[133413] in North American Network Operators' Group
Re: Are you ready for RPKI in your BGP?
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Arturo Servin)
Thu Dec 9 06:16:30 2010
From: Arturo Servin <arturo.servin@gmail.com>
Date: Thu, 9 Dec 2010 09:16:18 -0200
In-Reply-To: <mailman.8195.1291883869.813.nanog@nanog.org>
To: nanog@nanog.org
Errors-To: nanog-bounces+nanog.discuss=bloom-picayune.mit.edu@nanog.org
=09
There are some pieces in the RPKI puzzle.
One is the definitions of protocols, that one is very advanced =
in the SIDR WG in the IETF. Not RFCs yet but I am sure we will se some =
soon.
Another piece are repositories of CA's and ROAs and Trust =
Anchors. RIRs have they implementations or you could create your own if =
you want to keep your private keys.
IMHO one piece missing (not the only one, but one important in =
this stage) is RTR (RPKI/Router Protocol) working in routers. May be is =
too soon to see it in production routers but I am only aware of one big =
vendor with testing code. Also open-source implementations (Quagga, =
Xorp, Bird, etc.) are not actively (or at all) working in RPKI, I would =
imagine that one first step for many operators is to test RPKI with =
these implementations.
Regards,
-as
On 9 Dec 2010, at 06:37, nanog-request@nanog.org wrote:
> Date: Wed, 8 Dec 2010 22:56:08 -0500
> From: Jared Mauch <jared@puck.nether.net>
> Subject: Are you ready for RPKI in your BGP?
> To: North American Network Operators Group <nanog@nanog.org>
> Message-ID: <15FF52BA-388A-48E8-BDDE-A151E694E9AC@puck.nether.net>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=3Dus-ascii
>=20
> Are you ready for RPKI in your network?
>=20
> While there's some dubious hyperbole in the article, the work that has =
been undertaken in SIDR wg re: RPKI is moving along. =20
>=20
> =
http://www.networkworld.com/cgi-bin/mailto/x.cgi?pagetosend=3D/news/2010/1=
20710-chinese-internet-traffic-fix.html&pagename=3D/news/2010/120710-chine=
se-internet-traffic-fix.html&pageurl=3Dhttp://www.networkworld.com/news/20=
10/120710-chinese-internet-traffic-fix.html&site=3Dprintpage&nsdr=3Dn
>=20
> For those of you preparing to assign 2011 goals to your employees, or =
something to self-assign, this should be in the top-5 or top-10 if you =
configure routers for BGP.
>=20
> - Jared