nanog mailing list archives

Re: less than a /24 & BGP tricks


From: Stephen Kratzer <kratzers () pa net>
Date: Tue, 30 Jun 2009 13:08:53 -0400

Neal,

If your providers are doing uRPF, and it is always the case that hosts using 
provider A's IPs must route through provider A, and hosts using provider B's 
IPs must route through provider B, then why not enforce this behavior in your 
routing tables rather than doing PBR?

From your description, it doesn't sound like you're distributing subnets 
across datacenters, and it's difficult to tell how, why, or if you're sharing 
provider routes between your routers.

Stephen Kratzer
Network Engineer
CTI Networks, Inc.

On Tuesday 30 June 2009 09:54:29 neal rauhauser wrote:
   I have a network with two upstreams that land in datacenters many miles
apart. The hardware involved is Cisco 7507s with RSP4s and VIP4-80. I've
got a curious problem which I hope others here have faced.

   A while ago we got a /28 from each provider and attached it to a
dedicated fast ethernet interface at each location. Inbound traffic arrives
normally and anything arriving on that port is policy routed to the
upstream that provided the prefix.

   This was all well and good when it was a little firewall with a Linux
machine  behind it being used to check latency and do other diagnostics,
but the sales people noticed it and have lined up a couple of opportunities
to sell a service that would depend on our being able to receive and send
traffic from blocks less than a /24.

   The policy routing works fine at low volume, but the RSP4 is rated to
only do four megabits and I know they're going to exceed that.

   I can terminate this subnet on another router, wire that device into the
7507 with a crossover, and establish a BGP session. I'm wondering if there
is a tidy way to set next hop in some fashion using route-maps such that
all the marking would be done on the auxillary machine and the traffic
passing through the 7507 would be CEF switched rather than process
switched.




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