if you were my neighbor, and you had a gangly tree overgrown into my yard that i took an issue to, i think i would most likely call or talk to you personally about the issue, rather than carry out some agenda by sending pictures of it to the community newsletter, saying "hey everyone look what this guy is doing" On Mon, 29 Oct 2001, Adam Rothschild wrote:
Just a brief follow-up to what I posted previously...
On Mon, Oct 29, 2001 at 02:33:30AM -0500, Adam Rothschild wrote:
I guess I see the rationale behind passing this cruft along to EXDS transit customers who haven't yet read the filtering section of Halabi (remember: more specifics == more outbound traffic from customer == more revenue). But exchange points?
This is a full view from Exodus:
x.x.x.x 4 3967 243954 11543 752069 0 0 1d11h 106124
This is the same full view from Exodus if they'd practice what they preach(ed) and apply <http://www.nielsen.net/people/christian/linx.html>:
x.x.x.x 4 3967 262248 11546 752112 26 0 1d11h 87853
There are some particularly entertaining "bogons" (well, in my mind) in the non-abbreviated version, including:
$ /usr/local/rancid/bin/clogin -c "show ip bgp regex 3967_" border1.nyc1 > exds-routes $ grep "/32" exds-routes |wc -l 27 $ grep "/31" exds-routes | wc -l 2 $ grep "/30" exds-routes | wc -l 293 $ grep "/29" exds-routes | wc -l 114 $ grep "/28" exds-routes | wc -l 269 $ grep "/27" exds-routes | wc -l 220 $ grep "/26" exds-routes | wc -l 275 $ grep "/25" exds-routes | wc -l 312 $ grep "> 10." exds-routes *> 10.255.253.34/32 x.x.x.x 0 3967 i *> 10.255.253.35/32 x.x.x.x 0 3967 i *> 10.255.254.34/32 x.x.x.x 0 3967 i *> 10.255.254.35/32 x.x.x.x 0 3967 i
Can a brother get some prefix-filters?
-adam