Internet Routing, Looming Disaster?
wiredmikey writes "The Internet's leading architects have considered the rapid growth and fragmentation of core routing tables one of the most significant threats to the long-term stability and scalability of the Internet. In April 2010, about 15% of the world's Internet traffic was hijacked by a set of servers owned by China Telecom. In the technical world, this is typically called a prefix hijack, and it happened due to a couple of wrong tweaks made at China Telecom. Whether this was intentional or not is unknown, but such routing accidents are all too common online. While BGP is the de-facto protocol for inter-domain routing on the Internet, actual routing occurs without checking whether the originator of the route is authorized to do so. The global routing system itself is made up of autonomous systems (AS) which are simply loosely interconnected routing domains. Each autonomous system decides, unilaterally, and even arbitrarily, to trust everything it hears from any other AS, to use that information without validation, and to further transmit that information to its other peers..."
That's not entirely true.
/8's.
/24 assigned to me, and I decided to have it routed to my building in Toronto, but then decided to move a /28 to a location in Dallas, what would be the easiest way to go about that?
/28's to, I could simply retrieve an AS number and advertise each /28 to the parents at each location. this would then trail up to the largest area that my /24 exists under, and the traffic would be routed locally to each location.
/24's or /28's that exist. keep in mind that each /16 has 256-/24's which in turn each have 32 /28's each.
/16's (regularly) they buy a /27-/30. this means that the /8 you oversee as an ISP may have as many as 4,194,000+ /30 prefixes to account for.
though you choose what MAJOR prefixes you accept routing information for, nobody cares about the
If I had say a
if I had enough other locations to assign
sure, many ISP's that you deal with in North America may have policies regarding what exact prefixes you advertise at each peering location, but at some point you become large enough to be "trusted". once you start carrying your own traffic internally is often the breaking point.
say I decided to lease some dark fiber between my two locations: then suddenly my rates may be cheaper than the existing path the ISP is taking between the two. (HIGHLY unlikely, unless your IT department has WAY too much money and you've got a few ISP's interested in sharing a portion of your pipe, though it can seriously reduce the cost of some 100Mbit customer facing links in some cases)
this then leads to an interesting predicament: how does one know what prefixes will be advertised over that pipe? sure, each ISP sharing the connection MAY decide to restrict advertisements: but few have the capacity to do so for many of the smaller
customers don't buy