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INFORMATIONAL
Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                       J. SnijdersRequest for Comments: 8195                                    J. HeasleyCategory: Informational                                              NTTISSN: 2070-1721                                               M. Schmidt                                                                 i3D.net                                                               June 2017Use of BGP Large CommunitiesAbstract   This document presents examples and inspiration for operator   application of BGP Large Communities.  Based on operational   experience with BGP Communities, this document suggests logical   categories of BGP Large Communities and demonstrates an orderly   manner of organizing community values within them to achieve typical   goals in routing policy.  Any operator can consider using the   concepts presented as the basis for their own BGP Large Communities   repertoire.Status of This Memo   This document is not an Internet Standards Track specification; it is   published for informational purposes.   This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force   (IETF).  It represents the consensus of the IETF community.  It has   received public review and has been approved for publication by the   Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG).  Not all documents   approved by the IESG are a candidate for any level of Internet   Standard; seeSection 2 of RFC 7841.   Information about the current status of this document, any errata,   and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained athttp://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8195.Snijders, et al.              Informational                     [Page 1]

RFC 8195              Use of BGP Large Communities             June 2017Copyright Notice   Copyright (c) 2017 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the   document authors.  All rights reserved.   This document is subject toBCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal   Provisions Relating to IETF Documents   (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of   publication of this document.  Please review these documents   carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect   to this document.  Code Components extracted from this document must   include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of   the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as   described in the Simplified BSD License.Table of Contents1.  Introduction  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .32.  The Design Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .32.1.  Informational Communities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .42.2.  Action Communities  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .53.  Examples of Informational Communities . . . . . . . . . . . .53.1.  Location  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .53.1.1.  An ISO 3166-1 Numeric Function  . . . . . . . . . . .63.1.2.  A UN M.49 Region Function . . . . . . . . . . . . . .63.2.  Relation Function . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .73.3.  Combining Informational Communities . . . . . . . . . . .74.  Examples of Action Communities  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .74.1.  Selective NO_EXPORT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .74.1.1.  ASN-Based Selective NO_EXPORT . . . . . . . . . . . .84.1.2.  Location-Based Selective NO_EXPORT  . . . . . . . . .84.2.  Selective AS_PATH Prepending  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .94.2.1.  ASN-Based Selective AS_PATH Prepending  . . . . . . .94.2.2.  Location-Based Selective AS_PATH Prepending . . . . .104.3.  Manipulation of the LOCAL_PREF Attribute  . . . . . . . .104.3.1.  Global Manipulation of LOCAL_PREF . . . . . . . . . .114.3.2.  Region-Based Manipulation of LOCAL_PREF . . . . . . .114.3.3.  Note of Caution for LOCAL_PREF Functions  . . . . . .124.4.  Route Server Prefix Distribution Control  . . . . . . . .125.  Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .136.  IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .147.  References  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .147.1.  Normative References  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .147.2.  Informative References  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .14   Acknowledgments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .15   Authors' Addresses  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .15Snijders, et al.              Informational                     [Page 2]

RFC 8195              Use of BGP Large Communities             June 20171.  Introduction   BGP Large Communities [RFC8092] provide a mechanism to signal opaque   information between and within Autonomous Systems (ASes).  In very   much the same way that [RFC1998] provides a concrete real-world   application for BGP Communities [RFC1997], this document presents   examples of how operators might utilize BGP Large Communities to   achieve various goals.  This document draws on the experience of   operator communities such as the North American Network Operators'   Group (NANOG) <https://www.nanog.org/> and the Netherlands Network   Operator Group (NLNOG) <https://nlnog.net/>.2.  The Design Overview   BGP Large Communities are composed of three 4-octet fields.  The   first is the Global Administrator (GA) field, whose value is the   Autonomous System Number (ASN) of the AS that has defined the meaning   of the remaining two 4-octet fields, known as "Local Data Part 1" and   "Local Data Part 2".  This document describes an approach where the   "Local Data Part 1" field contains a function identifier and the   "Local Data Part 2" contains a parameter value.  Using the canonical   notation this format can be summarized as "ASN:Function:Parameter".                 +----------------------+---------------+                 |RFC 8092       | this document |                 +----------------------+---------------+                 | Global Administrator |      ASN      |                 |  Local Data Part 1   |    Function   |                 |  Local Data Part 2   |   Parameter   |                 +----------------------+---------------+                          Table 1: Field Mapping   The table above shows a mapping table between the fields in BGP Large   Communities [RFC8092] and this document.   In contemporary deployments of both BGP Communities [RFC1997] and BGP   Large Communities [RFC8092], the function of a community can be   divided into two categories:   o  Informational Communities   o  Action CommunitiesSnijders, et al.              Informational                     [Page 3]

