The RIPE DB's RPSL is not special in any regard Denis. Its one BGP
configuration space after all.
On Fri, May 15, 2020 at 12:00 AM ripedenis--- via routing-wg
<
routing-wg@ripe.net> wrote:
>
> Hi Gert
>
> You are right, this has been an issue for many years. It is not only the problem of parsing RPSL but also an issue with people understanding it as a language and applying it correctly. But should this be an issue taken up by the IETF? Or do you think the RIPE Database could/should do something different to all other IRRs?
>
> cheers
> denis
>
> co-chair DB-WG
>
>
> On Thursday, 14 May 2020, 14:45:11 CEST, Gert Doering <
gert@space.net> wrote:
>
>
> Hi,
>
> On Thu, May 14, 2020 at 09:52:06AM +0000, ripedenis--- via routing-wg wrote:
> > Just a comment on the RPSL issue from the RIPE 80 session today. RPSL has little to do with the accuracy of data in the RIPE IRR. RPSL is just a language. Assuming you understand the language, it is your choice whether or not you maintain your data and keep it accurate and up to date.
>
>
> Right.
>
> That said, the data quality regarding import: and output: lines in the
> RIPE DB is so poor that "bad and useless" is not halfway sufficient
> to describe its badness.
>
> I think import/export is beyond repair - it is too complex to correctly
> parse, and at the same time not expressive enough to describe policy
> precisely enough ("export to AS X as peer, no further upstreaming permitted"
> vs. "export to AS Y as upstream, further distribution expected").
>
> Gert Doering
> -- NetMaster
> --
> have you enabled IPv6 on something today...?
>
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