On Jun 10, 2013, at 14:14 , Joe Provo <nanog-p...@rsuc.gweep.net> wrote:
> On Mon, Jun 10, 2013 at 01:18:04PM -0400, Patrick W. Gilmore wrote:
>> On Jun 10, 2013, at 12:54 , Joe Provo <nanog-p...@rsuc.gweep.net> wrote:
>>> On Mon, Jun 10, 2013 at 11:36:44AM -0500, Dennis Burgess wrote:

>>>> I have a network that has three peers, two are at one site and the third
>>>> is geographically diverse, and there is NO connection between the two
>>>> separate networks.
>>> 
>>> So, you have two islands? Technically, that would be separate 
>>> ASNs as they are separatre routing policies, but the modern 
>>> world has adapted. 
>> 
>> Should we change the rules? I know with 64-bit ASNs mean it is
>> tough to run out of ASNs, but not sure we really want each island
>> to be its own AS going forward.
>> 
>> Comments from the peanut gallery?
> 
> I missed your proposal for loop detection to replace the current 
> behavior in the above text. Was it compressed?

Was not compressed. Don't want to take out loop detection in general. If you 
are running an island, it is up to you to ensure that island is specifically 
configured.

This makes it no different than lots of other "weird" things on the 'Net.  (I 
put weird in quotes because weird implies out of the ordinary, but there are 
probably more weird things than "normal" things these days.)


> I will admit that it is Not Hard for people who know what 
> they're doing to operate well outside default and standard 
> behavior. That's why I merely recommended that the questioner 
> educate themselves as to the whys and wherefore before just 
> turning knobs. I would submit that not knowing loop detection 
> is a default and valuable feature might indicate the person 
> should understand why and how it affects them. I don't have 
> the hubris to believe that I understand his business needs, 
> nor edge conditions/failure modes where a different solution 
> might be needed.

All good points.

Is it enough to keep the standard? Or should the standard have a specific carve 
out, e.g. for stub networks only, not allowing islands to provide transit. Just 
a straw man.

Or we can keep it like it is today, non-standard and let people who know what 
they are doing violate it at their own peril.

The problem with the latter is some ISPs point to standards as if there is no 
other possible way to do things. Which makes it difficult to be someone who 
knowingly violates a standard.

Anyway, just wondering how others felt.

-- 
TTFN,
patrick


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