You always want to prefer customer routes over non customer routes as a service provider. Of course having a robust set of communities to let adjustments happen helps.
Without proper tiering of routes you may see unstable routing. Having a standard set of customer, peer, transit set of local preferences would go a long way. Same for geographic scope of routes, only use these on same continent. Makes using a provider if you do something like anycast hard if they haul you long distance. - Jared Sent via RFC1925 compliant device > On Jul 25, 2022, at 6:49 AM, Forrest Christian (List Account) > <li...@packetflux.com> wrote: > > > I wish they'd add one more that turns off their "prefer routes learned from a > customer" rule. I'm having to split my blocks in half and announce them > that way to get them to send my traffic directly to me through our IX peering > session as opposed to one of my transit providers. > > I'd rather they just let shortest path selection work. > >> On Sun, Jul 24, 2022, 1:43 PM Siyuan Miao <avel...@misaka.io> wrote: >> They do have BGP communities ... but for black-hole only :-( >> >>> On Sun, Jul 24, 2022 at 9:39 PM Ryan Hamel <administra...@rkhtech.org> >>> wrote: >>> Yes. >>> >>> Ryan >>> >>> -----Original Message----- >>> From: NANOG <nanog-bounces+ryan=rkhtech....@nanog.org> On Behalf Of Rubens >>> Kuhl >>> Sent: Sunday, July 24, 2022 12:36 PM >>> To: Nanog <nanog@nanog.org> >>> Subject: HE.net and BGP Communities >>> >>> The last mention I found on NANOG about HE.net and BGP communities for >>> traffic engineering is from April 2021 and said they provided none. >>> >>> Is that still the case a year later ? >>> >>> >>> Rubens >>>