[AusNOG] International link issue
Bruce Rosenberg
BruceRosenberg at nbnco.com.au
Fri Feb 24 10:52:01 EST 2012
Basically they advertised a bucket load of /24’s which are more specific routes than the summary routes TID would have had installed.
The TID peer failed to auto-summarise so the more specific routes won.
From: ausnog-bounces at lists.ausnog.net [mailto:ausnog-bounces at lists.ausnog.net] On Behalf Of McDonald Richards
Sent: Friday, February 24, 2012 10:45 AM
To: Will Tardy
Cc: ausnog at ausnog.net
Subject: Re: [AusNOG] International link issue
I'm pretty sure no hardware or cables were an issue here. It's nice to blame them, but somebody somewhere made a mistake in a route-map.
Anybody have private capacity on endeavour and able to confirm if it did indeed "stop processing requests" ? ;)
Macca
On 24/02/2012, at 10:30 AM, Will Tardy <will at fetchtv.com.au<mailto:will at fetchtv.com.au>> wrote:
Telstra claims they had an international link down:
http://www.zdnet.com.au/telstra-hit-by-nationwide-data-outage-339332310.htm
If that happened at the same time as DODO incorrectly sending Telstra the full BGP table, could that explain why Telstra black-holed all-routes plus pumped all of it's own traffic via dodo?
On 24 February 2012 10:02, Wade Millican <Wade.Millican at echoent.com.au<mailto:Wade.Millican at echoent.com.au>> wrote:
Hi All,
What I'm yet to understand about this outage is why DODO's AS_PATH was seen as shorter than anything Telstra already had.
An earlier posted look at routes(below), thanks Gavin, shows all routes from Telstra taking hops to DODO, then Optus or PIPE before moving to the destination. Surely Telstra would have had better routes than pushing all traffic 2 hops out of it's way.
AS_PATH does not explain how Telstra accepted these as the active routes. Even if all routes were accepted, Telstra still has better routes.
Can anyone explain what BGP Metric was modified/used that pushed traffic over longer AS_PATHs?
*> 1.22.161.0/24<http://1.22.161.0/24> 165.228.157.73 100 80 0 1221 38285 7474 7473 55410 45528 i
*> 1.22.162.0/24<http://1.22.162.0/24> 165.228.157.73 100 80 0 1221 38285 7474 7473 55410 45528 i
*> 1.22.163.0/24<http://1.22.163.0/24> 165.228.157.73 100 80 0 1221 38285 7474 7473 55410 45528 i
*> 1.22.167.0/24<http://1.22.167.0/24> 165.228.157.73 100 80 0 1221 38285 7474 7473 6453 4755 45528 i
*> 1.22.168.0/24<http://1.22.168.0/24> 165.228.157.73 100 80 0 1221 38285 7474 7473 6453 4755 45528 i
..
* 14.201.64.0/24<http://14.201.64.0/24> 165.228.157.73 100 80 0 1221 38285 18398 7545 7545 i
Thanks,
Wade
--
Wade Millican
Technical Consultant Team Lead
Hemisphere Infrastructure Support
Information Technology
Echo Entertainment Group Limited
2 Edward St
Pyrmont NSW 2009
T: +61 2 9657 7460<tel:%2B61%202%209657%207460>
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wade.millican at echoent.com.au
www.echoentertainment.com.au<http://www.echoentertainment.com.au>
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From: "Ramsay, Paul" <pramsay at uecomm.com.au<mailto:pramsay at uecomm.com.au>>
Date: Wed, 22 Feb 2012 22:20:41 -0800
To: "ausnog at ausnog.net<mailto:ausnog at ausnog.net>" <ausnog at ausnog.net<mailto:ausnog at ausnog.net>>
Subject: Re: [AusNOG] International link issue
Yes, this reinforces the Rule of Trust. Don’t trust your BGP peers and ensure your filters are in place, configured correctly and working, you can’t transfer blame.
It can cost you big $$ and pain if you inadvertently turn yourself into a transit peer because your upstreams may prefer to send traffic where they can make $$ from.
From: ausnog-bounces at lists.ausnog.net<mailto:ausnog-bounces at lists.ausnog.net> [mailto:ausnog-bounces at lists.ausnog.net] On Behalf Of Sean K. Finn
Sent: Thursday, 23 February 2012 5:09 PM
To: 'ausnog at ausnog.net<mailto:'ausnog at ausnog.net>'
Subject: Re: [AusNOG] International link issue
It’s easy to describe for all the media types watching..
(And I’m not sure why its not being put out there in Laymans terms).
From the routes seen at various points, and reported on the WAIX mailing list earlier..
Dodo told Telstra that Dodo was the rest of the Internet.
Telstra Believed Dodo.
Telstra entire system tried to use DODO as their ISP instead of everyone else Telstra is connected to.
Needless to say this didn’t work, the pipes got Jammed.
Telstra should have filtered the announcement from Dodo, butdidn’t.
Filtering is in place as a form of control (which is used instead of trust).
Filtering obviously wasn’t in place, or didn’t work, so anything that Dodo told Telstra about where to find the Internet, Telstra believed.
This happens quite often, I’ve heard of this happening on peering exchanges within Australia, too. Just never at an organizational level as big as Telstra.
Over and Out.
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