| From the article: > With the current “default free zone” containing around 1,000,000 routes Back in ~1998 I was tasked with building a route collector/looking glass machine for an internet exchange point (sadly defunct). I remember the day we switched the collector on and acquired "all the routes", there were ~98,000 of them, you could've knocked me over with a feather. It was like looking into the Total Perspective Vortex. Having been out of that game for many years now I'd no idea we were up to 1M routes...wow. One of the RIPE conferences I attended back then there was much concern about the rapidly increasing size of the global routing table and whether vendors could build hardware powerful enough to keep up. For anyone interested the route collector was built on FreeBSD (3.0 I think) and Zebra[0]. And finally, what cracking blog, especially stuff like this: https://blog.benjojo.co.uk/post/eve-online-bgp-internet [0]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GNU_Zebra |
32,528 of them are in the 103.0/8 range, but on the other hand 21.0.0.0/8 is advertised once, no subnets at all. (same with 26, 28, 30, 33, 73. I don't have a route for 9.0.0.0/8 aside from 9.9.9.0/24.
Only 108,000 IPv6 routes.