RFC 8195              Use of BGP Large Communities             June 2017   Throughout the document, a topology of four ASes is used to   illustrate the use of communities in the following configuration:           AS 65551               |               ^               |           AS 64497             /  \            ^    \           /      ^      AS 64498     \          |        |          `<->- AS 64499   AS 64497 obtains transit services from (is a customer of) AS 65551, a   4-octet ASN.  AS 64497 provides transit services to both AS 64498 and   AS 64499.  AS 64498 and AS 64499 maintain a peering relationship in   which they only exchange their customer routes.   The opaque nature of BGP Large Communities allows for rapid   deployment of new features or changes to their routing policy that   perform an action.  Operators are encouraged to publicly publish and   maintain documentation on the purpose of each BGP Large Community,   both Informational and Action, that they support or that are visible   in BGP RIBs.2.1.  Informational Communities   Informational Communities are labels for attributes such as the   origin of the route announcement, the nature of the relation with an   External BGP (EBGP) neighbor, or the intended propagation audience.   Informational Communities can also assist in providing valuable   information for day-to-day network operations such as debugging or   capacity planning.   The Global Administrator field is set to the ASN of the network that   tags the routes with the Informational Communities.  For example, AS   64497 might add a community with the GA 64497 to a route accepted   from an Internal BGP (IBGP) or EBGP neighbor as a means of signaling   that it was imported in a certain geographical region.   In general, the intended audiences of Informational Communities are   downstream networks and the GA itself, but any AS could benefit from   receiving these communities.Snijders, et al.              Informational                     [Page 4]

RFC 8195              Use of BGP Large Communities             June 20172.2.  Action Communities   Action Communities are added as labels to request that a route be   treated in a particular way within an AS.  The operator of the AS   defines a routing policy that adjusts path attributes based on the   community.  For example, the route's propagation characteristics, the   LOCAL_PREF (local preference), the next hop, or the number of AS_PATH   prepends to be added when it is received or propagated can be   changed.   The Global Administrator field is set to the ASN that has defined the   functionality of that BGP Large Community and is the ASN that is   expected to perform the action.  For example, AS 64499 might label a   route with a BGP Large Community containing GA 64497 to request that   AS 64497 perform a predefined action on that route.   In general, the intended audience of Action Communities are transit   providers taking action on behalf of a customer or the GA itself, but   any AS could take action if they choose and any AS could add an   Action Community with the GA of a non-adjacent ASN.  However, note   that an Action Community could also be Informational.  Its presence   is an indicator that the GA may have performed the action and that an   AS in the AS_PATH requested it.   Operators are recommended to publish the relative order in which   Action Communities (both BGP Communities and BGP Large Communities)   are processed in their routing policy.3.  Examples of Informational Communities3.1.  Location   An AS, AS 64497 in these examples, may inform other networks about   the geographical region where AS 64497 imported a route by labeling   it with BGP Large Communities following one of the following schemes   or a combination of them.Snijders, et al.              Informational                     [Page 5]

