You obviously haven't had cases where a telco cuts or swings the wrong circuit. Telco: "We think we've swung it ok" Me: "Circuit is still up, never took a hit" Telco: "Hmm." me (thinking): "I wonder whose circuit they just took down" with cdp or looking at the path-trace one could take advantage of these situations with great ease. - jared On Mon, Sep 17, 2001 at 02:32:56PM -0700, Roeland Meyer wrote:
|> From: Randy Bush [mailto:randy@psg.com] |> Sent: Monday, September 17, 2001 1:45 PM
|> inter-isp peering and intra-isp ibgp to be covered fairly quickly. i |> would suggest having one's provisioning folk working with |> bgp customers |> to close that avenue as well, starting with the more |> critical customers. |> |> also, think about your igp.
Why, IGP shouldn't even be visible from outside the border, neh? Internal issues are, internal issues. If it leaks, plug the leak.
-- Jared Mauch | pgp key available via finger from jared@puck.nether.net clue++; | http://puck.nether.net/~jared/ My statements are only mine.