Re: Creative routing (was Re: Policy Statement ...)
Well, there's an alternate tactic for a tiny tiny company.
I was thinking of a slightly simplier example. Nevertheless, Mr. Doran's example confirms NSP engineers are capable of all sorts of routing hacks when it is in their self-interest to do so. Even if it means introducing a /32 into their network. -- Sean Donelan, Data Research Associates, Inc, St. Louis, MO Affiliation given for identification not representation
......... Sean Donelan is rumored to have said: ] >Well, there's an alternate tactic for a tiny tiny company. ] ] I was thinking of a slightly simplier example. Nevertheless, ] Mr. Doran's example confirms NSP engineers are capable of all ] sorts of routing hacks when it is in their self-interest to do so. Exactly. So let's forget there ever was such a thing as A/B/C networks and enforce classlessness. Couple this w/ responsibility originating from the big NSP players on enforcing prefix lengths, and *whoah* look what the world can figure out to do. "Golly, thar Martha, once them folks up in Reston said I had to renumber, well shucks, it warnt quite as hard as I thunk." -alan
participants (2)
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Alan Hannan
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Sean Donelan