iljitsch.com

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Hi, I'm Iljitsch van Beijnum. Here on iljitsch.com I publish articles and post links about a range of topics.

Also have a look at my business web site inet⁶ consult.

My BGP minilab

When I wrote my first BGP book I painstakingly made the config examples on actual Cisco routers. In my opinion, it's crucial to make sure that configuration examples that go in a book actually work.

So when I started writing my new BGP book, I did the same. But this time, I used open source routing software (FRRouting) running in Docker containers. Basically, those containers are very light-weight virtual machines.

This makes it possible to run a dozen virtual routers that start up and shut down in just a few seconds. So it's very easy to run different examples by starting the required virtual routers with the configuration for that example.

This was super useful when I was writing the book.

So I thought it would also be very useful for people reading the book.

So I'm making the "BGP minilab" with all the config examples from the book available to my readers. Download version 2022-11 of the minilab that goes with the first version of the book here.

You can also run the examples in the minilab if you don't have the book. And you can create your own labs based on these scripts.

The minilab consist of four scripts:

There are Mac/Linux shell script and Windows Powershell versions of each script.

Permalink - posted 2022-11-11

→ Why Egypt became one of the biggest chokepoints for Internet cables

The Asia-Africa-Europe-1 Internet cable travels 15,500 miles along the seafloor, connecting Hong Kong to Marseille, France. As it snakes through the South China Sea and toward Europe, the cable helps provide Internet connections to more than a dozen countries, from India to Greece. When the cable was cut on June 7, millions of people were plunged offline and faced temporary Internet blackouts.

The cable, also known as AAE-1, was severed where it briefly passes across land through Egypt. One other cable was also damaged in the incident, with the cause of the damage unknown.

Interesting article about how Egypt is a choke point for undersea cables between Europe and Asia (and eastern Africa).

Permalink - posted 2022-11-03

Free Range Routing vs Quagga/Cisco

Back in the 1990s, I used Cisco routers. Mostly rather underpowered ones such as the Cisco 2500 series. I later started using the Zebra and then Quagga routing software for the lab part of my training courses.

However, like Zebra before it, Quagga also ran out of steam but was forked by people (and companies) who saw value in the software. The Quagga fork is Free Range Routing a.k.a. FRRouting a.k.a. FRR.

As I was writing my new BGP book, I made configuration examples in Quagga. But about two thirds in, I decided to switch to FRRouting.

Full article / permalink - posted 2022-11-02

Skyline #17, everyone-loves-sunsets edition

Image link - posted 2022-10-28 in

My new e-book: Internet Routing with BGP

The book will be released the week of 17 November and it can be pre-ordered now from Apple Books in 51 countries and Amazon Kindle world-wide for US$ 9.99 / EUR 9.99.

Click the link for more details.

Full article / permalink - posted 2022-10-27

An accordion made of two Commodore 64s plays Scott Joplin ragtime

In an infinite universe, everything that's possible does in fact exist. I've long held the position that the internet is pretty much an infinite universe.

So of course a Youtube video where someone created an accordion-like instrument consisting of two C64s with bellows made out of 5¼" floppy disks playing Scott Joplin ragtime classics does exist on the internet. Enjoy!

Permalink - posted 2022-10-23

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