More on this - Two of BellSouth's AS's (6197 & 6198) have combined to inject around 1,000 deaggregated prefixes into the global routing tables over the last few weeks (in addition to their usual load of ~600+ for a total of ~1,600). This does indeed appear to be having an operational impact on some folks, an example of which is here: http://isp-lists.isp-planet.com/isp-bgp/0310/msg00059.html The vast majority (if not all) of these prefixes are covered within aggregates announced by BellSouth AS6389, which acts as an upstream to these and around 20 other BellSouth AS's. (These other AS's combine for another ~700 deaggregated announcements, meaning that BellSouth may currently be advertising more deaggregated prefixes into the global routing tables than any other entity.) Some of these AS's appear to use Qwest as backup transit, so presumably the motive behind the vast deaggregation is failover. Is there a better way of achieving this than forcing the Internet to store ~2,300 extra routes? Can anyone from BellSouth comment? What if a few other major ISPs were to add a thousand or so deaggregated routes in a few weeks time? Would there be a greater impact? (Note: The above numbers are based on data from cidr-report.org. Some other looking glasses were also checked to see if cidr-report.org's view of these AS's is consistent with the Internet as a whole. This appears to be the case, but corrections are welcome.) -Terry
-----Original Message----- From: owner-nanog@merit.edu [mailto:owner-nanog@merit.edu] On Behalf Of Terry Baranski Sent: Sunday, October 05, 2003 3:01 PM To: 'James Cowie'; nanog@merit.edu Subject: RE: as6198 aggregation event
James Cowie wrote:
On Friday, we noted with some interest the appearance of more than six hundred deaggregated /24s into the global routing tables. More unusually, they're still in there this morning.
AS6198 (BellSouth Miami) seems to have been patiently injecting them over the course of several hours, between about 04:00 GMT and 08:00 GMT on Friday morning (3 Oct 2003).
If you look at the 09/19 and 09/26 CIDR Reports, BellSouth Atlanta (AS6197) did something similar during this time period -- they added about 350 deaggregated prefixes, most if not all /24's.
Usually when we see deaggregations, they hit quickly and they disappear quickly; nice sharp vertical jumps in the table size. This event lasted for hours and, more importantly, the prefixes haven't come back out again, an unusual pattern for a single-origin change that effectively expanded global tables by half a percent.
That AS6197's additions are still present isn't encouraging.
-Terry