We've encountered the same diligence with LVL3, especially after acquisitions where records haven't been updated yet. Although a little annoying it's quite refreshing.
-----Original Message----- From: Eric Spaeth [mailto:eric@spaethco.com] Sent: Thursday, August 28, 2008 1:41 AM To: Jon Lewis; nanog@merit.edu Subject: Re: Revealed: The Internet's well known BGP behavior
Jon Lewis wrote:
At 11:32 PM 27-08-08 -0500, John Lee wrote:
They didn't have control of any routers other than their own. What they had to find is a single clueless upstream ISP that would allow them to announce prefixes that didn't belong to them.
Clueless or big and inattentive? AFAIK, Level3 will accept anything from me...as long as I put it in one of the IRRs the day before I plan to announce it.
Working for a company that has been steadily growing through acquisition, we have actually run into this problem a couple times before. I'm not sure if we hit the lottery, but our upstream providers (including LVL3) have definitely intervened when we've moved netblocks from a company that doesn't match our name into our facilities to be advertised under our ASNs. I'm not sure how diligent or widespread the validation checks are, but at least on occasion they do occur.
-Eric
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Do you utilize the IRR, have an as-set, and put all customer AS/CIDR's into the IRR? I've honestly never heard from LVL3 about our advertisements. Other providers have varied from just needing a web form, email, phone call, or those combined with faxed LOAs. The latter gets very annoying...but maybe it is the way it should be. On Thu, 28 Aug 2008, Boyd, Benjamin R wrote:
We've encountered the same diligence with LVL3, especially after acquisitions where records haven't been updated yet. Although a little annoying it's quite refreshing.
-----Original Message----- From: Eric Spaeth [mailto:eric@spaethco.com] Sent: Thursday, August 28, 2008 1:41 AM To: Jon Lewis; nanog@merit.edu Subject: Re: Revealed: The Internet's well known BGP behavior
Jon Lewis wrote:
At 11:32 PM 27-08-08 -0500, John Lee wrote:
They didn't have control of any routers other than their own. What they had to find is a single clueless upstream ISP that would allow them to announce prefixes that didn't belong to them.
Clueless or big and inattentive? AFAIK, Level3 will accept anything from me...as long as I put it in one of the IRRs the day before I plan to announce it.
Working for a company that has been steadily growing through acquisition, we have actually run into this problem a couple times before. I'm not sure if we hit the lottery, but our upstream providers (including LVL3) have definitely intervened when we've moved netblocks from a company that doesn't match our name into our facilities to be advertised under our ASNs. I'm not sure how diligent or widespread the validation checks are, but at least on occasion they do occur.
-Eric
***************************************************************************************
The information contained in this message, including attachments, may contain privileged or confidential information that is intended to be delivered only to the person identified above. If you are not the intended recipient, or the person responsible for delivering this message to the intended recipient, Windstream requests that you immediately notify the sender and asks that you do not read the message or its attachments, and that you delete them without copying or sending them to anyone else.
---------------------------------------------------------------------- Jon Lewis | I route Senior Network Engineer | therefore you are Atlantic Net | _________ http://www.lewis.org/~jlewis/pgp for PGP public key_________
Jon Lewis wrote:
Do you utilize the IRR, have an as-set, and put all customer AS/CIDR's into the IRR? I've honestly never heard from LVL3 about our advertisements. Other providers have varied from just needing a web form, email, phone call, or those combined with faxed LOAs. The latter gets very annoying...but maybe it is the way it should be.
Level3 pull information from a number of sources, including RIPE where we register our routes. One of the nice things about their setup is you can query a whois interface to check the filter generation: e.g. (to pick someone else's AS-MACRO at random) whois -h filtergen.level3.net RIPE::AS-DEMON Sam
participants (3)
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Boyd, Benjamin R
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Jon Lewis
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Sam Stickland