>i thought doing BGP needs to have own IP addresses?
Not necessarily. It's perfectly legal, in a multihomed environment,
to have no provider-independent IP addresses. Instead, you use a
block from each of your upstream providers.
You will generally need an assigned AS number.
>
>2 ISPs wil have 2 different set of IP and i dun think those ISP will
>want to route the traffic for the other ISP
ISPs can and will advertise parts of another ISP's address space when
the ISPs have a common customer.
Making all this work, however, is more than just configuring your
router. A substantial amount of coordination needs to place among
the customer and all involved ISPs. My 3-part paper on
CertificationZone just scratched the surface.
>
>
>"Richie, Nathan"
><<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in
>message
><[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
>What type of links are they? What type of business are you running?
>You could fit the bill for BGP, but it depends on some other factors.
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: net974 at Yahoo [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
>Sent: Monday, October 16, 2000 10:17 AM
>To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>Subject: Two Leaed Line from Diff. ISP.
>
>Hi,
>
>I have two leaded line from two different ISP's, now I want that I
>use in them in such a, way if one goes down then automatical second
>one handel the request and in both are working then load balancing
>wil happen.
>
>TIA
>
>Gm
>
>
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