BGP Stream: An Analysis of One Year of BGP Incidents

March 4, 2024

BGP Stream: An Analysis of One Year of BGP Incidents

By Alejandro Acosta, R&D Coordinator at LACNIC

LACNIC presents the first webpage designed to show incidents and an analysis of Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) measurement data in Latin America and the Caribbean.

MAIN INCIDENTS. In addition to a summary of the information, the page shows three main types of events: possible network hijacks, BGP outages, and route leaks.

Possible hijacks refers to the illegitimate takeover of groups of IP addresses by corrupting Internet routing tables. This typically occurs when an Autonomous System announces a prefix that it does not originate.

(Free access, no subscription required)

Outages refers to the loss of visibility of network prefixes by a majority group of sensors.

Route leaks, as the name suggests, refers to the —potentially— unintentional announcement of a network prefix via BGP. For example, in a private peering traffic exchange, when one of the participants announces the peer’s prefix to the Internet. This case is the most difficult for algorithms to detect, so some of these incidents are not identified.

How is the data obtained?

The views expressed by the authors of this blog are their own and do not necessarily reflect the views of LACNIC.

0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments