[179171] in North American Network Operators' Group
Re: BGP offloading (fixing legacy router BGP scalability issues)
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Pawel Rybczyk)
Thu Apr 2 07:43:19 2015
X-Original-To: nanog@nanog.org
Date: Thu, 02 Apr 2015 13:43:15 +0200
From: Pawel Rybczyk <nogs@border6.com>
To: nanog@nanog.org
In-Reply-To: <6754-b6.nogs.nanog-02042015112001-7B@news.border6.com>
Reply-To: pawel.rybczyk@border6.com
Errors-To: nanog-bounces@nanog.org
Hi Freddy,
As Paul has mentioned, you could check the David's project - SIR, look
at his presentation:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o1njanXhQqM
We've also developed a platform for the BGP monitoring and routing
optimization which could solve your problem. It would inject to the
border routers only TOP X prefixes with which you exchange most of the
traffic. The added value would be that route orders point to best
performing transit (low latency, 0 packet loss) per distant prefix.
If you are interested to know more about our software please contact me
off-list.
--
Regards,
Pawel Rybczyk
Regional Manager
BORDER 6 sp. z o.o.
pawel.rybczyk@border6.com
office: +48 22 242 89 51 (ext.103)
mobile: +48 664 300 375
> David Barroso's (Spotify) SDN Internet Router [0] comes to mind.
>
> 0 - https://github.com/dbarrosop/sir
>
> On 4/2/2015 午後 07:47, Baldur Norddahl wrote:
>> Filtering countries is a bad idea, but it is probably possible to create
>> filters so 99% of your actual traffic is handled by a relatively small
>> subset of global routes and the remaining 1% routed via a default
>> route or
>> via a Linux box.
>>
>> Anyone know of tools and methods to do this? How effective is it ( how
>> many
>> routes is necessary to capture 99% of the traffic)?
>>
>> Regards
>>
>> Baldur
>