Agreed, especially since I have seen more than a few professional installations where they got it wrong. 


Regards,
David Edelman 
who is responsible for the concept of this message. Unfortunately, autocorrect is responsible for the content

On Dec 23, 2024, at 19:45, Christopher Hawker <ch...@thesysadmin.au> wrote:


Tony,

"The NANOG Mailing List is a community-moderated forum, open to all. Established in 1994 to provide the open exchange of technical information, it provides the opportunity for lively discussions of specific implementation challenges that require cooperation among network service providers." - NANOG Usage Guidelines

I disagree with your remark that "this is not an appropriate channel for this query". I would believe that Jean's query falls under the "open exchange of technical information" category.

Regards,
Christopher Hawker

From: NANOG <nanog-bounces+chris=thesysadmin...@nanog.org> on behalf of Tony Wicks <t...@wicks.co.nz>
Sent: Tuesday, December 24, 2024 11:33 AM
To: 'Jean Franco' <jfra...@maila.inf.br>
Cc: 'North American Network Operators' Group' <nanog@nanog.org>
Subject: RE: Best way to have redundancy announcing on separate routers
 

Sorry, this is not a general help list for basic networking skills. There are many options for appropriate training available, but this is not an appropriate channel for this query.

 

From: NANOG <nanog-bounces+tony=wicks.co...@nanog.org> On Behalf Of Jean Franco
Sent: Tuesday, 24 December 2024 12:33 pm
To: North American Network Operators' Group <nanog@nanog.org>
Subject: Best way to have redundancy announcing on separate routers

 

Hi Folks,

 

I'm trying to achieve total redundancy on a multihomed environment:

 

ISP 1 <=> Router 1 <= X => Router 2 <=> ISP 2

Where X is my Network.

 

In the example below, he announces separate blocks to each ISP.

 

 

I would like to do a failover model, where if one ISP goes down the other would take over.

Please share your thoughts on this.

 

Best regards,

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