At 9:45 AM -0400 8/21/02, Stefan Jeglinski  imposed structure on a 
stream of electrons, yielding:
>>According to the global routing table, the entire netblock 
>>63.216.0.0/13 is routed as a single route to CAIS as part of AS 
>>3491.
>
>Which bring me to this question:
>
>How/where does one sleuth "global routing tables?" I have always 
>tried to figure these things out by looking in the ARIN database (or 
>RIPE or APNIC), but I know there's got to be a more precise way (?)


1. If you are a truly multi-homed ISP and run BGP with a defaultless 
router somewhere, you have one view of the global routing table right 
there.

2. If you understand a little BGP you might find the various 'looking 
glass' sites such as http://nitrous.digex.net/ interesting and useful.

3. If you are willing to deal with the routes as the ISP's are 
willing to register them (as opposed to how they happen to be 
announcing them in BGP this minute) you can do whois lookups of IP 
addresses against whois.radb.net and get back what the various ISP's 
have registered with the Routing Arbiter Database and its various 
successors and related systems. The RADB project is described at 
http://www.radb.net

-- 
Bill Cole                                  
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


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