[23881] in North American Network Operators' Group
Re: Severe Response Degradation
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Daniel Senie)
Wed Apr 28 11:12:08 1999
Date: Wed, 28 Apr 1999 11:10:30 -0400
From: Daniel Senie <dts@senie.com>
To: nanog@merit.edu
Errors-To: owner-nanog-outgoing@merit.edu
Jeff Aitken wrote:
>
> Andrew Brown writes:
> > Daniel Senie writes:
> > >Considering the large chunk of 24/8 they have, I can't imagine why they
> > >had to use RFC 1918 addresses throughout their infrastructure. When I
> > >raised issues about this (just after getting a T1 to their network),
> > >they had no answers other than that since they chose an MTU of 1500
> > >bytes for all their links, they didn't think path MTU discovery would be
> > >an issue.
> >
> > well then, they're obviously clueless.
>
> Hasn't this come up here before? I'm too lazy to go check the
> archive, but I seem to remember a discussion of this topic. IIRC,
> the reason/excuse given (lame or not) was that they use equipment
> that does not deal well/at all with CIDR or VLSM or somesuch. Or
> am I thinking of someone else?
Well, all of their gear is Cisco. Last I checked, I think Cisco was OK
with CIDR and VLSM, and even unnumbered links.
As for the cluelessness statements, my take is that they've got some
very clueful people, and some very clueless people. They've also got the
inertia of a company many times their size. Perhaps that's appropriate,
though, as they are now owned, at least in part, by AT&T (via the TCI
deal).
--
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Daniel Senie dts@senie.com
Amaranth Networks Inc. http://www.amaranthnetworks.com