Depending on the nature of your redundant connections, your traffic engineering/bgp settings, and the visibility of the routing through the lost provider to the internet route servers mentioned, you may/may not be able to easily monitor this. Some failures are harder to find than others. Suggestions: 1) On the provider that stopped accepting your prefix, your inbound traffic would have dropped to 0. Monitor for this if this isn't by design already. 2) Use the bgpmon suggested by Dave below to see events which are visible to the route server they use. On Tue, Dec 20, 2011 at 1:03 PM, Hank Nussbacher <hank@efes.iucc.ac.il>wrote:
At 13:52 20/12/2011 -0500, Dave Pooser wrote:
Use one of the following services: http://cyclops.cs.ucla.edu/ http://bgpmon.net/ You'll get an email whenever a routing change takes place in regards to the prefix you are monitoring.
-Hank
Earlier this year I got a /24 of PA space, set up our shiny new router,
got BGP working with both my upstreams, and heaved a sigh of relief: "I'll never have to think about THAT again!" (Okay, quit laughing; I SAID I was a noob!)
Now, I discover that one of my upstreams quit announcing our route in November (fortunately the provider who assigned us the /24, so we're still covered in their /18) and the other upstream apparently started filtering our announcements last week. I'm working with both of them to get that fixed, but it's made it clear to me that I need to be monitoring this.
My question for the group is, how? I can and do monitor my own router, and I can see that I'm receiving full routes from both ISPs. I am capable of manually accessing route servers and looking glass servers to check if they're receiving routes to me, but I'd like something more automated. Free is nice, $$ is not a problem, $$$$ might become a problem.
Thanks in advance for any suggestions. -- Dave Pooser Manager of Information Services Alford Media http://www.alfordmedia.com