On Mar 2, 2020, at 6:30 PM, Seth Mattinen <se...@rollernet.us> wrote:
> On 3/2/20 3:09 PM, Patrick W. Gilmore wrote:
>> Your routers, your decision.
>> But how much traffic are you sending TO Google? Most people get the vast 
>> majority of traffic FROM Google. They send you videos, you send them ACKs. 
>> Does it matter where the ACKs go?
> 
> 
> A customer is complaining that data they're sending is going over a higher 
> latency (longer) path. I don't know what they're doing I don't generally ask 
> why, but they claim it's a problem for whatever they're doing and I don't 
> have a reason to doubt them. It's not youtube.
> 
> I agree that it's an undesirable long term solution but if filtering select 
> transit-only /24's shifts the path to peering and reduces latency, if the 
> customer is happy then I'm happy and if/when Google starts accepting peering 
> requests again I'll revisit it.

Again, your routers, your decision. But if I had a customer who was 
complaining, I would take steps to fix it.

Google is sending you prefixes over the IX. You have every right to send them 
traffic over the IX to those prefixes.

That said, I fear this is going to be a problem long term. A blind “no /24s” 
filter is dangerous, plus it might solve all traffic issues. It is going to 
take effort to be sure you don’t get bitten by the Law Of Unintended 
Consequences.

Good luck.

-- 
TTFN,
patrick

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