Hi, Yeah, I need to turn on and off overtime, but I'm getting my own ASN very soon so that shouldn't be a problem soon! :) but how would I go about turning off a location at a certain time?
Thanks! On Wed, Jul 16, 2014 at 5:50 PM, Jonathan Lassoff <[email protected]> wrote: > Wow -- be careful playing with public eBGP sessions unless you know > what you're doing. It can affect the entire Internet. > > Since you're just connecting to a single upstream ISP, you wont > qualify for a public AS number. So, you'll have to work with your > upstream ISP to agree on a private AS number you can use. > You will be setting up an eBGP session (which is a session between two > different AS numbers, as opposed to iBGP, wherein the AS numbers are > the same). > > As for running BGP on a dedicated server, it'll depend on the OS in > use. Assuming Linux, take a look at Quagga, BIRD, and ExaBGP. > http://www.nongnu.org/quagga/ > http://bird.network.cz/ > https://code.google.com/p/exabgp/ > > > It may be a *lot* easier for you to just have your upstream ISP > announce your IP space, and route it to your dedicated server, unless > you need the ability to turn it off and on over time. > > Cheers, > jof > > On Wed, Jul 16, 2014 at 1:05 AM, Abuse Contact > <[email protected]> wrote: > > Hi, > > So I just purchased a Dedicated server from this one company and I have a > > /24 IPv4 block that I bought from a company on WebHostingTalk, but I am > > clueless on how to setup the /24 IPv4 block using the BGP Session. I want > > to set it up to run through their network as if it was one of their IPs, > > etc. I keep seeing things like iBGP (which I think means like a inner > > routing BGP) and eBGP (what I'm talking about??) but I have no idea how > to > > set those up or which one I would need. > > > > Any help would be appreciated. > > > > > > Thanks! >

