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Total Internet BGP routes taken today

kryollakryolla Member Posts: 785
BGP table version is 4727126, main routing table version 4727126
284303 network entries using 28714603 bytes of memory
9076734 path entries using 435683232 bytes of memory
1527630 BGP path attribute entries using 85555176 bytes of memory
1292500 BGP AS-PATH entries using 34542132 bytes of memory
23279 BGP community entries using 1673428 bytes of memory
17 BGP extended community entries using 508 bytes of memory
0 BGP route-map cache entries using 0 bytes of memory
0 BGP filter-list cache entries using 0 bytes of memory
BGP using 586169079 total bytes of memory
Dampening enabled. 2503 history paths, 4800 dampened paths
BGP activity 352580/58661 prefixes, 23832214/14721204 paths, scan interval 60 se
cs
Studying for CCIE and drinking Home Brew

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    GT-RobGT-Rob Member Posts: 1,090
    Sounds about right. We have a few internet facing routers that download the entire table. Then they wonder why its low on memory...
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    redwarriorredwarrior Member Posts: 285
    Dang...no wonder I've always been taught to limit the number of AS's routes you accept. :D

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    mikearamamikearama Member Posts: 749
    And that's one table! BGP has... what? 4? 5 tables? That's a crap load of mem.
    There are only 10 kinds of people... those who understand binary, and those that don't.

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    kpjunglekpjungle Member Posts: 426
    How does an enterprise/ISP/whoever needs an AS and a BGP table actually go about getting the BGP table? Do you make a peering contract with another ISP. I know technically what you do, but Its more the contractual agreements im curious about.

    Are there any constraints/rules you must abide by?
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    kryollakryolla Member Posts: 785
    Just an update on how much the internet has grown in just 10 months

    BGP table version is 14644156, main routing table version 14644156
    311048 network entries using 41058336 bytes of memory
    9577261 path entries using 498017572 bytes of memory
    1566261/56823 BGP path/bestpath attribute entries using 231806628 bytes of memory
    1357511 BGP AS-PATH entries using 36949132 bytes of memory
    19950 BGP community entries using 1338296 bytes of memory
    29 BGP extended community entries using 1180 bytes of memory
    0 BGP route-map cache entries using 0 bytes of memory
    0 BGP filter-list cache entries using 0 bytes of memory
    BGP using 809171144 total bytes of memory
    Dampening enabled. 5523 history paths, 16725 dampened paths
    BGP activity 531584/214655 prefixes, 53175514/43579678 paths, scan interval 60 secs
    Studying for CCIE and drinking Home Brew
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    networker050184networker050184 Mod Posts: 11,962 Mod
    kryolla wrote: »
    Just an update on how much the internet has grown in just 10 months

    BGP table version is 14644156, main routing table version 14644156
    311048 network entries using 41058336 bytes of memory
    9577261 path entries using 498017572 bytes of memory
    1566261/56823 BGP path/bestpath attribute entries using 231806628 bytes of memory
    1357511 BGP AS-PATH entries using 36949132 bytes of memory
    19950 BGP community entries using 1338296 bytes of memory
    29 BGP extended community entries using 1180 bytes of memory
    0 BGP route-map cache entries using 0 bytes of memory
    0 BGP filter-list cache entries using 0 bytes of memory
    BGP using 809171144 total bytes of memory
    Dampening enabled. 5523 history paths, 16725 dampened paths
    BGP activity 531584/214655 prefixes, 53175514/43579678 paths, scan interval 60 secs

    Its actually a little less than that on the internet. If you are checking from a border router you may not get accurate stats as it will also have any internal routes that may be summarized on the internet. Ours our showing a little higher than what you currently have with a bunch of full feeds.

    BGP table version is 255460563, main routing table version 255460563
    363769 network entries using 41469666 bytes of memory
    1829654 path entries using 87823392 bytes of memory
    181508/50468 BGP path/bestpath attribute entries using 18150800 bytes of memory
    2302 BGP rrinfo entries using 84288 bytes of memory
    78816 BGP AS-PATH entries using 2042740 bytes of memory
    3303 BGP community entries using 441370 bytes of memory
    2048 BGP extended community entries using 60178 bytes of memory
    0 BGP route-map cache entries using 0 bytes of memory
    20834 BGP filter-list cache entries using 250008 bytes of memory
    BGP using 150322442 total bytes of memory
    291131 received paths for inbound soft reconfiguration
    BGP activity 4667317/4277549 prefixes, 53738438/51854146 paths, scan interval 60 secs

    You can get daily updates from APNIC or sign up for the NANOG mailing list and get weekly BGP table/CIDR updates. They are currently showing 294311 from APNIC and 301116 from route views (which includes some iBGP prefixes).
    An expert is a man who has made all the mistakes which can be made.
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    Forsaken_GAForsaken_GA Member Posts: 4,024
    BGP table version is 175504806, main routing table version 175504806
    289367 network entries using 34145306 bytes of memory
    1850751 path entries using 96239052 bytes of memory
    288289/51256 BGP path/bestpath attribute entries using 40360460 bytes of memory
    127652 BGP AS-PATH entries using 3423014 bytes of memory
    7633 BGP community entries using 407148 bytes of memory
    36 BGP extended community entries using 2982 bytes of memory

    That's what my core router is showing right now, but we do some pretty aggressive filtering
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    Forsaken_GAForsaken_GA Member Posts: 4,024
    kpjungle wrote: »
    How does an enterprise/ISP/whoever needs an AS and a BGP table actually go about getting the BGP table? Do you make a peering contract with another ISP. I know technically what you do, but Its more the contractual agreements im curious about.

    Are there any constraints/rules you must abide by?

    To answer this question - When you turn up a circuit with your transit provider, you'll generally get a choice as to how you want your routing. If you're single homed, you pretty much take a default route, no need to stress your routers doing BGP. If you're multihomed, you pretty much have to do BGP, and you exhange routes with your uplink provider, and tuned and filter to your whim, and others will do the same with your routes. Generally, anything longer than a /24 is going to get filtered out.

    A large part of why the table is growing is because people are deaggregating larger ip spaces, since ARIN is getting stingy with new allocations
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    kryollakryolla Member Posts: 785
    Its actually a little less than that on the internet. If you are checking from a border router you may not get accurate stats as it will also have any internal routes that may be summarized on the internet. Ours our showing a little higher than what you currently have with a bunch of full feeds.

    You can get daily updates from APNIC or sign up for the NANOG mailing list and get weekly BGP table/CIDR updates. They are currently showing 294311 from APNIC and 301116 from route views (which includes some iBGP prefixes).

    I got my info from a public BGP mirror or route-view so if there is an issue on the accuracy then you can take it up with them. Here is the link for the public BGP mirror

    Route Views Project Page
    Studying for CCIE and drinking Home Brew
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