Hello.

When we was in a similar situation we opted for one transit provider to provide 
a default to us then we filtered on AS-HOPS so prefixes that was more than 3 
hops away was denied. 
This way we got the ones that where closest to us and that where more likely to 
matter. Prefixes that’s more than 3 hops away on both links could probably just 
as well go on a default insteed. 
However it’s a rather crude way of fixing the issue. We just did it to have the 
router up while we got extra memory from it. (we had memory shortage after an 
update that we needed to apply to correct some bug I think. We couldn’t just 
rollback the update if my memory serves me correct.) 

//Gustav

-----Original Message-----
From: NANOG [mailto:nanog-boun...@nanog.org] On Behalf Of Mike
Sent: den 2 maj 2016 21:07
To: NANOG list <nanog@nanog.org>
Subject: BGP peering strategies for smaller routers

Hello,

     I have an ASR1000 router with 4gb of ram. The specs say I can get
'1 million routes' on it, but as far as I have been advised, a full table of 
internet routes numbers more than 530k by itself, so taking 2 full tables seems 
to be out of the question (?).

      I am looking to connect to a second ip transit provider and I'm looking 
for any advice or strategies that would allow me to take advantage and make 
good forwarding decisions while not breaking the bank on bgp memory 
consumption. I simply don't understand how this would likely play out and what 
memory consumption mitigation steps may be necessary here. Im open to ideas... 
a pair of route reflectors? 
selective bgp download? static route filter maps?

Thank you.

Mike-

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