Could someone please point me in the direction of a New Zealand IP range list? Regards Edward ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Edward Yardley Director Edan Technologies Limited www.edan.co.nz edward(a)edan.co.nz "Providing plain english technological solutions" ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
The best I have come across is the Looking Glass at http://www.usenet.net.net/lg.cgi. Obviously, ignore the 0/0 route. "203.109.156.69" (the peer on that LG) appears to be an APE-connected router. Thats all I know. Perhaps someone else can shed some more light on this? If there is a better way of doing this without having any of my own BGP sessions I'm all ears. How do those ISP's who have a the same upstream(s) for intl and natl differentiate between the two for billing? Do they differentiate between them? Nathan Ward Edward Yardley wrote:
Could someone please point me in the direction of a New Zealand IP range list?
Regards Edward ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Edward Yardley Director Edan Technologies Limited www.edan.co.nz edward(a)edan.co.nz "Providing plain english technological solutions" ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
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The best I have come across is the Looking Glass at http://www.usenet.net.net/lg.cgi. Obviously, ignore the 0/0 route. "203.109.156.69" (the peer on that LG) appears to be an APE-connected router. Thats all I know. Perhaps someone else can shed some more light on this?
If there is a better way of doing this without having any of my own BGP sessions I'm all ears.
How do those ISP's who have a the same upstream(s) for intl and natl differentiate between the two for billing? Do they differentiate between them?
One way to do this is to have two connections to their upstream. One learns all the upstreams domestic routes, the other learns default only. Thus if there is a route in the table for it, it's domestic out interface A, otherwise it'll take the default route, international, out interface B. How they actually bill that though, I couldn't tell you. Tim Harman
Im sure everyone will say this exact thing, but 1) Different providers = difference routes = different charging. 2) routes change all the time. 3) ISPs traffic allocation is pretty dodgey, and you'll be hard pressed to find an ISP that will talk bgp to you unless your multihoming. Maxnet has a list up somewhere, updated daily i think, but even that isn't accurate enough. http://usenet.org.nz/lg.cgi is a router in the APE that can also be of help http://rob.nzpages.net/projects/nz-firewall is a list of IPs i've compiled from a few people's lists plus the APE looking glass and maxnet's list, Its also up there in *ghasp* ipchains formatt for a very basic firewall..... and scripts to generate other ones, mine just blocks FTP (all in php) Cheers, Rob On Mon, 14 Apr 2003 00:23, Edward Yardley wrote:
Could someone please point me in the direction of a New Zealand IP range list?
Regards Edward --------------------------------------------------------------------------- - Edward Yardley Director Edan Technologies Limited www.edan.co.nz edward(a)edan.co.nz "Providing plain english technological solutions" --------------------------------------------------------------------------- -
-- -------------- Robert McDonald NZPages.Net Web Services Ph: 021 1770061 ICQ: 86984875 http://www.nzpages.net
On Sunday, Apr 13, 2003, at 08:23 Canada/Eastern, Edward Yardley wrote:
Could someone please point me in the direction of a New Zealand IP range list?
Do you mean "IP addresses which are configured on devices within NZ", or "IP addresses which are reachable from NZ without leaving the country"? I'm not sure there's any practical way to get an accurate list of the former, unless you happen to know the operator of every IP-numbered device in the country. The second set of numbers slightly according to where you measure from, but is best obtained from a representative BGP view and some localised knowledge of what ASNs in paths constitute "overseas". You should probably bear in mind that the addresses in the second set of addresses vary, although if you eliminate the high-frequency noise the resulting stable set probably doesn't change all that frequently. If accuracy is important you'll want to refresh your list every now and then. Joe
Thanks Joe, I was meadning IP addresses reachable from NZ without leaving the country. Edward. Joe Abley writes:
On Sunday, Apr 13, 2003, at 08:23 Canada/Eastern, Edward Yardley wrote:
Could someone please point me in the direction of a New Zealand IP range list?
Do you mean "IP addresses which are configured on devices within NZ", or "IP addresses which are reachable from NZ without leaving the country"?
I'm not sure there's any practical way to get an accurate list of the former, unless you happen to know the operator of every IP-numbered device in the country. The second set of numbers slightly according to where you measure from, but is best obtained from a representative BGP view and some localised knowledge of what ASNs in paths constitute "overseas".
You should probably bear in mind that the addresses in the second set of addresses vary, although if you eliminate the high-frequency noise the resulting stable set probably doesn't change all that frequently. If accuracy is important you'll want to refresh your list every now and then.
Joe
participants (6)
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edward
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Edward Yardley
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Joe Abley
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Nathan Ward
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Robert McDonald
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TiM