RFC 8195              Use of BGP Large Communities             June 20173.1.1.  An ISO 3166-1 Numeric Function   AS 64497 could assign a value of 1 to the Function field to designate   the content of the Parameter field as an ISO 3166-1 numeric country   identifier <https://www.iso.org/iso-3166-country-codes.html>.   +---------------------+---------------------------------------------+   | BGP Large Community | Description                                 |   +---------------------+---------------------------------------------+   |     64497:1:528     | Route learned in the Netherlands            |   |     64497:1:392     | Route learned in Japan                      |   |     64497:1:840     | Route learned in the United States of       |   |                     | America                                     |   +---------------------+---------------------------------------------+                    Table 2: Informational: ISO 3166-1   The table above shows example documentation for Informational   Communities deployed by AS 64497 to describe the location where a   route was imported using ISO 3166-1 numeric identifiers.3.1.2.  A UN M.49 Region Function   AS 64497 could assign a value of 2 to the Function field to designate   the content of the Parameter field as the M.49 numeric code published   by the United Nations Statistics Division (UNSD)   <https://unstats.un.org/unsd/methodology/m49/> for macro-geographical   (continental) regions, geographical sub-regions, or selected economic   and other groupings.          +---------------------+-------------------------------+          | BGP Large Community | Description                   |          +---------------------+-------------------------------+          |      64497:2:2      | Route learned in Africa       |          |      64497:2:9      | Route learned in Oceania      |          |     64497:2:145     | Route learned in Western Asia |          |     64497:2:150     | Route learned in Europe       |          +---------------------+-------------------------------+                   Table 3: Informational: UNSD Regions   The table above shows example documentation for Informational   Communities deployed by AS 64497 to describe the location where a   route was imported using M.49 numeric codes published by the UNSD.Snijders, et al.              Informational                     [Page 6]

RFC 8195              Use of BGP Large Communities             June 20173.2.  Relation Function   An AS, AS 64497 in this example, could assign a value of 3 to the   Function field to designate the content of the Parameter field as a   number indicating whether the route originated inside its own network   or was learned externally, and if learned externally, it might   simultaneously characterize the nature of the relation with that   specific EBGP neighbor.      +---------------------+---------------------------------------+      | BGP Large Community | Description                           |      +---------------------+---------------------------------------+      |      64497:3:1      | Route originated internally           |      |      64497:3:2      | Route learned from a customer         |      |      64497:3:3      | Route learned from a peering partner  |      |      64497:3:4      | Route learned from a transit provider |      +---------------------+---------------------------------------+                     Table 4: Informational: Relation   The table above shows example documentation for Informational   Communities deployed by AS 64497 to describe the relation to the ASN   from which the route was learned.3.3.  Combining Informational Communities   A route may be labeled with multiple Informational Communities.  For   example, a route learned in the Netherlands from a customer might be   labeled with communities 64497:1:528, 64497:2:150, and 64497:3:2 at   the same time.4.  Examples of Action Communities4.1.  Selective NO_EXPORT   As part of an agreement, often a commercial transit agreement,   between AS 64497 and AS 64498, AS 64497 might expose BGP traffic-   engineering functions to AS 64498.  One such BGP traffic-engineering   function could be selective NO_EXPORT, which is the selective   filtering of a route learned from one AS, AS 64498, to certain EBGP   neighbors of the GA, AS 64497.Snijders, et al.              Informational                     [Page 7]

RFC 8195              Use of BGP Large Communities             June 20174.1.1.  ASN-Based Selective NO_EXPORT   AS 64497 could assign a value of 4 to the Function field to designate   the content of the Parameter field as a neighboring ASN to which a   route should not be propagated.         +---------------------+---------------------------------+         | BGP Large Community | Description                     |         +---------------------+---------------------------------+         |    64497:4:64498    | Do not export route to AS 64498 |         |    64497:4:64499    | Do not export route to AS 64499 |         |    64497:4:65551    | Do not export route to AS 65551 |         +---------------------+---------------------------------+                      Table 5: Action: ASN NO_EXPORT   The table above shows example documentation for Action Communities   deployed by AS 64497 to expose a BGP traffic-engineering function   that selectively prevents the propagation of routes to the   neighboring ASN specified in the Parameter field.4.1.2.  Location-Based Selective NO_EXPORT   AS 64497 could assign a value of 5 to the Function field to designate   the content of the Parameter field as an ISO 3166-1 numeric country   identifier within which a labeled route is not propagated to EBGP   neighbors.  However, this might not prevent one of those EBGP   neighbors from learning that route in another country and making it   available in the country specified by the BGP Large Community.   +-----------------+-------------------------------------------------+   |    BGP Large    | Description                                     |   |    Community    |                                                 |   +-----------------+-------------------------------------------------+   |   64497:5:528   | Do not export to EBGP neighbors in the          |   |                 | Netherlands                                     |   |   64497:5:392   | Do not export to EBGP neighbors in Japan        |   |   64497:5:840   | Do not export to EBGP neighbors in the United   |   |                 | States of America                               |   +-----------------+-------------------------------------------------+                   Table 6: Action: NO_EXPORT in Region   The table above shows example documentation for Action Communities   deployed by AS 64497 to expose a BGP traffic-engineering function   that selectively prevents the propagation of routes to all EBGP   neighbors in the geographical region specified in the Parameter   field.Snijders, et al.              Informational                     [Page 8]

