Re: [uknof] ipv6 bgp filter size?
Hi Mike, Thanks for the reply sir, appreciated. From looking at the ipv6 route summary, filtering smaller than a /48 frees up a few hundred routes which isn't as many as I'd hoped. Would I cause problems for myself if I filtered on smaller than /32 for now, while I work on getting more memory sorted/new cam-profile/new router ? Cheers, Johnny On 30 January 2014 13:52, Mike Simkins mike.simk...@sungard.com wrote: Filter smaller than a /48 Mike Simkins ▪ Senior Network Engineer , *Operations Engineering* ▪ SunGard Availability Services ▪ Lighterman House, 3 Clove Crescent, London E14 2BB Telephone: +44 (0) 20 8080 8060 / +1-720-833-7731 ▪ mike.simk...@sungard.com *Customer Service Desk: *+1 (800) 441 1181 ▪ sas.esupp...@sungard.com USA Internal Number: 60227 -- Keeping People and Information Connected® ▪ http://www.sungardas.com/ P *Think before you print* CONFIDENTIALITY: This e-mail (including any attachments) may contain confidential, proprietary and privileged information, and unauthorized disclosure or use is prohibited. If you received this e-mail in error, please notify the sender and delete this e-mail from your system. On 29 January 2014 09:39, john huss mrjohnh...@googlemail.com wrote: Hello all, Was wondering what size you filter in ipv6 bgp routes? In ipv4 bgp we filter out networks smaller than /24's but I'm not sure what people generally do for ipv6. I've got some kit running out of ipv6 bgp routes memory and was wondering if I should filter out networks smaller than ipv6 /32's. At present this kit is accepting everything down to /128 which is making me wonder if that is a bit wrong/too much as ipv6 grows. Would appreciate thoughts from others who run ipv6 bgp. Sorry if I'm using all the wrong words! Cheers, Johnny
Re: [uknof] ipv6 bgp filter size?
Hi Johnny, If you filter on /32, you would be unable to reach any of the PI assignments (including my own) which are done on a /48 boundary. Thanks, Daniel. On 31/01/2014 08:38, john huss wrote: Hi Mike, Thanks for the reply sir, appreciated. From looking at the ipv6 route summary, filtering smaller than a /48 frees up a few hundred routes which isn't as many as I'd hoped. Would I cause problems for myself if I filtered on smaller than /32 for now, while I work on getting more memory sorted/new cam-profile/new router ? Cheers, Johnny On 30 January 2014 13:52, Mike Simkins mike.simk...@sungard.com mailto:mike.simk...@sungard.com wrote: Filter smaller than a /48 Mike Simkins ▪ Senior Network Engineer , *Operations Engineering* ▪ SunGard Availability Services ▪ Lighterman House, 3 Clove Crescent, London E14 2BB Telephone: +44 (0) 20 8080 8060 / +1-720-833-7731 ▪ mike.simk...@sungard.com mailto:mike.simk...@sungard.com *Customer Service Desk: *+1 (800) 441 1181 ▪ sas.esupp...@sungard.com mailto:sas.esupp...@sungard.com USA Internal Number: 60227 -- Keeping People and Information Connected® ▪ http://www.sungardas.com/ P *Think before you print* CONFIDENTIALITY: This e-mail (including any attachments) may contain confidential, proprietary and privileged information, and unauthorized disclosure or use is prohibited. If you received this e-mail in error, please notify the sender and delete this e-mail from your system. On 29 January 2014 09:39, john huss mrjohnh...@googlemail.com mailto:mrjohnh...@googlemail.com wrote: Hello all, Was wondering what size you filter in ipv6 bgp routes? In ipv4 bgp we filter out networks smaller than /24's but I'm not sure what people generally do for ipv6. I've got some kit running out of ipv6 bgp routes memory and was wondering if I should filter out networks smaller than ipv6 /32's. At present this kit is accepting everything down to /128 which is making me wonder if that is a bit wrong/too much as ipv6 grows. Would appreciate thoughts from others who run ipv6 bgp. Sorry if I'm using all the wrong words! Cheers, Johnny
Re: [uknof] ipv6 bgp filter size?
