AFAIK, they couldn't. In this case you would have to apply for your own
independent range of addresses and ISP1 and ISP2 would have to advertise
these routes for you. In this case you would use communities, med, as_path
prepend and other stuff to influence the incoming traffic.

""Steven A. Ridder""  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> Here's a question I can't seem to answer.  I came up with a scenario in my
> head, and now I can't find a solution.
>
> Example: I have a dual homed network via BGP.  I have ISP 1 and they give
me
> 209.21.220.1/20 for use, and ISP gives me 199.33.23.1/21.  Say I use the
> 209.x.x.x for my web servers, mail server, etc, and advertise that back
out
> to the Internet via ISP 1 (the ISP that assigned me the block) and in DNS.
> I'm assuming ISP 2 will not advertise that block for me, as it's ISP 1's
> block.  So, now the whole world knows to get to me via ISP 1.  Then let's
> say ISP 1 goes down, how would the world know how to get to me, if they
only
> knew how to get to me Via ISP 1 and it's IP's?
>
> --
> RFC 1149 Compliant
>
> Get in my head:
> http://sar.dynu.com




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