On the back of other 'security' posts....

Greenhalgh, John JGreenhalgh at newskies.com
Sun Aug 31 12:18:50 UTC 2003



>That depends on your definition of edge, I suppose.  I define it as the
>port on one of my routers where the other end of the link is connected
>to a machine I don't control.  In those terms, edge filtering makes sense
>in some cases and not in others.  If it's a dial-up or T1 customer which is
>a single business, it makes sense.  If it's an ISP with a few fortune 500
>customers, it doesn't work out as well.

I agree. In the satellite world, such filtering is extremely difficult due
to the asymmetric nature of the traffic. A common scenario is that the
customer will receive packets from upstream via Provider A to addresses
assigned by Provider A. The customer will send packets upstream through
Provider B with source addresses belonging to Provider B. If Provider B
implements edge filtering, then the only way round is to use GRE tunnels,
which gets messy.

--
John Greenhalgh



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