At 05:23 PM 6/22/00, Daniel L. Golding wrote:
BTW - I find /24 to be fairly common. Some folks are more restrictive, using the ARIN /20 issuance guideline as a filter policy. www.nanog.org has a few filter policies listed.
The link to Sprint's filter policy is broken, but rumor has it they now accept up to /24 in any space. So does this mean Verio is the only big provider still filtering based on ARIN allocation lengths? /Sean
In a past life, when I worked for a Sprint transit customer, they seemed to accept the /24s we were sending them. - Dan On Thu, 22 Jun 2000, Sean Butler wrote:
At 05:23 PM 6/22/00, Daniel L. Golding wrote:
BTW - I find /24 to be fairly common. Some folks are more restrictive, using the ARIN /20 issuance guideline as a filter policy. www.nanog.org has a few filter policies listed.
The link to Sprint's filter policy is broken, but rumor has it they now accept up to /24 in any space. So does this mean Verio is the only big provider still filtering based on ARIN allocation lengths?
/Sean
In a past life, when I worked for a Sprint transit customer, they seemed to accept the /24s we were sending them.
Sprint did not apply the filters to customer routes. When Sprint turned these on in 1995(?) if the other NSPs has followed Sprint's lead and implemented the same filters then Sprint customers would have lost some net connectivity. -mark
participants (3)
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Daniel L. Golding
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Mark Kent
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Sean Butler