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Re: What's the point of prepend communities?


From: William Herrin <bill () herrin us>
Date: Thu, 26 Oct 2017 15:05:25 -0400

On Thu, Oct 26, 2017 at 2:47 PM, Jason Lixfeld <jason+nanog () lixfeld ca>
wrote:

Hi Bill,

On Oct 26, 2017, at 2:37 PM, William Herrin <bill () herrin us> wrote:

BGP routing is based on "distance". Distance in BGP is primarily
calculated as the number of ASNs in the AS Path. Prepends make a path more
distance, encouraging routers to choose a different path if one is
available.

I understand how prepends fit in the context of best path selection, but
my question was more the difference between a customer signalling the ISP
to prepend their AS using a BGP community stamped to a prefix vs. the
customer prepending their own AS instead.


Hi Jason,

You'd only use communities like that if you want to signal the ISP to
deprioritize your advertisement on a particular peer or set of peers but
not others. That's when you're getting fancy. It's not the norm. The norm
is you want to deprioritize one of your paths as a whole. Maybe that link
has less capacity or is enough better connected that it would always
override your other links unless you detune it a little.

I mean, you could tell the ISP to prepend everything based on a community,
assuming they support such a community, but why would you? That needlessly
makes things more complicated.

Regards,
Bill Herrin


-- 
William Herrin ................ herrin () dirtside com  bill () herrin us
Dirtside Systems ......... Web: <http://www.dirtside.com/>


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