RFC 8195              Use of BGP Large Communities             June 20174.2.  Selective AS_PATH Prepending   As part of an agreement between AS 64497 and AS 64498, AS 64497 might   expose BGP traffic-engineering functions to AS 64498.  One such BGP   traffic-engineering function could be selective prepending of the   AS_PATH with AS 64497 to certain EBGP neighbors of AS 64497.4.2.1.  ASN-Based Selective AS_PATH Prepending   AS 64497 could assign a value of 6 to the Function field to designate   the content of the Parameter field as a neighboring ASN to which   prepending of the AS_PATH with AS 64497 is requested on propagation   of the route.  Additional AS_PATH prepending functions might also be   defined to support multiples of prepending, that is, two, three, or   more prepends of AS 64497.    +---------------------+------------------------------------------+    | BGP Large Community | Description                              |    +---------------------+------------------------------------------+    |    64497:6:64498    | Prepend 64497 once on export to AS 64498 |    |    64497:6:64499    | Prepend 64497 once on export to AS 64499 |    |    64497:6:65551    | Prepend 64497 once on export to AS 65551 |    +---------------------+------------------------------------------+                      Table 7: Action: Prepend to ASN   The table above shows example documentation for Action Communities   deployed by AS 64497 to expose a BGP traffic-engineering function   that selectively prepends the AS_PATH with AS 64497 when propagating   the route to the specified EBGP neighbor.Snijders, et al.              Informational                     [Page 9]

RFC 8195              Use of BGP Large Communities             June 20174.2.2.  Location-Based Selective AS_PATH Prepending   AS 64497 could assign a value of 7 to the Function field to designate   the content of the Parameter field as an ISO 3166-1 numeric country   identifier to which the prepending of the AS_PATH with AS 64497 is   requested on propagation of the route to all EBGP neighbors in that   region.   +-----------------+-------------------------------------------------+   |    BGP Large    | Description                                     |   |    Community    |                                                 |   +-----------------+-------------------------------------------------+   |   64497:7:528   | Prepend once to EBGP neighbors in the           |   |                 | Netherlands                                     |   |   64497:7:392   | Prepend once to EBGP neighbors in Japan         |   |   64497:7:840   | Prepend once to EBGP neighbors in the United    |   |                 | States of America                               |   +-----------------+-------------------------------------------------+                    Table 8: Action: Prepend in Region   The table above shows example documentation for Action Communities   deployed by AS 64497 to expose a BGP traffic-engineering function   that selectively prepends the AS_PATH with AS 64497 when propagating   the route to all EBGP neighbors in the geographical region specified   in the Parameter field.4.3.  Manipulation of the LOCAL_PREF Attribute   As part of an agreement between AS 64497 and AS 64498, AS 64497 might   expose BGP traffic-engineering functions to AS 64498.  One such BGP   traffic-engineering function might allow AS 64498 to manipulate the   value of the LOCAL_PREF attribute of routes learned from AS 64498   within AS 64497, even though the LOCAL_PREF attribute is   non-transitive and is not propagated to EBGP neighbors.   The LOCAL_PREF value of routes are locally significant within each AS   and are impossible to list in this document.  Instead, the typical   LOCAL_PREF values could be classified as a hierarchy, and a BGP Large   Community function could be exposed, allowing an EBGP neighbor to   affect the LOCAL_PREF value within the specified GA.  The following   example list defines the classes of routes in the order of descending   LOCAL_PREF value and assigns a function identifier that could be used   in the Function field of a BGP Large Community.Snijders, et al.              Informational                    [Page 10]

