Alternatives to bgpmon?

Anyone have recommendations for an alternative service that works like bgpmon (external reachability/peer monitoring, route hijack alerts, etc)? Since their OpenDNS acquisition, I’ve found the service not working reliably, as in I receive no alerts even when I’m intentionally taking one of our peers offline, and after two attempts to find out why this is, I receive no response, so it seems support is now broken as well.

Thanks,

David

Hey,

maybe is https://www.thousandeyes.com/ a option.

Best,
Jan-Philipp

Hi David,

My secret spy satellite informs me that David Hubbard wrote On
2017-03-29, 12:21 PM:

Anyone have recommendations for an alternative service that works like bgpmon (external reachability/peer monitoring, route hijack alerts, etc)? Since their OpenDNS acquisition, I’ve found the service not working reliably, as in I receive no alerts even when I’m intentionally taking one of our peers offline, and after two attempts to find out why this is, I receive no response, so it seems support is now broken as well.

The service still works the same as before. For support question folks
can use support <At> bgpmon.net (i see one ticket from you). I'll reach
out off-list and see if we can figure out what you're running into.

Cheers
Andree (BGPmon)

We are going to be trying ThousandEyes... They provide flexible alerting rules for various BGP issues and their visualization is excellent, kind of like BGPlay on steroids...

Bill

I just signed up for the free account .. gonna give a spin

Victor

Hi all,
    it sounds like you may be interested in the project we are carrying on
here in my research institute here in Pisa (Isolario project,
www.isolario.it). The project is totally free of charge and we just require
you to open one (or more) full route (v4/v6) BGP session(s) towards our
route collectors to have one (or more) Isolario user(s). BGP packets
received on these sessions will be used to provide to the users the
real-time services we implemented (e.g. external reachability analyses and
alerting), and they will be stored and made publicly available as every other
route collecting project (e.g. Route Views and RIPE NCC RIS) on our website.

My colleague Luca gave a presentation about that at NANOG66 in San Diego,
so you may find the slides on NANOG archives. Just write me if you need any
more detail about the project!

Ale