nanog mailing list archives
Re: new BGP hijack & visibility tool “BGPalerter”
From: Christopher Morrow <morrowc.lists () gmail com>
Date: Thu, 15 Aug 2019 11:38:17 -0400
This looks like fun! (a few questions for the RIPE folk, I think though below) What is the expected load of streaming clients on the RIPE service? (I wonder because I was/am messing about with something similar, though less node and js... not that that's relevant here). I hadn't seen the ripe folk pipe up anywhere with what their SLO/etc is for the ris-live service? (except their quip about: "used to run in a tmux session I had to occassioanlly ssh into <foo> and restart when <foo> rebooted" I believe the end of that quip in Iceland was: "and now its' running as a real service") Also, one of the strengths to the 'monitoring as a service' folks is their number of collection points and breadth of ASN to which they interconnect those points/ RISLive, I think, reports out from ~37 or so RIPE probes, how do we (the internet) get more deployed (or better interconnection to the current sets)? and maybe even more imoprtantly... what's the right spread/location/interconnectivity map for these probes? thanks! for showing what's possible with tooling being developed by like minded individuals :) -chris On Thu, Aug 15, 2019 at 11:11 AM Job Snijders <job () ntt net> wrote:
Hi Ryan, Alarig,On 14/08/2019 19:06, Ryan Hamel wrote:I appreciate the effort and the intent behind this project, but why should the community contribute to an open source project on GitHub that is mainly powered by a closed source binary?On Wed, Aug 14, 2019 at 07:13:47PM +0200, Alarig Le Lay wrote:You can build it yourself, see https://github.com/nttgin/BGPalerter#more-information-for-developers I think that the binaries are here for thoses that don’t want to install all the build-chain.Indeed, the binary files in the github repository in the 'bin/' directory are merely provided as a convenience service so interested people don't need to compile the software themselves in order to run tests. This project is 100% open source. At some point in the future ready made binaries should move to a different place, for example perhaps we can distribute packages through the PPA mechanism for debian/ubuntu. It would be cool if we get to the point where one can install the software by simply issuing a command like "apt install bgpalerter". Help with packaging is most welcome! :-) Kind regards, Job
Current thread:
- new BGP hijack & visibility tool “BGPalerter” Job Snijders (Aug 14)
- Re: new BGP hijack & visibility tool “BGPalerter” Eric Lindsjö (Aug 14)
- Re: new BGP hijack & visibility tool “BGPalerter” Kushal R. via NANOG (Aug 14)
- Re: new BGP hijack & visibility tool “BGPalerter” Ryan Hamel (Aug 14)
- Re: new BGP hijack & visibility tool “BGPalerter” Alarig Le Lay (Aug 14)
- Re: new BGP hijack & visibility tool “BGPalerter” Job Snijders (Aug 15)
- Re: new BGP hijack & visibility tool “BGPalerter” Christopher Morrow (Aug 15)
- Re: new BGP hijack & visibility tool “BGPalerter” Robert Kisteleki (Aug 16)
- Re: new BGP hijack & visibility tool “BGPalerter” Valdis Klētnieks (Aug 16)
- Re: new BGP hijack & visibility tool “BGPalerter” Robert Kisteleki (Aug 16)
- Re: new BGP hijack & visibility tool “BGPalerter” Christopher Morrow (Aug 16)
- Re: new BGP hijack & visibility tool “BGPalerter” Alarig Le Lay (Aug 14)
- Re: new BGP hijack & visibility tool “BGPalerter” Eric Lindsjö (Aug 14)