Just seen that here too: Feb 19 16:20:35: %BGP-6-ASPATH: Long AS path 8001 8928 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 20912 received from 207.99.64.25: More than configured MAXAS-LIMIT Our AS path limit is 100 which is way too high in my opinion but regardless I was trying to figure out any logic in this.... I can remember prepending one of our upstreams 4X at one point thinking that was a bit nuts .... thankfully we don't prepend anyone these days.... Paul -----Original Message----- From: Mikael Abrahamsson [mailto:swmike@swm.pp.se] Sent: Thursday, February 19, 2009 4:21 PM To: nanog@nanog.org Subject: lots of prepends Today 85.119.176.0/21 was announced by AS20912 with 177 prepends. I noticed 20912 modulo 256 is 176. AS47868 modulo 256 is 252 which matches this mondays prepend-incident. So, what router OS will put 20912 into a byte and thus end up with 176 in something like "set as-path prepend last-as <no of prepends>" ? It needs to be fixed. Has anyone noticed any ill effects with IOS and using "bgp max-as"? Will it just drop any prefixes with long as-paths and no other ill operational effects? -- Mikael Abrahamsson email: swmike@swm.pp.se ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- "The information transmitted is intended only for the person or entity to which it is addressed and contains confidential and/or privileged material. If you received this in error, please contact the sender immediately and then destroy this transmission, including all attachments, without copying, distributing or disclosing same. Thank you."