So, I'm gonna go out on a bit of a limb here, though I don't think by much. I 
wasn't aware, but CANARIE is an NREN, so probably you get cheap/free transit 
through that, versus some greater transit rate via Shaw. 

You can decide your own outbound policy, but you can't really wield that 
influence over inbound. In some cases maybe the far end network may have 
incentive to play along and tweak their routing policy, but I somewhat doubt 
Microsoft would maintain special routing policy just for you. 

So you are left with your regular inbound influence bag of tricks, e.g. 
prepending towards Shaw. If your upstream is a bit more feature-rich they may 
have some control communities you can use to influence how they advertise your 
prefixes, but I don't recall Shaw having anything as fine grained as "don't 
announce to this peer" like you might find on a route server. Prepending is a 
bit of a bigger hammer, though, as it affects the advertisements to any Shaw 
peers/customers

Others may chime in with others possible inbound TE tricks, but nothing would 
beat e.g. getting a port at torix or SIX (you mentioned both) yourself and just 
peering with Microsoft directly. 

On October 17, 2019 2:06:53 p.m. PDT, Hugo Slabbert <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>On Thu 2019-Oct-17 14:19:54 -0600, Samir Rana <[email protected]>
>wrote:
>
>>Greetings,
>>
>>We have asymmetric routing issues from Microsoft TORIX connection
>between
>>Microsoft and CANARIE and Microsoft and SHAW.
>>
>>We are sending traffic via Cybera-CANARIE-Microsoft ( SIX ) and
>>receiving via Microsoft-Shaw-Cybera ( SIX ).
>
>And?  Like, why is this a problem?  Internet routing is highly 
>asymmetrical.
>
>>
>>if anyone from Microsoft is available please contact me offline.
>>
>>Regards,
>>Samir
>>403.210.5382

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