iljitsch.com

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Hi, I'm Iljitsch van Beijnum. These are general neworking-related posts.

Mixing IPv4 and IPv6 in BGP

When I first started running IPv6 over BGP, I ran into an interesting problem. The Cisco router I was working on had four full BGP feeds over IPv4. But when did show ip bgp, I noticed the router had five copies of each prefix. One of these paths had a really weird next hop address and was marked as unreachable.

Turned out those were IPv4 prefixes learned over an IPv6 BGP session.

Full article / permalink - posted 2016-03-18

IPv6 celebrates its 20th birthday by reaching 10 percent deployment

My latest Ars Technica IPv6 story is about IPv6 celebrating its 20th birthday and that it has reached 10% deployment at the end of 2015.

And the US is doing very well with almost 25% IPv6 deployment:

Permalink - posted 2016-01-04 - 🇳🇱 Nederlandse versie

Amsterdam is the internet traffic capital of the world

These are the top 10 internet exchanges in the world exchanging the most traffic according to Packet Clearing House:

As you can see, the DE-CIX in Frankfurt is the top dog at 4.76 terabits per second peak traffic. (That's enough to transfer about a hundred HD movies or 595 gigabytes per second.) The Amsterdam Internet Exchange is second at 3.94 Tbps. But... we also have the Neutral Internet Exchange (NL-ix) in Amsterdam at 1.44 Tbps. So AMS-IX and NL-ix together make Amsterdam the city with the most internet traffic in the world at no less than 5.38 Tbps as per these statistics.

Congrats, Amsterdam!

However, not all NL-ix traffic is actually exchanged in Amsterdam, they have many locations in the Netherlands and also some in the surrounding countries. It's still entirely possible that at least 830 Gbps of that 1.44 Tbps is exchanged in Amsterdam, though.

Permalink - posted 2015-11-27

20 years of BGP

20 years ago today, I got my first autonomous system (AS) number, marking my entry in the BGP business. (5399, if you're wondering.)

To quote Ferris Bueller: "Life moves pretty fast. If you don't stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it." So let's look back and see what has happened over those 20 years.

Full article / permalink - posted 2015-08-15

Taking Apple's NAT64 implementation for a spin

As we learned last month, Apple has included a DNS64/NAT64 implementation in the upcoming version 10.11 of the Mac operating system, for the purpose of testing whether iOS applications are "IPv6-clean". I installed the public beta of 10.11 last week, so I was able to see how this DNS64/NAT64 implementation works.

Read the article - posted 2015-07-13

5 minutes of BGP instability after leap second

This July 30th, at 23:59:60, a leap second was added to Coordinated Universal Time (UTC). Dyn Research posted the following graph on Twitter that shows there was significant BGP update instability for five minutes after the leap second occurred:

Full article / permalink - posted 2015-07-06

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