The beauty of being BGP'ed right on the Internet?
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John D. Hays
K7VE
PO Box 1223, Edmonds, WA 98020-1223
<http://k7ve.org/blog> <http://twitter.com/#!/john_hays>
<http://www.facebook.com/john.d.hays>
On Thu, May 22, 2014 at 3:01 PM, Bjorn Pehrson <bpehrson(a)kth.se> wrote:
> (Please trim inclusions from previous messages)
> _______________________________________________
> Hi Marius,
>
> I am the country coordinator of 44.140.0.0/16, which is delegated to
> Sweden and has transit to the Internet via SUNET, the Swedish University
> network. The whole /16 is announced out of AS8973, a research network under
> SUNET at the Royal Institite of Technology in Stockholm, although there are
> gateways being established with longer prefixes at SUNET PoPs in different
> parts of Sweden to facilitate for as many amateurs as possible to connect
> locally with direct radio links.
>
> I do not know exactly where you found the information you refer to but f
> you make a traceroute to 44.140.0.1 you will pass 192.16.126.10 before
> arriving at 192.16.126.18, which is the upstream interface of the same
> router that has 44.140.0.1 as one of its downstreams.
>
> I will be happy to correct whatever is wrong if you give me a hint where.
>
> If you are curious about what we are up to there is info a
www.se,ampr.org,
> some of it in English.
>
> Thanks
>
> Bjorn
>
>
> On 05/22/2014 10:26 PM, Marius Petrescu wrote:
>
>> (Please trim inclusions from previous messages)
>> _______________________________________________
>> Just peeked in th RIP broadcasts today:
>> 44.140.0.0/16 via 44.140.0.1
>> This entry is invalid, since the gateway is in its own subnet and no
>> other
>> entry for 44.140.0.1 exists.
>> Please correct the entry.
>> Marius, YO2LOJ
>>