-----Original Message----- From: Gert Doering [mailto:gert@space.net] Sent: 11. november 2005 19:02
So where's the benefit if DENIC sets up something inside MCI's network that only MCI customers can see? And *if* the route is leaked outside, what is gained, except people will have to maintain explicit white-lists ("hey, this /64 is DENIC-anycast, so we permit it, while not permitting other /64s")?
I will try to explain more detailed: A large network provider can have hundreds/thousands of peers. These peers receive the same /32 prefix. A large network provider has housing facilities many places in many countries. * Put your server in some or all of these housing facilities. * Give every server the same IP address. * Tell large network provider to use the closest path and make a route to this IP address where you have your servers (use a routing protocol or whatever) * The peers of large network provider will be routed to the closest DENIC server in large network providers network. * If a server is down, the next closest DENIC server will get the traffic. * There is no single point of failure here. * You are using anycast. * You have a multiple failover solution. I hope this was clear enough. Cheers, Joergen Hovland