Engineer Superficial Intelligence Research Division Defective Technologies