Chris, That's a good question. IAR peers that also wish to run PGBGP will transmit their anomalous routes out of band to the IAR. This will likely be done via logs and a simple forwarding script.
Josh On Mon, Mar 10, 2008 at 4:01 PM, Christopher Morrow < [EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On Mon, Mar 10, 2008 at 11:01 AM, Josh Karlin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > All, > > > > Some of you are aware of the site for network operators: > > http://iar.cs.unm.edu/ which has running for two years now. The > purpose of > > the site is to detect and distribute network anomaly information to the > > network operators that need to know. The flip side of our proposed > security > > system, Pretty Good BGP (PGBGP), lowers the local preference of > anomalous > > routes on BGP routers for 24 hours, giving operators time to respond to > > anomalous routes before they can fully propagate. > > > > does pgbgp toss out alerts/snmp-traps/log-messages when these > anomalous announcements arrive? if not, how does one know they are > inside the 24hr window? >