On 10/2/10 10:59 AM, Jon Lewis wrote:
On Sat, 2 Oct 2010, Brielle Bruns wrote:
It took only a few days to be assigned our AS number, but that was after hair pulling, head banging on desk, and i-want-to-drink-every-night-after-work for a week or two while we figured out how to work around the circular "You need to have two upstreams first before we will assign an AS" rule but providers can't/won't peer with you without one in the first place reality.
It's been a while since I've applied for an ASN...but used to be you just put on the form that you've ordered connectivity from multiple providers with the intent of multihoming, and that was good enough for ARIN. If that's no longer good enough, I would think any understanding provider would let you setup the peering connection first, assign it a /30, and then wait for you to get your ASN to do the BGP part.
Long story, but the short of it is we were planning our IPv6 deployment, and because of several issues couldn't get native ipv6 to our main cabinet. Given our low budget nature, another drop was not feasable just to appease the ARIN rules, so it took time to brainstorm a plan of action. To do things the right way, yeah it made it harder and required coordination and the help of the guys at HE. But, the key being we followed the rules and didn't try to game the system - we're multihomed now, just not in the traditional way. :) This comes back to the whole thing where the people who try do things the right way always seem to have the biggest hassle, yet while those are who are less honest, seem to get everything. -- Brielle Bruns The Summit Open Source Development Group http://www.sosdg.org / http://www.ahbl.org