The inbound traffic will be determined by how the Tier 1’s decide to route, as 
you are observing they will pick either you or your other upstream.  Traffic 
engineering as the Tier 3 carrier you have described has this kind of 
unexpected traffic routing.  As you have obviously already tried common BGP 
traffic engineering tool of AS Padding your left with next worst option.

Best of luck!

Kevin Burke
802-540-0979
Burlington Telecom
200 Church St, Burlington, VT

From: NANOG <nanog-bounces+kburke=burlingtontelecom....@nanog.org> On Behalf Of 
Pirawat WATANAPONGSE via NANOG
Sent: Wednesday, October 19, 2022 2:28 AM
To: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Newbies Question: Do I really need to sacrifice Prefix-aggregation to 
do BGP Load-sharing? (the case of Multi-homed + Multi-routers + Multi-upstreams)

WARNING!! This message originated from an External Source. Please use proper 
judgment and caution when opening attachments, clicking links, or responding to 
this email.
Dear Guru(s),


My apologies if these questions have already been asked;
in that case, please kindly point me to the answer(s).

I hope the following information sufficiently describes my current "context":
- Single customer: ourselves
- One big IPv4 block + one big IPv6 block
- Native Dual-Stack, Non-tunneling
- Non-transit (actually, a “multi-homed Stub”)
- “All-green” IRR & RPKI registered (based on IRRexplorer report)
- Fully-aggregated route announcement (based on CIDR report)
- Two (Cisco) gateway routers on our side
- Two upstreams (See the following lines), fully cross-connected to our gateways
- One (pure) commercial ISP
- One academic consortium ISP (who actually uses the above-mentioned commercial 
ISP as one of its upstreams as well)

My current “situation”:
- All inbounds “flock” in through the commercial ISP, overflowing the bandwidth;
since (my guess) the academic ISP also uses that commercial ISP as its 
upstream, there is no way for its path to be shorter.

Questions:
1. Do I really have to “de-aggregate” the address blocks, so I can do the 
“manual BGP load-sharing”?
I hate to do it because it will increase the global route-table entries, plus 
there will be IRR & RPKI “hijack gaps” to contend with at my end.
2. If the answer to the above question is definitely “yes”, please point me to 
the Best-Practice in doing the “manual BGP load-sharing (on Cisco)”.
Right now, all I have is:
https://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/support/docs/ip/border-gateway-protocol-bgp/13762-40.html#anc52

Thanks in advance for all the pointers and help given (off mailing-list is also 
welcome).


Best Regards,

Pirawat.


Reply via email to