nanog mailing list archives

Re: BGP Peer Selection Considerations


From: Steve Bertrand <steve () ibctech ca>
Date: Mon, 09 Nov 2009 21:43:48 -0500

adel () baklawasecrets com wrote:
Hi,

Thanks to everyone that replied to my post on failover configuration.  This has lead me to this post.  I'm at a point 
now where I'm looking at dual-homing with two BGP peers upstream.  Now what I am looking at doing is as follows:

BGP Peer with Provider A who is multihomed to other providers.
BGP Peer with Provider B who is not peered with provider A

I have an existing relationship with provider A, colo, cross connects etc.  Provider A has offered to get the PI 
space, ASN number, purchase the transit for us with provider B and manage cross connects to provider B 

...I've likely missed something, but get the IP/ASN for yourself.

*ensure* that A & B will peer and provide transit for you.

(they say they have a diverse "fibre backhaul network").  This is quite attractive from a support and billing 
perspective.

...until you find out that the backhaul network is owned by Provider B,
or virtualized within an existing circuit to someplace else.

Also suspect that provider A will be able to get more attractive pricing from Provider B than I would be able to.

But at what cost?

Am I missing things that I need to consider?

I think so. Long-term survival for one.

If you are budgeted for a diverse and redundant network, then I
recommend that you ensure one. My current understanding is that you can
negotiate terms with potential providers where there is competition.

Don't allow any of your ISPs to manage/dictate the use of your address
space. It will bite you, and cause undue frustration.

Steve


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