[26493] in North American Network Operators' Group

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Re: Y2K bgp announcements

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Sean Donelan)
Sat Jan 1 16:26:57 2000

Date: 1 Jan 2000 13:25:17 -0800
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To: nanog@merit.edu
From: Sean Donelan <sean@donelan.com>
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On Sat, 01 January 2000, Ben Buxton wrote:
> Looks like numerous networks went off the air over the year rollover 
> due to fear and the like, and this caused a significant drop in 
> the number of announcements:

The precise numbers will vary depending where your BGP view is in the
worldwide Internet.  You are correct.  There was a steady decline in
both number of prefixes and number of asns in the 24 hours before
Midnight.  The global routing table shrunk by 1000 routes before the
hour before Midnight EST.  In that hour, another 600 routes withdrew.
The routes remained stable at that level for 5 hours, and then began
to climb back to normal levels.  About 30 ASNs vanished prior to the
rollover.

From my view, the decline actually started on December 24. But it isn't
really noticable until the last 24 hours.  Since the graph of practically
anything about Internet always shows an increase, a decrease is an
interesting change.





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