> You mean outages@...
chris, this is not productive. outages are a very apt subject for
nanog.
Ian Henderson wrote:
"Vocus already operates a cable through the Sydney Harbour Tunnel but according to CEO James Spenceley the new cable is
some 700
metres shorter and represents the lowest latency link available between the CBD and
the ASX data centre."
Why does King Lear's "That way madnes
On 25/08/2012, at 3:33 AM, valdis.kletni...@vt.edu wrote:
> If you can use 3ms to extract enough money out of the market to pay for a
> cable, that market is *way* too volatile in the first place.
3ms is centuries. :)
http://www.itwire.com/business-it-news/networking/55281-vocus-cables-sydney-ha
Yup, the CIDR Report gets its feed in Australia...
I get my BGP feed from APNIC's router in Japan - and at the time it
grabbed the dump, the BGP table stopped at 190.55.80.0/21. Not sure
what's going on, looks like the ssh session just hung, but then
terminated normally - so the script's checking
On 8/24/12 3:07 PM, Lori Jakab wrote:
On 8/24/2012 11:33 AM, Routing Analysis Role Account wrote:
[...]
Analysis Summary
BGP routing table entries examined: 264582
Isn't this supposed to be >400K? What happened this week?
yes it disagrees with t
On 8/24/2012 11:33 AM, Routing Analysis Role Account wrote:
[...]
> Analysis Summary
>
>
> BGP routing table entries examined: 264582
Isn't this supposed to be >400K? What happened this week?
-Lori
> Prefixes after maximum aggregation:
BGP Update Report
Interval: 19-Aug-12 -to- 23-Aug-12 (4 days)
Observation Point: BGP Peering with AS131072
TOP 20 Unstable Origin AS
Rank ASNUpds % Upds/PfxAS-Name
1 - AS840236689 1.0% 20.9 -- CORBINA-AS OJSC "Vimpelcom"
2 - AS638930409 0.8
This report has been generated at Fri Aug 24 21:13:04 2012 AEST.
The report analyses the BGP Routing Table of AS2.0 router
and generates a report on aggregation potential within the table.
Check http://www.cidr-report.org for a current version of this report.
Recent Table History
Date
You mean outages@...
On Aug 24, 2012 4:27 PM, "John Schneider" wrote:
> Sprint appears to be having major network issues in the Chicago area.
>
> Confirmed by sprint as CRS down in Chicago affecting multiple customers
> nationwide.
>
Sprint appears to be having major network issues in the Chicago area.
Confirmed by sprint as CRS down in Chicago affecting multiple customers
nationwide.
On Wed, Aug 22, 2012 at 1:42 PM, David Hubbard
wrote:
> Of those who have used Quagga or Bird, or anything else,
> would either of them be appropriate and/or well suited for
> use as an iBGP blackhole route server? We currently
> do blackholes via manual config on one of our real
> routers but ar
folk should remember that ARIN publishes an RSS feed of
allocations/deallocations...
http://lists.arin.net/pipermail/arin-issued/2012-August/001348.html
(well, a mailing-list which has an rss feed... which reader.google
seems to like just fine...)
On Thu, Aug 23, 2012 at 1:29 AM, Otis L. Surratt
This is an automated weekly mailing describing the state of the Internet
Routing Table as seen from APNIC's router in Japan.
The posting is sent to APOPS, NANOG, AfNOG, AusNOG, SANOG, PacNOG, LacNOG,
TRNOG, CaribNOG and the RIPE Routing Working Group.
Daily listings are sent to bgp-st...@lists.ap
On 2012-08-24, at 10:33 AM, valdis.kletni...@vt.edu wrote:
> If you can use 3ms to extract enough money out of the market to pay for a
> cable, that market is *way* too volatile in the first place.
Heh. Think things are volatile now? Wait 'til they get it down to
pico-payment based trading of
Don't forget about XORP if you have any need for multicast routing ...
On Wed, Aug 22, 2012 at 1:19 AM, Hank Nussbacher wrote:
> Sorry to disrupt the bad cabling thread, but I'd like to revisit a thread
> from 2 years ago. I have read over the NANOG presentations:
> http://www.nanog.org/meetings
On Fri, 24 Aug 2012 04:25:26 -0400, Joly MacFie said:
> "The gain may sound small, but could prove critical to financial trades
> made out of the region," according to the report.
If you can use 3ms to extract enough money out of the market to pay for a
cable, that market is *way* too volatile in
On 23 Aug 2012, at 15:04, Raymond Burkholder wrote:
> To expand the opinion set, how do Quagga, Bird, exaBGP, OpenBGPd hold up for
> handling Multi-Protocol BGP Route Reflector duties in a BGP/MPLS environment
> for a smaller ISP?
I am using BIRD as a RR between a busy VRF and our core and will
http://www.livescience.com/22538-asias-fastest-communications-cable-comes-online.html
The fastest-yet communications cable in Asia came online today (Aug. 20).
The underwater fiber optic cable links Japan, Hong Kong, the Philippines,
Malaysia and Singapore for high-speed, computerized stock tradin
18 matches
Mail list logo