RFC 8195              Use of BGP Large Communities             June 2017   +----------+--------------------------------------------------------+   | Function | Preference Class                                       |   +----------+--------------------------------------------------------+   |    8     | Normal customer route                                  |   |    9     | Backup customer route                                  |   |    10    | Peering route                                          |   |    11    | Upstream transit route                                 |   |    12    | Fallback route, to be installed if no other path is    |   |          | available                                              |   +----------+--------------------------------------------------------+             Table 9: Action: Preference Function Identifiers4.3.1.  Global Manipulation of LOCAL_PREF   AS 64497 could place one of the previously defined Preference   Function Identifiers in the Function field and set the value 0 in the   Parameter field to designate that the LOCAL_PREF associated with that   function identifier should be applied for that route throughout the   whole AS.   +---------------------+---------------------------------------------+   | BGP Large Community | Description                                 |   +---------------------+---------------------------------------------+   |      64497:9:0      | Assign LOCAL_PREF for a customer backup     |   |                     | route                                       |   |      64497:10:0     | Assign LOCAL_PREF for a peering route       |   |      64497:12:0     | Assign LOCAL_PREF for a fallback route      |   +---------------------+---------------------------------------------+             Table 10: Action: Global LOCAL_PREF Manipulation   The table above shows example documentation for Action Communities   deployed by AS 64497 to expose a BGP traffic-engineering function   that allows a BGP neighbor to globally manipulate the LOCAL_PREF   attribute for the route within AS 64497.4.3.2.  Region-Based Manipulation of LOCAL_PREF   AS 64497 could place one of the previously defined Preference   Function Identifiers in the Function field and use a UN M.49 numeric   region identifier in the Parameter field to designate the   geographical region within which the non-default LOCAL_PREF   associated with that function identifier should be applied to the   route.  The value of the LOCAL_PREF attribute should not deviate from   the default for that route class in any region not specified by one   or more of these Action Communities.Snijders, et al.              Informational                    [Page 11]

RFC 8195              Use of BGP Large Communities             June 2017   +--------------+----------------------------------------------------+   |  BGP Large   | Description                                        |   |  Community   |                                                    |   +--------------+----------------------------------------------------+   |  64497:9:3   | Assign the LOCAL_PREF value equivalent to a        |   |              | customer backup class route on BGP routers in the  |   |              | North America region                               |   |  64497:10:5  | Assign the LOCAL_PREF value equivalent to a        |   |              | peering class route on BGP routers in the South    |   |              | America region                                     |   | 64497:12:142 | Assign the LOCAL_PREF value equivalent to a        |   |              | fallback class route on BGP routers in the Asia    |   |              | region                                             |   +--------------+----------------------------------------------------+            Table 11: Action: Regional LOCAL_PREF Manipulation   The table above shows example documentation for Action Communities   deployed by AS 64497 to expose a BGP traffic-engineering function   that allows a BGP neighbor to selectively manipulate the LOCAL_PREF   attribute within AS 64497 in the geographical region specified in the   Parameter field.4.3.3.  Note of Caution for LOCAL_PREF Functions   The LOCAL_PREF attribute strongly influences the BGP Decision   Process, which in turn affects the scope of route propagation.   Operators should take special care when using Action Communities that   decrease the LOCAL_PREF value, and the degree of preference, to a   value below that of another route class.  Some of the unintended BGP   states that might arise as a result of these traffic-engineering   decisions are described as "BGP Wedgies" in [RFC4264].4.4.  Route Server Prefix Distribution Control   Route servers [RFC7947] use BGP to broker network reachability   information among their clients.  As not all route server clients may   wish to interconnect with each other, the route server operator will   usually implement a mechanism to allow each client to control the   route server's export routing policy, as described inSection 4.6 of   [RFC7948].  One widely used mechanism is an adaption of "ASN-Based   Selective NO_EXPORT" (Section 4.1.1) that is specific to route   servers.Snijders, et al.              Informational                    [Page 12]

