Showing posts with label Check the Real World BGP. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Check the Real World BGP. Show all posts

Wednesday, 29 February 2012

Check the Real World BGP

We can check if this is correct by using a looking glass, I found that AS6453 got an online looking glass.
Choose BGP and enter the IP address 193.0.19.25.
Look for: BGP routing table entry for 193.0.0.0/21. Right, it is announced as a /21 on the internet.
We can go further and perform an inverse query to check for other prefixes that AS3333 have registered to see if it’s part of a larger range.
This time I have to ask whois.ripe.net directly because the whois tool on linux automatically chooses the correct whois server for an object, and it does not understand which whois server it should send inverse queries to.
$ whois -h whois.ripe.net — -i origin AS3333
% This is the RIPE Whois query server #3.
% The objects are in RPSL format.
%
% The RIPE Database is subject to Terms and Conditions.
% See http://www.ripe.net/db/support/db-terms-conditions.pdf
% Note: This output has been filtered.
% To receive output for a database update, use the “-B” flag.
% Information related to ‘193.0.0.0/21AS3333′
route: 193.0.0.0/21
descr: RIPE-NCC
origin: AS3333
mnt-by: RIPE-NCC-MNT
source: RIPE # Filtered
% Information related to ‘193.0.12.0/23AS3333′
route: 193.0.12.0/23
descr: RIPE-NCC
descr: Specific range for nameserver operations.
origin: AS3333
mnt-by: RIPE-NCC-MNT
source: RIPE # Filtered
% Information related to ‘193.0.18.0/23AS3333′
route: 193.0.18.0/23
descr: RIPE-NCC
origin: AS3333
mnt-by: RIPE-NCC-MNT
source: RIPE # Filtered
% Information related to ‘193.0.20.0/23AS3333′
route: 193.0.20.0/23
descr: RIPE-NCC
origin: AS3333
mnt-by: RIPE-NCC-MNT
source: RIPE # Filtered
There we go 193.0.0.0/21 is registered there as well, now this is actually part of a (seems like) special /18 which parts of is handed out to network operators. According to remarks, RIPE itself has taken 193.0.0.0/19 for their own network. (And this is just a little of what information I gathered in three minutes.)
A whois of the AS Number:
$ whois AS3333
[... output omitted ....]
% Information related to ‘AS3333′
aut-num: AS3333
as-name: RIPE-NCC-AS
descr: RIPE Network Coordination Centre
[... output omitted ...]
Usually you can find references to an org, to check a prefix just use the command whois PREFIX | grep ^org, or use egrep to also get type of address space; you will then often get a result like this:
$ whois 193.0.0.0/18 | egrep \(^org\|^status\)
org: ORG-NCC1-RIPE
status: ALLOCATED UNSPECIFIED
organisation: ORG-NCC1-RIPE
org-name: RIPE NCC
org-type: RIR
The org-name is the name of the organisation, the type can be for example:
  1. RIR – Regional Internet Registry (king of the hill [or continent])
  2. LIR – Local Internet Registry (basically an ISP)
  3. OTHER – Other type, for example users of PI address space
The status is the type of address space, it can be for example:
  1. ALLOCATED UNSPECIFIED – This is often legacy address space which was not handed out under current conditions.
  2. ALLOCATED PA – Provider Aggregatable, which is a larger address space handed out to LIRs for sub delegations.
  3. ALLOCATED PI – Provider Independent, handed out to smaller organisations (registered as OTHER) which are NOT members of the RIPE NCC (LIRs), this kind of address space makes it possible for a company to multihome and change providers without changing IP addresses. (Rather than getting assignments from a larger PA address space)
I guess you figured out that you can also whois the org name, ‘ORG-NCC1-RIPE’.
Let me know if I also should write a tutorial on how to update and perform changes to the RIPE whois database!

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Chitika