Heads up: Long AS-sets announced in the next few days
James
haesu at towardex.com
Fri Mar 4 00:22:33 UTC 2005
On Thu, Mar 03, 2005 at 02:28:43PM -0800, David Schwartz wrote:
[ snip ]
>
> Every piece of BGP documentation I have ever seen says that this attribute
> documents the ASes that the route has actually passed through.
>
> > Do I need to get permission from Sprint before I include 1239:100 as a
> > community-string attribute on my own advertisement, too?
>
> You certainly need their permission before you can advertise routes that
> falsely came to have passed through their network!
What kind of specific _technical_ issue do I create by prepending another ASN
on AS_PATHs I advertise, without such "owner"'s permission?
> that you do need permission to attach someone else's community string to
> your routes and that it would be considered at least terribly bad manners to
> use undocumented community strings from other people's ASes. (Documentation,
> of course, equates to permission.)
Please, that's ridiculous.
[ snip ]
> I'm curious where you would draw the line then. And I'm curious what you
> think is the point of registering AS numbers at all, if it's okay to use
> other people's without their permission.
If you are concerned about accuracy of registration records, I would advise
that you ensure that your origin AS (aka the last ASN showing up before 'i'
on Cisco or 'I' on Juniper in show output) in the AS_PATH is accurate. I don't
see any technical pitfalls to include someone else's ASN in the transit path
to avoid that particular ASNs from seeing it, other than the fact that is
generally a frowned-upon or tasteless act to do.
-J
More information about the NANOG
mailing list