nanog mailing list archives

Re: nested prefixes in Internet


From: Ryan L <ryan.nsplist () gmail com>
Date: Mon, 21 Nov 2016 10:41:21 -0500

Hopefully they would be flexible with this sort of policy under certain
circumstances.

I could see this as being somewhat problematic for mitigation providers,
since longer mask preemption is a commonly used method to take on traffic
for scrubbing, as well as customers potentially using a more specific for
migration activity. Or heck, even a less corner case scenario of traffic
engineering to a particular location via more specific route.

To me, it just sounds like more headache than it may be worth to have to
deal with that sort of thing.


On Mon, Nov 21, 2016 at 9:08 AM, Victor Sudakov <vas () mpeks tomsk su> wrote:

Niels Bakker wrote:
I have reports that in case (2), some operators (e.g. Rostelecom)
don't accept the /24 or even /23 prefix on the grounds that it is
part of a larger /19 route already present in the routing table.

Could they have a reason not to accept these more specific prefixes
other than a whim?

If you announce a prefix you must deliver traffic sent to addresses
covered by it.  You don't go announcing 0.0.0.0/0 to your peers either.

If a customer takes a /24 and announces it elsewhere, a transit
provider runs the risk of accepting inbound traffic without having
the possibility to bill their customer for it if it accepts more
specifics from e.g. a peer.

That's all correct from the point of view of the provider annoncing
the /19 route, and should be their risk.

My question was however from a different perspective. If AS333
receives a /19 from AS111 and a /24 from AS222 (where AS222's /24 is
nested within AS111's /19), what reason might AS333 have to ignore the /24?
AS333 is not concerned with possible monetary relations between AS111
and AS222.

--
Victor Sudakov,  VAS4-RIPE, VAS47-RIPN
sip:sudakov () sibptus tomsk ru



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