Re: BGP routing ARIN space in APNIC region

2023-06-15 Thread Jon Lewis
On Fri, 9 Jun 2023, Matthew Petach wrote: I previously wrote: Every platform I've used has a knob for turning off / relaxing as-path loop detection.  Note, for some platforms (at least Juniper), you may also have to have your upstream provider "advertise-peer-as", though I

Re: BGP routing ARIN space in APNIC region

2023-06-12 Thread Hugo Slabbert
> I've seen it at recent RIPE and LACNIC conferences. Supposedly all of > the big geolocation providers support it or are planning on supporting > it. Possibly relevant there: https://geolocatemuch.com/ -- Hugo Slabbert On Sun, Jun 11, 2023 at 10:56 AM Randy Bush wrote: > > Everyone should

Re: BGP routing ARIN space in APNIC region

2023-06-11 Thread Randy Bush
> Everyone should check out Massimo Candela's presentation "Geolocation > problems: Do we have a solution?" for how to provide your own > geolocation data... > > https://www.netnod.se/sites/default/files/2023-03/Massimo_Webpage.pdf > > I've seen it at recent RIPE and LACNIC conferences.

Re: BGP routing ARIN space in APNIC region

2023-06-11 Thread Robert Story
On Sat 2023-06-10 18:33:04+0200 Mark wrote: > > [...] you may run into geolocation issues where some geolocation > > providers decide that many/all of your users are in one location or > > the other,[...] > > This is solvable by slicing your IPv4 prefixes into /24's and > assigning them the

Re: BGP routing ARIN space in APNIC region

2023-06-10 Thread Mark Tinka
On 6/9/23 21:54, Matt Harris wrote: I would also note that, from an end-user perspective if we're talking about ISP services to customers on both ends here, you may run into geolocation issues where some geolocation providers decide that many/all of your users are in one location or the

Re: BGP routing ARIN space in APNIC region

2023-06-09 Thread Matthew Petach
On Fri, Jun 9, 2023 at 6:17 PM Jon Lewis wrote: > On Fri, 9 Jun 2023, Matthew Petach wrote: > > > > > Hi Mike, > > > > In general, no, there's nothing that prevents you from doing that. > ... > > Now, from a network reachability perspective, you should also think > about your own internal

Re: BGP routing ARIN space in APNIC region

2023-06-09 Thread Jon Lewis
On Fri, 9 Jun 2023, Matthew Petach wrote: Hi Mike, In general, no, there's nothing that prevents you from doing that. ... Now, from a network reachability perspective, you should also think about your own internal network connectivity. If you're using the same ASN in California and Makati,

Re: BGP routing ARIN space in APNIC region

2023-06-09 Thread Matt Harris
Matt Harris VP OF INFRASTRUCTURE Follow us on LinkedIn! matt.har...@netfire.net 816-256-5446 www.netfire.com On Fri, Jun 9, 2023 at 2:49 PM Matthew Petach wrote: > > Hi Mike, > > In general, no, there's nothing that prevents you from doing that. > In days gone by, some networks used to require

Re: BGP routing ARIN space in APNIC region

2023-06-09 Thread Matthew Petach
Hi Mike, In general, no, there's nothing that prevents you from doing that. In days gone by, some networks used to require consistent advertisements from a given ASN in all locations in order to peer. In your case, that would have made it economically disadvantageous to use the same ASN in Makai

BGP routing ARIN space in APNIC region

2023-06-09 Thread Mike
Hello,     I'm certain this must have been covered before but I can't find a lot of good-seeming answers. Essentially, I am a California based ISP and have plans to open up shop in Makati Philippines. I have an ASN and several /22's of ipv4 and a few /44s of ipv6 out of my assigned ranges