Dear all, Speaking as RIPE Routing Working Group Co-Chair (*without having consulted with the other co-chairs*) I think the routing working group in RIPE is a good platform to explore the topic at hand. I believe both Denis and Nick to be valuable contributors in the process ahead of us. I care a lot about getting the right people in the 'room', and ensuring all people involved have comitted time to work on the issue. I recognize that platforms also exist to discuss RPSL/IRR related issues (such as nanog@nanog.org, the irrd project at http://irrd.net/, *NOG lists, or grow@ietf.org) At whatever "RIPE 80" was, in the Routing Working Group session , Nick Hilliard asked for feedback from this WG. As a result, we as Routing WG we should follow-up, and I am willing to put in time. As I am one of your co-chairs, please email this list (or mail the chairs directly) if you have plans you want to share. *speaking as participant of the global Internet routing system*: I don't mind whereever we do this, but I would like all of it to be: A) publicly archived B) follow some process that all involved ahead of time understand C) COUNT ME IN Kind regards, Job On Thu, May 14, 2020 at 02:29:50PM +0000, ripedenis--- via routing-wg wrote:
This is exactly the point I am making George. I am not saying the RIPE Database is special. Exactly the opposite. So if there is a problem with using RPSL in the RIPE Database I assume it is likely all IRRs have the same problem. So should the IETF look at this issue or is it reasonable to change the way routing data is processed or handled only in the RIPE IRR? cheersdenis co-chair DB-WG On Thursday, 14 May 2020, 16:16:13 CEST, George Michaelson <ggm@algebras.org> wrote:
The RIPE DB's RPSL is not special in any regard Denis. Its one BGP configuration space after all.
If the observations about the RIPE IRR are true, then is it not equally likely they hold at other IRR too?
So I think a reasonable approach here might be to take observations about object types, complexity, usage, and ask other IRR if they also see these behaviours?
-George
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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