Looks like WVFiber removed them as a customer:
http://www.cidr-report.org/cgi-bin/as-report?as=as27595
Now only AS32335 [PACIFICINTERNETEXCHANGE-NET] remains.
- ferg
--
"Fergie", a.k.a. Paul Ferguson
Engineering Architecture for the Internet
fergdawg(at)netzero.net
ferg's tech blog: http://
I saw that one before. Thats what we based our current fix on.
Frank Bulk wrote:
> Steven:
>
> This was recently discussed on cisco-nsp:
> http://marc.info/?l=cisco-nsp&m=121316151010190&w=2
>
> Frank
>
> -Original Message-
> From: Steven King [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Sunday, Sep
General Information
===
About NANOG:http://www.nanog.org/about/
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On Mon, Sep 15, 2008 at 7:13 AM, Jim Mercer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> oddly enough, the ISP's in the region have not caught on to the potential
> winfall of providing cost effective hosting locally, so therefore, the bulk
> of the hosting for companies in the region is primarily done in the US,
* Jean-François Mezei:
> Did western europe ever really have a primary route via the USA to reach
> asia ?
It depends where you buy transit from. For instance, I see Baidu
through AT&T, and the traffic is routed through the U.S. Some
Singaporean banks and a few Koran government sites are route
On Mon, Sep 15, 2008 at 10:22:27AM +0100, Alexander Harrowell wrote:
> On Mon, Sep 15, 2008 at 7:13 AM, Jim Mercer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > oddly enough, the ISP's in the region have not caught on to the potential
> > winfall of providing cost effective hosting locally, so therefore, the bulk
Fiber opic capacity from to Europe to Asia via the African cost has always been
quite slim by TransAtlantic standards. As I recollect, you have FLAG, SWM3, and
SWM4. Those systems can push multi-terabits. Capacity is not fundamentally the
problem, but rather the lack of competition.
Also you n
Hello NANOG list,
I'm trying to reach out to Level(3) Security Operations for assistance with a
Denial of Service attack.
So far, the normal means to contact Level(3) have failed.
I can be reached directly at 603-296-1598.
Thanks,
Tom Daly
--
Tom Daly
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Dynamic Network Service
I will be out of the office starting 09/15/2008 and will not return until
09/21/2008.
I will respond to your message when I return. Please contact with
[EMAIL PROTECTED] for any production issues
-
On 14 Sep 2008, at 23:38, Matthew Moyle-Croft wrote:
Other cable systems predated FLAG (at least for voice).
The qualifier might be important.
As should have been obvious from all the IIRCs and related qualifiers
in my note, I wasn't in Europe at the time I started paying attention
to th
Hi Francois,
The answer is yes. The cost of reaching Asian via the US was and is still much
lower than via the cables that hug the Africain cost.
And since Europe had a lot of traffic terminating in the US, it made more sense
to throw it all that way than split into two major routes.
Finall
On 15 Sep 2008, at 05:40, Jim Mercer wrote:
there is an exchange http://emix.ae, however, when i last interacted
with
them several years ago, it was a relatively closed club.
Unless things have changed recently, it's more of a monopoly transit
provider than an exchange point. It's a servi
The 3560E/3750E support uRPF as per docs:
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/docs/switches/lan/catalyst3750e_3560e/softwar
e/release/12.2_46_se/configuration/guide/swiprout.html#wp1388196
The unsupported command guide looks in error.
> -Original Message-
> From: Brandon Ewing [mailto:[EMAIL PROTE
Greetings,
For NANOG44 in Los Angeles, we will be running the keysigning
sessions during the general session breaks in the Moroccan open seating
area, which is on the Mezzanine level (above the Main Galleria).
If you're planning to attend any of the keysigning sessions, p
Hello Nanog,
I'm currently looking into what are the options for enabling inter-datacenter
communication.
Our current solution is to use ipsec/gre tunnels traversing over the Internet.