On 31 Jan 2014, at 08:38, john huss mrjohnh...@googlemail.com wrote: From looking at the ipv6 route summary, filtering smaller than a /48 frees up a few hundred routes which isn't as many as I'd hoped. Would I cause problems for myself if I filtered on smaller than /32 for now, while I work on getting more memory sorted/new cam-profile/new router ? Yes. There are lots of services only hosted in /48s - i.e. IPv6 PI, including many of the IPv6 root nameservers. You can probably look at RIR lists for which blocks they allocate which sizes of address from; actually what I suggest is you take default routes from your transits (as well as full routes) which will cover you (sub-optimally) until you can get the problem fixed. -- Will Hargrave LONAP Ltd +44 20 3137 8330
Re: [uknof] ipv6 bgp filter size?
Hello, Thanks Daniel and Will, I appreciate your advice. Still learning about V6 so your help is gratefully received. Think I'll have to filter on /32's and accept a default route for now while sorting out alternative's. Thanks once again everyone who has replied, have a great Friday :) Cheers, Johnny
[uknof] Offsite storage
Hi all, Can anyone offer us some offsite storage that we can dump to via SSH/rsync? Preferably across LONAP. Thanks. Gavin
Re: [uknof] Offsite storage
How much storage you after? How fast do you want access to it, 1G, 10G etc? Cheers, James.
Re: [uknof] Offsite storage
Amazon Web Services is at LoNAP. http://aws.amazon.com/s3/ http://aws.amazon.com/glacier/ There is a popular tool called s3cmd which gives you a handy CLI interface: http://s3tools.org/s3cmd Aled On 31 January 2014 10:30, Gavin Henry ghe...@suretec.co.uk wrote: Hi all, Can anyone offer us some offsite storage that we can dump to via SSH/rsync? Preferably across LONAP. Thanks. Gavin
Re: [uknof] Offsite storage
On 31 Jan 2014, at 10:30, Gavin Henry ghe...@suretec.co.uk wrote: Can anyone offer us some offsite storage that we can dump to via SSH/rsync? Preferably across LONAP. You didn't say how much storage you needed, but sounds like a job for a VM or dedicated server (if you need a lot of space) http://www.bytemark.co.uk/hosting/storage_monster / http://www.bigv.io/prices https://www.portfast.co.uk/vps.shtml There are lots more options and providers out there, of course, those are just two I can think of immediately. -- Will Hargrave +44 114 303
Re: [uknof] ipv6 bgp filter size?
Will Hargrave wrote: On 31 Jan 2014, at 08:38, john huss mrjohnh...@googlemail.com wrote: [...] Yes. There are lots of services only hosted in /48s - i.e. IPv6 PI, including many of the IPv6 root nameservers. You can probably look at RIR lists for which blocks they allocate which sizes of address from; http://www.ripe.net/ripe/docs/ripe-555 HTH, Leo smime.p7s Description: S/MIME cryptographic signature
Re: [uknof] ipv6 bgp filter size?
John, I need to ask. Why the requirement to do such drastic filtering? The v6 table size is pretty small. Plus you stated, after adjusting your own configuration, the /48 filter (the accepted common practice in v6-land) reduces cruft and provides a pretty clean table. Does the slightly less than 20,000 total routes (see http://bgp.he.net/report/prefixes#_prefixes plus other sites) cause you issues? Memory issues? Philosophical issues? Convergence issues? I'd strongly vote against you installing /32 filters for a few reasons. 1) The result won't be a complete (or valid, if you multi-home) routing table. 2) The implication of even one ISP doing this has ripples back to the RIR ISP allocation world. 3) These kinds of filters NEVER get removed. 4) Default route doesn't really fix things. 2000::/3 route even more-so! 5) Memory is cheap. Or am I still missing something? Martin Martin J. Levy Director IPv6 Strategy Hurricane Electric 760 Mission Court, Fremont, CA 94539, USA +1 408 499 3801 (mobile) mar...@he.net (email) http://he.net/ (web) On Jan 31, 2014, at 1:23 AM, john huss mrjohnh...@googlemail.com wrote: Hello, Thanks Daniel and Will, I appreciate your advice. Still learning about V6 so your help is gratefully received. Think I'll have to filter on /32's and accept a default route for now while sorting out alternative's. Thanks once again everyone who has replied, have a great Friday :) Cheers, Johnny