Re: BGP peering

From: Jay McMickle <jay.mcmickle_at_yahoo.com>
Date: Tue, 21 Aug 2012 18:51:56 -0700 (PDT)

I personally use a BGP looking glass-

telnet route-views.routeviews.org
Username: rviews
route-views>sh ip bgp summ
BGP router identifier
128.223.51.103, local AS number 6447
BGP table version is 192142705, main
routing table version 192142705
462395 network entries using 61036140 bytes of
memory

But, with 462,000 routes in the global BGP table, I'm sure you don't
want the entire table.

You can jump on there and collect your routes with "sh
ip route bgp" or "sh ip bgp".

Happy labbing!

 
Regards,
Jay McMickle- CCIE
#35355 (R&S)
 

________________________________
 From: Charles Wallace Jr
(wallacc) <wallacc_at_cisco.com>
To: Tom Kacprzynski <tom.kac_at_gmail.com>
Cc:
Adam Booth <adam.booth_at_gmail.com>; ""ccielab_at_groupstudy.com"
<ccielab_at_groupstudy.com>; marc edwards <renorider_at_gmail.com>
Sent: Tuesday,
August 21, 2012 8:26 PM
Subject: RE: BGP peering
 
I am really just looking
for a place I can download the global IPV4 bgp table
into my lab router here
at Cisco for experimentation. I suppose I could
probably find it through some
group at Cisco, but wanted to see if there was a
public place that I could
just get the copy of the table into my router here
in my lab without going
through all the red tape at corporate IT. Obviously
if I can justify a need I
can get it, but it'll be a pain to try. I suppose I
can duplicate something
here on the small scale, but I'd like to tool around
with the real thing.
From: Tom Kacprzynski [mailto:tom.kac_at_gmail.com]
Sent: Tuesday, August 21,
2012 9:13 PM
To: Charles Wallace Jr (wallacc)
Cc: Adam Booth;
"ccielab_at_groupstudy.com; marc edwards
Subject: Re: BGP peering

Charles,
Are
you trying to get the full routing table for analysis or are you trying to
find a place where you could peer with other networks publicly? If you want
analysis I think everyone mentioned good links above, but if you are
interested in public peering between other networks, you'll have to look at
internet exchanges like AMS-IX in Amsterdam, LINX in London or DE-CIX in
Frankfurt...there are hundreds more
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Internet_exchange_points_by_size
Regards,

Tom Kacprzynski

On Tue, Aug 21, 2012 at 5:52 PM, marc edwards
<renorider_at_gmail.com<mailto:renorider_at_gmail.com>> wrote:
You can get views
from an ASN if they support BGP route servers. Most
are publicly accessible.
here is a good link to some of the larger ISPs
http://www.netdigix.com/servers.html

Hurricane Electric also supports a
pretty cool database of how ASN's
interconnect.

HTH

Marc

On Tue, Aug 21,
2012 at 3:37 PM, Adam Booth
<adam.booth_at_gmail.com<mailto:adam.booth_at_gmail.com>> wrote:

> Hi Charles,
>
>
RIPE NCC has BGP data you can download from
>
http://www.ripe.net/data-tools/stats/ris/ris-raw-data
>
> Some people have
used it with a perl script that simulates a BGP peer in
> order to introduce
an internet routing table into a lab environment
>
>
http://code.google.com/p/bgpsimple/wiki/README
>
> Cheers,
> Adam
>
>
> On
Wed, Aug 22, 2012 at 7:57 AM, Charles Wallace Jr (wallacc) <
>
wallacc_at_cisco.com<mailto:wallacc_at_cisco.com>> wrote:
>
> > Does any sort of
"public" bgp peering exist on the internet where I can
> get
> > the full copy
of the bgp table. I seem to recall years ago there was one
> > that
> > you
could login and create your own peer on the honor system. Anything
> > like
>
> that exist now days?
> >
> > Charles
> >
> >
> > Blogs and organic groups at
http://www.ccie.net
> >
> >
Received on Tue Aug 21 2012 - 18:51:56 ART

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