North American Network Operators Group Date Prev | Date Next | Date Index | Thread Index | Author Index | Historical Re: Advice on dealing with Sprint
On Thu, 26 Sep 1996 01:45:57 -0400 (EDT), [email protected] writes: > >> > I spoke to a sprint salesperson about 2 weeks ago and was told that I >> > could not get any kind of BGP4 peering with Sprint unless I had a >> > Cisco 7000 series router. That brings up an interesting question. I've been told now that I can in fact connect to Sprint, but am I going to be able to do BGP4 peering? The connection would be pretty worthless without that, as I have several networks I need to announce, and expect to get a full routing table back from Sprint. What is Sprint's official policy on this? >> This is my experience also, althought I was able to get my sales >> weasel to say that they might except a 45xx series if it had >> sufficient memory, as some "exceptions" had been granted on a "case >> by case" basis. >> >> As a reseller of IP services they will not manage my router for me, >> but said I still had to have a Cisco(tm) router, even if I'm not >> peering BGP. >I won't say there's "no way they can know", but basically they really >shouldn't. If you disable incoming telnet to your Bay box and tell >them it's a cisco with "cdp disabled", they shouldn't be able to >tell the difference. I considered that, actually. :) >Of course, you'd best know how the hell to configure the bay box >if you want to go this route. That goes without saying. If I didn't know how to configure it, I'd go buy a 2500 and let someone else manage it for me, like many other ISPs do. As it is, I'm quite familiar with how my routers work, and what their capabilities are. I wish other people were.. I'm always surprised when engineers from MCI tell me "Oh, Bay Networks can't do BGP4" (ignoring the fact that I *am* doing it with them.) I have two Bay BCN routers here, each card in the router has a 60MHz processor and 64MB of memory. One processor card is designated as the BGP soloist, and *all* it does is process BGP. If I want one, I can get a processor card that has dual PPC chips on it that will run as a BGP soloist. If anyone thinks Bay can't do BGP4, I'd be happy to give them a tour. :) ----------------------------------------------------------------- * Jon Green * Wide-Area Networking Technician * * [email protected] * Iowa Network Services, Inc. * * Finger for Geek Code/PGP * 312 8th Street, Suite 730 * * #include "std_disclaimer.h" * Des Moines, IA 50309 * ------------------------------------------------------------------------- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
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