If
(a) both their 10mbps and 100/1000mbps link are terminating on the same
router
and
(b) "Local customers" means your directly attached customers
then
(1) you can you can influence traffic inbound to you (from the customer)
with AS-path manipulation. Pretty standard, does not require customer
involvement.
(2) you can policy route traffic from you to the customer based on
source IP. Mainly anything originating in your block can be sent down
the 100/1000 pipe. Everything else will go down the 10mbps pipe.
root net wrote:
Yes this is right, we control the routing...
On Tue, Jun 10, 2008 at 6:57 AM, Wink <[EMAIL PROTECTED]
<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>> wrote:
You control the routing on your side, the customer doesn't
necessarily have to do anything... right?
root net wrote:
I do not think shaping traffic would work as I am not trying
to throttle his
traffic to everyone else but our local LAN I want to provide a
circuit that
only allows local LAN traffic meaning our directly connected
customers
routes only not any other routes. BGP would definitely work
but I am not
sure if we can do this with this customer. Is there an
alternative towards
BGP like with a ACL or route-map maybe?
-rootnet08
On Tue, Jun 10, 2008 at 4:40 AM, a. rahman isnaini r.sutan <
[EMAIL PROTECTED] <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>> wrote:
Rate-Limit/Traffic Shape Group ?
rgsour
a. rahman isnaini r.sutan
root net wrote:
This customer is pretty savvy so BGP may be possible.
But if not then
what?
On Mon, Jun 9, 2008 at 4:26 PM, Justin M. Streiner <
[EMAIL PROTECTED] <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>>
wrote:
On Mon, 9 Jun 2008, root net wrote:
I have a customer that wants a 100/1000 Mb/s pipe
into our network for
our
local customers. This customer is also a
customer but he has a
dedicated
10
Mb/s circuit to the Internet and is maxing out
on bandwidth. Wishes to
buy
the 100/1000 Mb/s pipe for our local network
access only not Internet.
What
is the best way to filter this?
If you're running BGP with this customer, or
can do so, you can feed
them
your local and customer routes and you can have
them announce their
blocks
to you over that pipe. Use the knobs that BGP
provides, such as local
preference or MED to make the prefixes sent and
received over the
100/1000
Mb/s pipe preferred over their normal transit
pipe. This will push
traffic
between your network and theirs over the higher
bandwidth link, and only
use
the 10 Mb/s pipe if the larger one is down.
That's a pretty simplistic view of it and doesn't
take into account any
other connectivity the customer might have.
jms
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