I would not recommend to do that.

If you really do this, please make sure that the owner of the supernet (in this 
case the university) also does transit for the subnet (which they should as 
they are supposed to accept and forward traffic for the whole aggregate that 
they are announcing).

Otherwise, for networks that only do partial routing (basically defaults from 
transits + peering routes), this will create a blackhole in case they peer with 
the ISP that announces only the supernet,
but not with the ISP that announces the subnet, because traffic will always be 
routed towards the announcement of the supernet only.
Same applies if the subnet gets filtered by some people for policy reasons 
(like no more-specifics of PA space, or smaller than /24...).

Also, be careful that the owner of the supernet doesn't apply inbound 
anti-spoofing filters at their borders towards transits and peers for traffic 
from your subnet that is part of their supernet.

Chris

On 04/08/16 21:39, Andrew wrote:
Hello List,

I work for a medium sized ISP.  We are entering an agreement to rent
some IPv4 space from a local higher education institution.  Being a
multi-homed ISP we would like to advertise the rented prefix from our
ASN.  The prefix that will be advertised is a smaller subnet from the
higher educations block; they will continue to advertise the larger
prefix.

What is the best way to accomplish this?  Is there any way of doing this
without having to tunnel the traffic through the origin ASN?

I feel if we just adverse the prefix it get put on a bogon list for
prefix hijacking.  This space is rented long term but they are not
interested in reassigning the space to us.  They also want to keep
advertising their prefix as one contiguous block.

I appreciate any insight and information.
Thank you for your time,
Andrew.


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