Reading all the arguments one could generalize that choosing default/partial 
routes (instead of full feed) one is basically outsourcing all the control, 
convergence speed, security, etc.. to upstream providers.

 

adam

 

From: NANOG <nanog-boun...@nanog.org> On Behalf Of Amir Herzberg
Sent: Monday, January 27, 2020 1:49 PM
To: Job Snijders <j...@instituut.net>
Cc: NANOG <nanog@nanog.org>
Subject: Re: Dual Homed BGP

 

Dear Job and NANOG,

 

Just wondering, wouldn't any of you guys consider using full tables in this 
case, for  the ability to detect and avoid prefix hijacks (using RPKI/ROV or 
other means)? 

 

Of course, I'm focused on security, and I know this is often not a high 
priority for a real network manager who has many other considerations; just 
want to know. Thanks. 

-- 
Amir 

 

 

On Fri, Jan 24, 2020 at 12:27 PM Job Snijders <j...@instituut.net 
<mailto:j...@instituut.net> > wrote:

Dear Brian,

 

On Fri, 24 Jan 2020 at 17:40, Brian <brian....@gmail.com 
<mailto:brian....@gmail.com> > wrote:

Hello all. I am having a hard time trying to articulate why a Dual Home ISP 
should have full tables. My understanding has always been that full tables when 
dual homed allow much more control. Especially in helping to prevent Async 
routes.

 

The advantage of receiving full routing tables from both providers is that in 
cases where one of the two providers is not yet fully converged, your routers 
will use the other provider for those missing destinations. This may happen 
during maintenance or router boot-up in your upstream’s network.

 

Another advantage of receiving full routes is that you can manipulate 
LOCAL_PREF per destination, or compose routing policy based on per-route 
attributes such as BGP communities your upstreams set. It can happen that a 
provider is great for 99% of destinations, except a few - without full tables 
such granular traffic-engineering can be cumbersome.

 

Virtually all internet routing is asymmetric, I wouldn’t consider that an 
issue. 

 

Am I crazy? 

 

I dropped out of university, never completed my psychology studies, I fear I am 
unqualified to answer this question. ;-)

 

Kind regards,

 

Job

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