Prefix filtering for Cisco SUP2
I am hoping to help an ISP keep a couple of Cisco 6500's with SUP2's in production for a while longer. They are currently just about at the FIB limit of 250,000 entries, mostly composed of BGP routes. I'm considering two alternatives to reduce the number of entries. 1. Accept only default and partial routes from upstream. a. Accept directly-connected routes, reject everything else and rely on the default route. b. Assume a reduction to about 30,000 unique routes per upstream ISP (currently 3). 2. Accept only default and RIR minimum routes from upstream. a. Filter based on RIR minimums, rely on default for unaggregated routes. b. Assume a reduction of about 50,000-100,000 total routes. Does anyone have any opinions as to whether one option is better than the other? Are there options that would be better than either of these? Are there serious risks to either option? My sense is that either of these would be a fairly benign change, only having a marginal impact on routing efficiency in either case. It seems like the better option is the one that retains the greater number of routes within some margin of safety. What do you think?
On Fri, 29 Feb 2008, Henry Futzenburger wrote:
2. Accept only default and RIR minimum routes from upstream. a. Filter based on RIR minimums, rely on default for unaggregated routes. b. Assume a reduction of about 50,000-100,000 total routes.
Does anyone have any opinions as to whether one option is better than the other? Are there options that would be better than either of these? Are there serious risks to either option?
My sense is that either of these would be a fairly benign change, only having a marginal impact on routing efficiency in either case. It seems like the better option is the one that retains the greater number of routes within some margin of safety. What do you think?
I chose number 2. It works so well I'm starting to wonder why any network with less than, say, three or four transit providers would want to do anything else, even without system limits. My philosophy is rapidly becoming "Let the settlement-free club worry about all the deaggregated prefixes." Andy --- Andy Dills Xecunet, Inc. www.xecu.net 301-682-9972 ---
Henry, In my past experience with the SUP2/MSFC2 combo you are best off with option 2. Minimize the FIB entry of what you control like BGP route entries. You never know what can happen to cause the FIB to run up again and cause the CPU to spike. Manolo Henry Futzenburger wrote:
I am hoping to help an ISP keep a couple of Cisco 6500's with SUP2's in production for a while longer. They are currently just about at the FIB limit of 250,000 entries, mostly composed of BGP routes. I'm considering two alternatives to reduce the number of entries.
1. Accept only default and partial routes from upstream. a. Accept directly-connected routes, reject everything else and rely on the default route. b. Assume a reduction to about 30,000 unique routes per upstream ISP (currently 3).
2. Accept only default and RIR minimum routes from upstream. a. Filter based on RIR minimums, rely on default for unaggregated routes. b. Assume a reduction of about 50,000-100,000 total routes.
Does anyone have any opinions as to whether one option is better than the other? Are there options that would be better than either of these? Are there serious risks to either option?
My sense is that either of these would be a fairly benign change, only having a marginal impact on routing efficiency in either case. It seems like the better option is the one that retains the greater number of routes within some margin of safety. What do you think?
Is it time for this nanog thread again? http://www.merit.edu/mail.archives/nanog/msg02822.html srs On Fri, Feb 29, 2008 at 11:45 PM, Henry Futzenburger <henryfutz@gmail.com> wrote:
1. Accept only default and partial routes from upstream. a. Accept directly-connected routes, reject everything else and rely on the default route. b. Assume a reduction to about 30,000 unique routes per upstream ISP (currently 3).
2. Accept only default and RIR minimum routes from upstream. a. Filter based on RIR minimums, rely on default for unaggregated routes. b. Assume a reduction of about 50,000-100,000 total routes.
participants (4)
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Andy Dills
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Henry Futzenburger
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Manolo Hernandez
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Suresh Ramasubramanian