I'm interested in trading a full BGP table once a day/week to be used
for trouble shooting some of our announcements. Are people doing this
already?
--Ben Kirkpatrick
Data Products, Electric Lightwave, DD: 360-816-3508
I'm interested in trading a full BGP table once a day/week to be used
for trouble shooting some of our announcements. Are people doing this
already?
--Ben Kirkpatrick
Data Products, Electric Lightwave, DD: 360-816-3508
Personally, I like the tools that are there for everyone to use.
Digex has one of the best system out there, nitrous.digex.net.
But if you want access to a few others, you might want to have a look at
http://www.merit.edu/~ipma/tools/servers.html
happy hunting...
Christian
Digex has one of the best system out there, nitrous.digex.net.
Question is; would Digex share the source to those tools, so that others
could provide the same?
It seems like a perl/expect combination.
If folks want to cook up a freely redistributable implementation, I can
assist.
Cheers,
I hear that all requests for the source have been answered
by silence.
In article <19971011122357.63493@priori.net>,
> Digex has one of the best system out there, nitrous.digex.net.
Question is; would Digex share the source to those tools, so that others
could provide the same?I hear that all requests for the source have been answered
by silence.
As a proof of concept I sat down tonight and cloned the looking glass
in about one hour. See http://www.cistron.nl/cistron/trace/ams-ix-lg.html
If someone wants it it can slap the GPL on it, tar it up and put it on
our FTP site.
Euh.. I did copy the HTML code from the Digex pages. Would that be
a problem?
Mike.
> Question is; would Digex share the source to those tools, so that others
> could provide the same?I hear that all requests for the source have been answered
by silence.
That is because that anyone who knows a bit of perl and expect can write
those tools in less than 15 minutes
Alex