On Thu, 8 Jun 2006, Gadi Evron wrote:
>
>
> I am happy folks like at RIPE and the IETF are looking at solutions, but
> sBGP isn't a new idea, and well, how LONG have we been waiting for DNS-SEC
> now?
>
which are completely orthogonal... and have seperate (very seperate)
use cases, users, deplo
On Wed, 7 Jun 2006, Bruno Quoitin wrote:
>
> Matthew Petach wrote:
> > Q: Randy Bush. Common problem we all face. I'm at 42
> > peering points; my neighbors are X. I have route views
> > dumps, I have my BGP dumps. I have my netflow data.
> > Want a whatifatron that shows what happens to my
>
> Q: Randy Bush, IIJ, 10th anniversary of much of the
> Anycast UDP deployment.
s/udp/tcp/
udp preceeded by at least four or five years.
randy
On 6/9/06, Simon Waters <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Friday 09 Jun 2006 12:22, Matthew Petach wrote:
> SNDS tomorrow
> Usability
The sign-up process is very painful.
Microsoft Passports really aren't appropriate for business accounts, my
employer don't have a mothers maiden name, or a first p
On 6/8/06, Matthew Petach <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
(still here, just been really busy at work today; will try to finish sending the
notes out tonight. --Matt)
2006.06.06 MPLS TE tutorial
Pete Templin, Nextlink
Gyah!! Huge apologies to Pete, who really works for Texlink.
I used to work at
(last notes from NANOG37, yay! I definitely fell further behind
this time around than in Dallas. Unfortunately, I don't think
I'll be allowed to go to St. Louis, so I probably won't be
able to provide notes for NANOG38. --Matt)
2006.06.07 Deploying DNSSEC--bootstrap yourself
Joao Damas, ISC
(this was one of the coolest talks from the three days, actually,
and has gotten me *really* jazzed about some cool stuff we can
do internally. Huge props to Matt, Barrett, and Todd for putting
this together!! --Matt)
2006.06.07 TCP anycast, Matt Levine, Barrett Lyon
with thanks to Todd Under
Break ends at 11:40, PGP signing will take place,
and don't forget to fill out servers.
ANYCAST fun for the final sessions.
Lorenzo Colitti, RIPE NCC
[slides are at:
http://www.nanog.org/mtg-0606/pdf/lorenzo-colitti.pdf
Agenda:
introduction
latency
client-side
server-side
Benefit of individual
thanks for taking (and posting) notes matt!
[snip]
NEXT:
Rick Wesson, Support Intelligence [hehe]
Understanding abuse, aggregate it, push it back to
operators, let them know what they're doing to other
people.
[no slides, he does a live presentation of his tool]
How do I believe you?
realtime
(I think these were the toughest to take notes on, since they went
by so fast; took the most cleaning up afterwards. But they were also
the best talks of the 3 days. I wish we could have flipped, and taken
more time on Tuesday for them so we really could have dug in and
asked the questions we w
I've recently stumbled over an error in the logs of one of my Black Diamond
6808's. Due to redundant MSMs this hasn't had any practical effect yet, but
I have just initiated a ticket on the matter.
Parallell to that I thought I'd take the oportunity to ask if anyone here
has any more insight on w
Would somebody from earthlink.net mail ops please contact me off-list?
thx
-mark
--
Mark Jeftovic <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Founder & President, easyDNS Technologies Inc.
ph. +1-(416)-535-8672 ext 225
fx. +1-(866) 273-2892
It's me. I wouldn't say anonymous, but not a whole lot of personal
information out there. For the most part the info is legit. Nothing
mysterious going on, just an attempt to keep my name out of spammer
databases.
Was there an issue?
The site hasn't been updated in a while, I had a mothe
On Fri, Jun 09, 2006 at 08:01:37PM +0200, William Waites wrote:
> Maybe there's someone in Hannover that knows who they are...
>
> Their telephone number is just an anonymous mailbox...
>
> Very mysterious indeed...
FWIW, the WHOIS location is residential. Doesn't provide much
information, nor
This is an automated weekly mailing describing the state of the Internet
Routing Table as seen from APNIC's router in Japan.
Daily listings are sent to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
If you have any comments please contact Philip Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>.
Routing Table Report 04:00 +10GMT Sat 10 Jun, 2006
Paul Vixie wrote:
> the web site and whois info are just about as completely anonymous as can be.
Interesting. We actually did some similar research correlating events
during the bombing of Belgrade in 1999. You could see when universities
(identified by their ASN) were knocked off line and occas
the web site and whois info are just about as completely anonymous as can be.
On Friday 09 Jun 2006 12:22, Matthew Petach wrote:
>
> (I'm starting to guess I'd finish sending these out faster if
> I stopped falling asleep on my keyboard so often... --Matt)
Get more sleep -- Nanog isn't worth losing sleep over.
> nice quotes on slides
> http://www.circleid.com/posts/how_t
I am happy folks like at RIPE and the IETF are looking at solutions, but
sBGP isn't a new idea, and well, how LONG have we been waiting for DNS-SEC
now?
I just read a paper yesterday from '97 that suggested complete
registries would be available within the next couple of years ;)
On Thu, 8 Jun 2006, Ariel Biener wrote:
> On Wednesday 07 June 2006 21:58, Gadi Evron wrote:
> Gadi,
>
> There's no real need for such drastic measures over this. The Internet is
> no
> longer a "safe" place, meaning that the sane NSPs/ISPs sanitize their networks
> rather than trust someone
On Thu, 8 Jun 2006, Todd Underwood wrote:
> 8.0.0.0/8
> 8.0.0.0/9
Interesting, apparently ISP's are not the only ones using BGP tricks.
> 8.2.64.0/23
> 8.2.144.0/22
> 8.3.0.0/23
> 8.3.12.0/24
> 8.3.13.0/24
> 8.3.15.0/24
> 8.3.33.0/24
> 8.3.37.0/24
> 8.3.46.0/24
> 8.3.208.0/24
> 8.4.86.0/24
> 8.
On Thu, 8 Jun 2006, Jeroen Massar wrote:
> In the end, the complete solution to most of these issues will be in the
> form of S-BGP (http://www.ir.bbn.com/sbgp/) and similar solutions.
>
> And the IETF is fortunately working on this:
> http://www.ietf.org/html.charters/sidr-charter.html
> It mig
BGP Update Report
Interval: 26-May-06 -to- 08-Jun-06 (14 days)
Observation Point: BGP Peering with AS4637
TOP 20 Unstable Origin AS
Rank ASNUpds % Upds/PfxAS-Name
1 - AS912127269 2.3% 65.4 -- TTNET TTnet Autonomous System
2 - AS17974 17031 1
This report has been generated at Fri Jun 9 21:48:37 2006 AEST.
The report analyses the BGP Routing Table of an AS4637 (Reach) router
and generates a report on aggregation potential within the table.
Check http://www.cidr-report.org/as4637 for a current version of this report.
Recent Table Hist
(hope the inclusion of URLs in the notes isn't
making them all end up in people's spam
folders... --Matt)
2006.06.07 Vince Fuller, from Cisco
and Jason Schiller from UUnet
[slides are at:
http://www.nanog.org/mtg-0606/pdf/vince-fuller.pdf
IPv6 issues routing and multihoming
scalability with r
(I'm starting to guess I'd finish sending these out faster if
I stopped falling asleep on my keyboard so often... --Matt)
2006.06.07 Welcome to Wednesday morning
http://www.nanog.org/
click on Evaluation Form
Let us know how the M-W vs S-Tu
format; next time will be S-Tu due to ARIN
joint meet
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