Well, the biggest offender in this respect by far was @home, and you know what happened to THEM...
-C On Fri, Jun 07, 2002 at 12:55:08PM -0400, Greg A. Woods wrote: > > [ On Friday, June 7, 2002 at 10:26:53 (+0100), Stephen J. Wilcox wrote: ] > > Subject: Re: Bogon list > > > > RFC1918 does not break path-mtu, filtering it does tho.. > > So, in other words inappropriate use of RFC 1918 does not break Path MTU > Discovery! You can't still have your cake and have eaten it too. One > way or another RFC 1918 addresses must not be let past the enterprise > boundaries. Lazy and/or ignorant people don't always meet all the > requirements of RFC 1918, but it's only their lack of compliance that > _may_ allow Path-MTU-discovery to continue working for their networks > for _some_ people _some_ of the time. > > However any enterprise also using RFC 1918, but using it correctly (or > customers of such an enterprise), and thus who are also carefully > protecting their use from interference by outside parties, will be > filtering inbound packets with source addresses in the RFC 1918 assigned > networks, and so as a result they _will_ experience Path-MTU-discovery > failure (i.e. at any time it's necessary it literally cannot work) when > attempting to contact (and sometimes be contacted by, depending on the > application protocol in use) any host on or behind the lazy and/or > ignorant operator's network(s). > > (and no, I'm not sorry if I've yet again offended anyone who might be > mis-using RFC 1918 addresses for public nodes -- you should all know > better by now! How many _years_ has it been?) > > > > 2) Not believe in filtering RFC1918 sourced traffic at enterprise boundaries > > > (of which an exchange would be a boundary) > > > > What for? You'll find many more much more mailicious packets coming from > > legit routable address space. > > If you have any IP address level trust relationsips on your internal > LANs then you _MUST_ (if you want those trust relationships to be valid) > filter all foreign packets with source addresses appearing to be part of > your internal LANs. > > > For p2p you can use unnumbered.. it wont work on exchanges but i agree > > they shouldnt be rfc1918. > > On this we can agree! :-) > > -- > Greg A. Woods > > +1 416 218-0098; <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > Planix, Inc. <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; VE3TCP; Secrets of the Weird <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
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