I tried that already. I can see the routing information from GTE for our network information in route-views.oregon-ix.net. But route-server.cerf.net does not show any routing information from GTE. In this situation, I'm thinking the possibility for routing problem if UUNET connection is down by accident or something like that. Hyun Kevin Nicholson <kcn@skycache.com> on 12/08/99 12:10:45 PM To: Hyunseog Ryu/Brookfield/Norlight <HRyu@norlight.com> cc: (bcc: Hyunseog Ryu/Brookfield/Norlight) Fax to: Subject: Re: Please help me... On Wed, 8 Dec 1999, Hyunseog Ryu/Brookfield/Norlight wrote:
Hi, folks
Please help me. I need your help. If you have the right to access your router, please send me the result of following command at your router.
Show ip bgp reg 1_7260
Maybe it will be long. But I need that.
why not just telnet to route-server.cerf.net or route-views.oregon-ix.net and do a sh ip bgp regexp yourself. -Kevin Hyun
On Wed, Dec 08, 1999 at 12:18:18PM -0600, Hyunseog Ryu/Brookfield/Norlight wrote:
I tried that already. I can see the routing information from GTE for our network information in route-views.oregon-ix.net. But route-server.cerf.net does not show any routing information from GTE. In this situation, I'm thinking the possibility for routing problem if UUNET connection is down by accident or something like that.
It's really quite simple, with the number of prepends you do on the GTE connection, it's fairly sure that only GTE and single homed customers to GTE will use it, but if your primary path fails, then other providers will use the path via GTE, and announce it to their customers. /Jesper -- Jesper Skriver (JS4261-RIPE), Network manager Tele Danmark DataNet, IP section (AS3292) One Unix to rule them all, One Resolver to find them, One IP to bring them all and in the zone to bind them.
participants (2)
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Hyunseog Ryu/Brookfield/Norlight
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Jesper Skriver