Disaster recovery follow up
Folks, Having had my own (albeit politically insignificant) email disaster I have lost the dialogue I was in with a number of you further to the previoud posting (below). Could any of you I was in contact with please come back to me resend me your previous emails (and indeed any other comments of input any of you have) to d2@d2consulting.co.uk My apologies and thanks in advance, Dom (Previous message inserted) --------- Hey folks. I have been commissioned to research disaster recovery after the effects of Sept 11 on the major IP networks for an article in UK trade Magazine ISP World. Presumably any further dialog may be best kept out of NANOG lists, so please reply direct to me (unless you guys feel discussion here is relevant) at d2@d2consulting.co.uk I was wondering if any wizards may have some quotable comments etc as to what (if anything) occurred that day to the Internet, and what was done to rectify any problems... Any feedback would be warmly received, Thanks in advance Dom ------------ Dom Robinson : D2 Consulting ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 'data in motion' ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ IP Distribution Consultancy eMail: d2@d2consulting.co.uk www.d2consulting.co.uk
Hello, I was wondering if anyone on this list might know the maximum number of route updates that can be sent in a BGP Update message. Alternatively, it would be nice to know the max length of the NLRI portion of the message. I am trying to configure Class-based-weighted-fair-queueing (CBWFQ), and I would like to work out how much bandwidth I need to assign to a BGP class match. We are currently grabbing the entire table of 106+K routes, and would like to do this as a preventative measure. Any help would be appreciated, Tim Devries Net Eng. Inquent Technologies
participants (2)
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Dom Robinson
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Tim Devries