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Date:      Mon, 20 Mar 2000 07:58:05 -0500
From:      "Troy Settle" <troy@picus.com>
To:        "Craig Beasland" <craig@hotmix.com.au>, <freebsd-isp@freebsd.org>
Cc:        "'Michael Hallgren'" <m.hallgren@free.fr>
Subject:   RE: Multihoming
Message-ID:  <NDBBLGJECLNPOOFNABJCAEAGCAAA.troy@picus.com>
In-Reply-To: <A1FB33621BC3D311872D004005F62F6C5823@MANDELA>

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A 2503 will not take a 2 full tables.  Plus, you wouldn't want to run a full
session over a BRI.

First, make sure that your upstream is capable of doing BGP over BRI.  I
know mine would likely laugh until I cried.

Second, ask each of your upstream providers for limited tables.  Customer
and Peering routes are a good place to start.

One trick, that might work for you, is to take *NO* routes from either
upstream.  Only advertise your own routes via BGP.  This will ensure that
the rest of the world always has a route back to you (assuming that at least
one provider is up :).  For your outbound, configure your router to spit
packets out of both interfaces.  If one goes down, the other will pick up
the slack (well, as much as possible anyways :).

If you want to do this right, get yourself at least a Cisco 3620 or 3640
(3640 will last longer), and get private line T1s to each of your providers.
You won't regret it (though your accountant might kill you over it :)

HTH,

--
  Troy Settle
  Picus Communications
  540.633.6327



** -----Original Message-----
** From: owner-freebsd-isp@FreeBSD.ORG
** [mailto:owner-freebsd-isp@FreeBSD.ORG]On Behalf Of Craig Beasland
** Sent: Monday, March 20, 2000 2:25 AM
** To: freebsd-isp@freebsd.org
** Cc: 'Michael Hallgren'
** Subject: RE: Multihoming
**
**
** Michael,
**
** I do have my own portable address space, I cannot apply for an
** ASN until I
** am ready to proceed - I guess this is to stop people applying who then do
** not go ahead with the BGP routing.
**
** Does anyone know if a Cisco 2503 will allow me to do BGP, 1
** frame link and
** one BRI.  From the docs I've seen it will but it would be nice to have it
** confirmed.
**
** Cheers
** craig
**
** -----Original Message-----
** From: mh@roam.home.net [mailto:mh@roam.home.net]On Behalf Of Michael
** Hallgren
** Sent: Monday, 20 March 2000 15:05
** To: Craig Beasland
** Subject: Re: Multihoming
**
**
** Craig Beasland wrote:
** Hi there,st
**
** Hi,
**
** A few questions:
**
** Do you have your own IP addresss space (PI) ? Do you have your
** own ASN ? In
** general I'd say the way to
** go would be to speak BGP with your upstreams, but you might also
** do fairly
** well with static routes seconded
** by floaters (depending on how your space is announced by your
** upstreams ?)
** Michael
**
** I run a small ISP and now require the ability to multihome.  I
** have read an
** article that says (using a cisco router) I can add two default
** routes, with
** different priorities.  I am not sure how this will help me
** though, because
** if the primary link goes down, the data can not travel back because the
** primary link is down - we had this problem before when we were
** blackholed by
** a previous ISP's BGP routing tables).
** So my question is how can I cheaply achieve a redundant link?
** Cheers
** craig
** To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org
** with "unsubscribe freebsd-isp" in the body of the message
** --
** Michael Hallgren, http://m.hallgren.free.fr
**
**
**
**
** To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org
** with "unsubscribe freebsd-isp" in the body of the message
**
**



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