On Fri, 3 Sep 2004, Rodney Joffe wrote:
On Sep 3, 2004, at 10:46 AM, Stephen J. Wilcox wrote:
Given Network A, which has "golden network" content behind it as described by the RIPE paper (root and tld data), if the network has some combination of events that result in all of their announcements to you being dampened by you, your users can't get "there". For grin's, let's say we're talking about .foo, one of the larger gtld's.
But .foo is announced from 13 IPs globally, allowing for anycast probably 40 nodes. If gtld-A has an incident it may be a good thing to dampen it from the internet as it may not be reachable, the other 12 gtlds will be able to serve responses in a stable manner.
Unless you're suggesting *all* the gtlds are flapping at once?
Sorry. I thought I made that clear, in that "if the network has some combination of events that result in all of their announcements to you being dampened by you". I am not talking about events that happen all of the time, where one of 13 hiccups. .foo may have 13 IPs but they have two upstream providers, and the event causes all of their routes to flap.
ok so as someone else mentioned this would be a local problem. in a network such as this, you should be concerned for the possibility of having large numbers of prefixes dampened and soften your dampening parameters accordingly. there is nothing special in this scenario about 'golden networks' Steve