Dan, Heh-heh. Most people want me to register a maintainer ... ;) The problem with your request is there is no standard method of making routing table globally accessable. The best I can do for you is to give you a pointer to our IPMA pages which has lots of excellent infomation, including our route server routing tables at all of the exchanged points. So you can see the routing tables of those who peer with our route servers. Go to www.merit.edu and click on 'Research projects', 'Internet Performance, Measurement & Analysis (IPMA)', 'Statistics and Daily Reports', and 'Internet Routing Table'.
From there you can navigate the various exchange points you are interested in.
good luck. --jerry From: Daniel Senie <dts@senie.com> To: nanog@merit.edu Date: Thu, 21 Jan 1999 23:39:47 -0500 Subject: Who uses RADB/IRR? Sender: owner-nanog@merit.edu Message-ID: <36A80113.53178B82@senie.com> Organization: Amaranth Networks, Inc. X-Mailer: Mozilla 4.5 [en] (Win98; U) X-Accept-Language: en MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Precedence: bulk Status: RO I'd like to find out which networks use the RADB or IRR databases to build their routing policies, and how to look at their current databases or access looking glass or equivalent systems. It's becoming difficult to take a network multihomed without having parts of the net appear to be black holed in other parts of the world. It appears difficult to ascertain which networks are doing what with policies. So far I am aware of CW.NET and ANS.NET using the routing databases to build their policies, but am not aware of a way to look at their tables. If anyone has pointers to their resources, or those of other nets using the routing registries, please let me know. -- ----------------------------------------------------------------- Daniel Senie dts@senie.com Amaranth Networks Inc. http://www.amaranthnetworks.com
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Gerald Andrew Winters