-----Original Message----- From: Avi Freedman [SMTP:freedman@netaxs.com] Sent: Friday, April 25, 1997 5:20 PM To: freedman@access.netaxs.com; nanog@merit.edu Subject: 7007: FROM THE HORSE'S MOUTH
MAI's view:
Here's a status on what AS 7007 themselves saw and think happened. They're disconnected from the 'net now, so they can't post this themselves. MAI does NOT think that they were distributing the BGP routes into an IGP and then readvertising them on that basis; they think there was/is a Bay BGP bug that caused this to happen.
Or Bay unfamiliarity, to be fair. BCN's are all over the core participating in BGP everyday in some very large networks as you know. If MIA is not running the Bay ISP workspace code, then they need to get Bay to educate them on what's available and appropriate for their environment.
An outside view of what happened:
And ASN 7007
We saw about 60k routes in our core routers at the time, and saw thousands of routes from 7007 when we looked more carefully.
When you and I were on the phone, we saw 70K at one time, and the Cisco's were at 100% doing nothing but route calculations.
We kept clearing sessions to filter 7007 but the routes kept popping back up: Sprint (of course), UUNET, and MCI all had them.
Which of course half of the Net was doing, so all routers running dampening, had 3/4 of the prefixes on hold.
Now a good 4 hours after the main-event, I still see MAE routers with a couple thousand dampened paths. Most of the connectivity is stable now (from my view), so some of you can clear ip bgp damp and make a few more customers happy.
I suppose that the immediate topic will be route filtering vs. AS_PATH filtering...
As it should of been a long time ago.
Raw fish tonight, Avi?
Best regards,
Dave Van Allen - You Tools Corporation/FASTNET(tm) dave@fast.net (610)289-1100 http://www.fast.net FASTNET - PA/NJ/DE Business Internet Solutions