[62394] in North American Network Operators' Group
Re: .ORG problems this evening
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (E.B. Dreger)
Thu Sep 18 01:45:06 2003
Date: Thu, 18 Sep 2003 05:44:25 +0000 (GMT)
From: "E.B. Dreger" <eddy+public+spam@noc.everquick.net>
To: nanog@merit.edu
In-Reply-To: <Pine.GSO.4.58.0309180526110.11397@rampart.argfrp.us.uu.net>
Errors-To: owner-nanog-outgoing@merit.edu
CLM> Date: Thu, 18 Sep 2003 05:28:05 +0000 (GMT)
CLM> From: Christopher L. Morrow
CLM> Just because they hosts are on the same subnet and are
CLM> apparently behind the same end device for you doesn't make
CLM> them non-geographically diverse if they are really anycast
CLM> pods, does it? It really just means one anycast pod was down
CLM> for a time :(
Ideally, though, an anycast node should yank the route if the
service in question dies. I say "ideally" because we still
haven't had DNS properly make friends with BGP... and such flaps
really shouldn't be seen, which means having a contiguous
internal network and [properly] decoupling IGP from EGP...
...and suddenly I'm making many assumptions. ;-)
CLM> It is one of the things that anycast makes difficult though
CLM> :( Troubleshooting anycast from the outside is a bear.
It's a lot like multihoming, only with different geography.
Unicast IP addresses are analogous to world-facing router
interfaces.
Tip for anyone considering playing with anycast, particularly on
the same ethernet segment: Bind the anycast IP addresses to your
loopback interface.
Eddy
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