Same - we poll all the major RR every 24 hours.  Our scripts will automatically 
add or remove prefixes based on matching origin key

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On 
Behalf Of Michael Hallgren
Sent: Friday, November 21, 2014 9:25 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [routing-wg] Who uses the RIPE IRR and for what?


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Le 21/11/2014 10:08, Gert Doering a écrit :
> Hi,

      >

      > On Wed, Nov 19, 2014 at 06:31:56PM -0800, Ronald F. Guilmette
      wrote:

      >> Of the remaining 235,061 route base IP addresses, fully
      28,988 of

      >> those (12.3%) are being announced by some AS other than
      the one

      >> specified in the ripe.db.route file.

      >

      > To state something that might be obvious or not - for the
      same prefix,

      > you can have multiple route: entries with different origin
      ASes, which

      > makes sense when a network moves (add new route: object,
      start new

      > announcement, eventually remove old route: object).  So, some
      of these

      > might be perfectly fine, some might be forgotten (= a route:
      object with

      > the proper origin AS exists as well), and some might just be
      legacy

      > garbage - indeed.

      >

      >> Given the considerable number of routing anomalies
      revealed by my simple

      >> experiment, I am inclined to wonder who is actually using
      all of that

      >> route information in the RIPE DB, and what on earth they
      could be using

      >> it for.

      >

      > We use it to build BGP filters for BGP customers.

So did I at previous employer's edge, for years and years.

>

      >

      > For those, the filter is build using the origin AS as key, so
      if there are

      > additional route objects for the same prefix but with a
      different origin AS,

      > our script won't see them, so it's "garbage that does not
      disturb anything".

      >

      > Of course, if the origin AS doesn't match at all, customers'
      BGP announcements

      > won't go out - and they usually notice that quickly and fix
      their stuff.

Yes, voilà, same.

>

      >

      > (Our upstream providers do the same thing for us, so it's
      used on a larger

      > scale - unfortunately, not all large transit providers do
      that, some just

      > take the money and look the other way)

Right, shared view.

Cheers,

mh

>

      > Gert Doering

      >         -- NetMaster

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