Can all Attica's BGP peers please update their filters:
ip prefix-list attica-networks seq 5 permit 202.180.96.0/19
ip prefix-list attica-networks seq 10 permit 202.180.64.0/18 le 19
ip prefix-list attica-networks seq 15 permit 210.55.254.0/24
ip prefix-list attica-networks seq 20 permit 210.55.5.0/24
ip prefix-list attica-networks seq 25 permit 202.50.170.0/24
ip prefix-list attica-networks seq 30 permit 202.55.111.0/24
Cheers.
James Tyson ---
Samizdat New Media Solutions
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Looking at www.orbs.org this morning (as I frequently do (;-)) I see:
Due to circumstances beyond our control, the ORBS website is no longer
available.
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This trace is coming from a netgate-connected PC via DSL to iconz.:
odysseus@ns1:~$ traceroute www.iconz.co.nz
traceroute to www.iconz.co.nz (210.48.1.113), 30 hops max, 38 byte
packets
1 gateway (192.168.100.2) 1.214 ms 1.058 ms 1.001 ms
2 172.18.0.37 (172.18.0.37) 18.447 ms 16.481 ms 16.707 ms
3 172.18.4.2 (172.18.4.2) 28.454 ms 18.017 ms 17.485 ms
4 asiaonlinenz.ape.net.nz (192.203.154.44) 18.131 ms 18.229 ms
18.473 ms
5 202.14.100.33 (202.14.100.33) 19.081 ms 18.982 ms 18.945 ms
6 202.14.100.33 (202.14.100.33) 19.144 ms !A * *
>From what I can gather there's peering between the two at ape. If
reverse name look-ups aren't reliable enough to go to, the number of
hops has certainly decreased so I'll go on that. :)
Chris
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I'd like to collect some BGP data from NZ ISPs to see if I can see
the same trends in RIB growth, de-aggregation and multi-homing
that other people are seeing in other parts of the world.
An NZ perspective might be interestingly different because of the
history of pervasive peering that is absent from other environments.
If possible, I'd like to take as full a BGP feed as possible from
as many people as possible. Something like this, in fact:
router bgp xxxx
neighbor 202.89.128.76 description jabley(a)automagic.org
neighbor 202.89.128.76 remote-as 65517
neighbor 202.89.128.76 ebgp-multihop 254
neighbor 202.89.128.76 send-community
or perhaps
protocols {
bgp {
group jabley {
type external;
description "jabley(a)automagic.org";
peer-as 65517;
multihop ttl 254;
neighbor 202.89.128.76;
}
}
if that suits you better. If anybody thinks they might be happy to
send me some data like this for a while, please let me know.
Thanks!
Joe
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Now with free steak knives! [1]
ip prefix-list ihug-networks seq 5 permit 202.36.94.0/23 le 24
ip prefix-list ihug-networks seq 10 permit 202.37.129.0/24
ip prefix-list ihug-networks seq 15 permit 202.37.136.0/24
ip prefix-list ihug-networks seq 20 permit 202.37.182.0/24
ip prefix-list ihug-networks seq 25 permit 202.37.194.0/24
ip prefix-list ihug-networks seq 30 permit 202.49.59.0/24
ip prefix-list ihug-networks seq 35 permit 202.49.88.0/23 le 24
ip prefix-list ihug-networks seq 40 permit 202.49.148.0/23 le 24
ip prefix-list ihug-networks seq 45 permit 202.49.176.0/23 le 24
ip prefix-list ihug-networks seq 50 permit 202.49.180.0/23 le 24
ip prefix-list ihug-networks seq 55 permit 202.49.186.0/24
ip prefix-list ihug-networks seq 60 permit 202.49.240.0/22 le 24
ip prefix-list ihug-networks seq 65 permit 202.49.249.0/24
ip prefix-list ihug-networks seq 70 permit 202.49.252.0/22 le 24
ip prefix-list ihug-networks seq 75 permit 202.50.84.0/24
ip prefix-list ihug-networks seq 80 permit 202.50.103.0/24
ip prefix-list ihug-networks seq 85 permit 202.50.255.0/24
ip prefix-list ihug-networks seq 90 permit 203.109.128.0/17 le 24
ip prefix-list ihug-networks seq 95 permit 203.173.128.0/17 le 24
ip prefix-list ihug-networks seq 100 permit 210.55.184.0/24
ip prefix-list ihug-networks seq 105 permit 210.55.203.0/24
ip prefix-list ihug-networks seq 110 permit 210.55.248.0/21 le 24
As you can see, these allow for variable masks. If anyone requires
specific prefixes, let me know and I'll see what I can do. We change them
from time to time, and its easier this way.
[1] Ok, I was kidding about the steak knives.
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As anybody noticed any recent excess local search engine traffic.
Since saturday we suddenly seem to be 'heavily indexed' by 203.97.86.133
(aka: ASDF Search NZ) and 210.48.127.49 (aka: kupe.searchnz.co.nz).
It's quite obvious on our traffic graph between midnight and 6:30 am.
One of them is obviously behing a 256K pipe.
jfp.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Jean-Francois Pirus <jfp(a)clearfield.com> Clearfield Software Ltd
Phone (+64-9) 358 2081 4th Floor 8-10 Whitaker Place
Fax (+64-9) 358 2083 P O Box 2348 Auckland, New Zealand
------------------------------------------------------------------------
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I just had to deal with Telecom over a customer of ours who was having
trouble getting connected and I was wondering if anyone here had
experience with or had heard of the excuse Telecom gave me.
The customer in question lives on Wahiki Island and cannot connect to our
pool at anything greater than 13200 (if that). After excluding all the
usual problems (bad lines, bad modem etc etc) we opened a fault with
Telecom who quite happily informed us that the reason it wouldn't connect
at a decent speed was that the homeowner was on "Size Core" lines instead
of normal phone lines, due to being so remote.
When pressed for an explanation the person in question could only tell me
that "It was a method for making 8 home lines go over a single normal
line". They said they couldn't give me a better explanation and didn't
want to hand me to someone who could. And that was pretty much that.
Has anyone else had any experience with this sort of technology (or lack
of it) and could anyone shed anymore light on the widespereadness of it's
use and if it's going to become more so.
Chris Rigby
Senior Systems Engineer
IHUG - Into the Internet
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