The specific needs the new solution must meet are:
- The ability to run end-to-end QOS.
- Dedicated bandwidth
> - Layer 2 Ethernet (Virtual Private Line): This service seems to be offered
> by a lot of ISPs using various networking techniques. The price point is
> attractive however packets are forwarded only at best effort across the ISP's
> network which means the quality of the service will directly
Hi everyone,
There are going to be a few announcements over the next few days
regarding all things NANOG, so please bear with us!
Thanks to all who volunteered for the Steering Committee - the list of
candidates to join the three continuing Steering Committee members is at
http://www.nanog.org/go
On 15/09/2008, at 10:06 PM, Joe Abley wrote:
As an example, PacRimEast still had capacity in the late 90s,
strictly speaking. But given the difficulty in ordering anything
other than E1s on it at that time, did it really exist as a
terrestrial option for New Zealand ISPs trying to send pa
This is something has been bugging me lately Etherape is a Linux
tool that graphs packets arriving at your host, and shows paths of
connectivity. I captured the graphs, at the URL below, from my Linux
laptop connected to a Linksys wifi router that is hooked to a Comcast
cable modem. Why is
On 15/09/2008, at 10:36 PM, Joe Abley wrote:
On 14 Sep 2008, at 23:38, Matthew Moyle-Croft wrote:
Other cable systems predated FLAG (at least for voice).
The qualifier might be important.
As should have been obvious from all the IIRCs and related
qualifiers in my note, I wasn't in Europ
On 16/09/2008, at 1:34 PM, Jim Popovitch wrote:
This is something has been bugging me lately Etherape is a Linux
tool that graphs packets arriving at your host, and shows paths of
connectivity. I captured the graphs, at the URL below, from my Linux
laptop connected to a Linksys wifi router
Chris Kleban <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hello Nanog,
>
> I'm currently looking into what are the options for enabling inter-datacenter
> communication.
>
> Our current solution is to use ipsec/gre tunnels traversing over the
> Internet. The specific needs the new solution must meet are:
>
> - T
Paul,
Cogent is keeping tabs of the Intercage/Atrivo situation in ticket
HD000789038. Be sure to e-mail or call them referencing that
number with any information you may have to share.
AboveNet's ticket auto-responder is broken.
I've been unable to get a response out of NTT (AS 2914).
Driv
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
- -- "Paul Wall" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>Cogent is keeping tabs of the Intercage/Atrivo situation in ticket
>HD000789038. Be sure to e-mail or call them referencing that
>number with any information you may have to share.
>
>AboveNet's ticket
On Tue, Sep 16, 2008 at 00:43, Hank Nussbacher <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Are you running Skype? Have you become a supernode? There is now a
> registry switch in 3.0 that allows you to disable supernode functionality.
No. Nothing is running on this host (my laptop) when initiating
etherape.
On 16/09/2008, at 4:43 PM, Hank Nussbacher wrote:
Are you running Skype? Have you become a supernode? There is now a
registry switch in 3.0 that allows you to disable supernode
functionality.
This would not cause him to see traffic to and from random addresses.
Note that traffic is not
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
- -- "Paul Wall" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>Cogent is keeping tabs of the Intercage/Atrivo situation in ticket
>HD000789038. Be sure to e-mail or call them referencing that
>number with any information you may have to share.
>
>AboveNet's ticket
On Tue, 16 Sep 2008, Paul Ferguson wrote:
In any event, the badness is still there. Lots of it.
Not according to this:
http://www.domainnews.com/en/general/estdomains-denies-links-to-malware-distribution.html
"The company also has a reliable ally in its battle against malware in a
face of In
On Mon, 15 Sep 2008, Jim Popovitch wrote:
Are you running Skype? Have you become a supernode? There is now a
registry switch in 3.0 that allows you to disable supernode functionality.
-Hank
This is something has been bugging me lately Etherape is a Linux
tool that graphs packets arrivi
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