Hey Lars, We're already doing something similar to this on our collectors, in collaboration with CAIDA. Feel free to contact me off list if you're interested. - David From: Jared Mauch <jared@puck.nether.net> Sent: Saturday, July 18, 2020 4:33 PM To: Brendan Halley Cc: nanog list Subject: Re: non-rate limited, automatable Looking Glasses?
And you can also use ripe atlas as well. If you need credits ask on that list and people offer them up regularly and quickly.
Sent from my iCar
On Jul 18, 2020, at 5:45 PM, Brendan Halley <brendan@halley.net.au> wrote:
Hi Lars,
You should check out https://ring.nlnog.net/ by contributing resources yourself you also get access to a wide array of machines from all across the world you can use to turn traceroutes and pings.
Some wrappers have already been made to run commands against multiple machines at the same time (https://ring.nlnog.net/toolbox/), you'll have SSH access to run any commands you want and there is an API to find the probes if you want to automate it all.
I encourage anyone and everyone to join. The more networks the better!
Brendan
On Sun, 19 Jul 2020, 7:36 am Lars Prehn, <lprehn@mpi-inf.mpg.de> wrote:
Hi everyone,
In the next couple of months, I want to compare data plane and control plane measurements on a larger scale. In particular, I'm looking for (publicly accessible) devices that receive BGP feeds and can perform a bunch of automated (paris) traceroutes. I currently do not have an exact probing rate or target set in mind; however, I'm sure that manually entering IP addresses as targets for usual Looking glasses won't cut it. Does anyone know less-restricted (maybe even automatable?) Looking Glasses (or similar devices) or is willing to provide access to one?
BTW: I though about picking Atlas probes from ASes that feed BGP Collector Projects (e.g. RIPE RIS or RouteViews). Unfortunately, the respective probes are often really far apart from the feeding routers; thus, their individual perspectives are likely misaligned :(
Best regards,
Lars