IP backbone numbering/naming
haesu at towardex.com
haesu at towardex.com
Sat Nov 16 00:59:12 UTC 2002
Hey,
Usually numbering backbone routers with a 10/8 is not a necessary practice.
Any backbone routers communicating with the outside world are marked category
three and should have globally unique IP numbers. Plus, if you are an ISP (in
which it looks like you are..), it will help others on public internet to try
to track down abuse a little deeper through traceroutes, which will may be
help them identify the upstream provider of the offender.
You could also use RFC1918 numbers for your point-to-point /30 aggregation
blocks with the customers.. But.. since that would have effect on customer's
premise equipment, it would be better to give them globally unique space as
well, who knows if your customer comes back and yells at you for not being
able to get to his router's serial interface IP.
Quoting Steve Rude <steve at rudedogg.com>:
>
> Hi All,
>
> I am trying to collect information about using RFC 1918 space on an ISP
> backbone. I have read the RFC several times, and I don't see where it
> says that you cannot use 10/8 space to number your backbone links (/30s).
>
> I know this is an old thread that has been rehashed several times, but can
> anyone please send me links or information that I can use to convince my
> boss that we should use our arin alloc'd space on our backbone instead of
> using private space.
>
> Also if anyone has opinions on naming conventions for backbone such as why
> to or why not to even have dns resolution for your backbone and some
> conventions please let me know.
>
> TIA!
>
> --
> Steve Rude
> steve at rudedogg.com
>
>
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