RFC 8195              Use of BGP Large Communities             June 2017   An example BGP Large Communities policy that enables client-   controlled prefix distribution for a route server operating as AS   64511 is outlined as follows:   +-------------------+-----------------------------------------------+   | BGP Large         | Description                                   |   | Community         |                                               |   +-------------------+-----------------------------------------------+   | 64511:0:peer-as   | Explicitly prevent announcement of route to   |   |                   | peer-as                                       |   | 64511:1:peer-as   | Explicitly announce route to peer-as          |   | 64511:0:0         | Do not announce route to any peers by default |   | 64511:1:0         | Announce route to all peers by default        |   +-------------------+-----------------------------------------------+        Table 12: Action: Route Server Prefix Distribution Control   Multiple BGP Large Community values can be used together to implement   fine-grained route distribution control.  For example, route server   client AS 64500 might wish to use a route server for interconnecting   to all other clients except AS 64509.  In this case, they would label   all their outbound routes to the route server with 64511:1:0 (to   announce to all clients by default) and 64511:0:64509 (to prevent   announcement to AS 64509).   Alternatively, route server client AS 64501 may have a selective   routing policy and may wish to interconnect with only AS 64505 and AS   64506.  This could be implemented by announcing routes labeled with   64511:0:0 (blocking all distribution by default) and 64511:1:64505,   64511:1:64506 to instruct the route server to force announcement to   those two ASNs.5.  Security Considerations   Operators should note the recommendations inSection 11 of "BGP   Operations and Security" [RFC7454] and handle BGP Large Communities   with their ASN in the Global Administrator field similarly.   In particular and in the same respect as BGP Communities [RFC1997],   operators should be cognizant that any Large Community can be carried   in a BGP UPDATE.  Operators should recognize that BGP neighbors,   particularly customers and customers of customers, may utilize   communities defined by other BGP neighbors of the operator.  They may   wish to send routes with Action Communities and receive routes with   Informational Communities to or from these other neighbors, and it is   beneficial to all to permit this.Snijders, et al.              Informational                    [Page 13]

RFC 8195              Use of BGP Large Communities             June 20176.  IANA Considerations   This document does not require any IANA actions.7.  References7.1.  Normative References   [RFC1997]  Chandra, R., Traina, P., and T. Li, "BGP Communities              Attribute",RFC 1997, DOI 10.17487/RFC1997, August 1996,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc1997>.   [RFC7454]  Durand, J., Pepelnjak, I., and G. Doering, "BGP Operations              and Security",BCP 194,RFC 7454, DOI 10.17487/RFC7454,              February 2015, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7454>.   [RFC8092]  Heitz, J., Ed., Snijders, J., Ed., Patel, K., Bagdonas,              I., and N. Hilliard, "BGP Large Communities Attribute",RFC 8092, DOI 10.17487/RFC8092, February 2017,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8092>.7.2.  Informative References   [RFC1998]  Chen, E. and T. Bates, "An Application of the BGP              Community Attribute in Multi-home Routing",RFC 1998,              DOI 10.17487/RFC1998, August 1996,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc1998>.   [RFC4264]  Griffin, T. and G. Huston, "BGP Wedgies",RFC 4264,              DOI 10.17487/RFC4264, November 2005,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4264>.   [RFC7947]  Jasinska, E., Hilliard, N., Raszuk, R., and N. Bakker,              "Internet Exchange BGP Route Server",RFC 7947,              DOI 10.17487/RFC7947, September 2016,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7947>.   [RFC7948]  Hilliard, N., Jasinska, E., Raszuk, R., and N. Bakker,              "Internet Exchange BGP Route Server Operations",RFC 7948,              DOI 10.17487/RFC7948, September 2016,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7948>.Snijders, et al.              Informational                    [Page 14]

RFC 8195              Use of BGP Large Communities             June 2017Acknowledgments   The authors would like to gratefully acknowledge the insightful   comments, contributions, critique, and support from Adam Chappell,   Jonathan Stewart, Greg Hankins, Nick Hilliard, Will Hargrave, Randy   Bush, Shawn Morris, Jay Borkenhagen, and Stewart Bryant.Authors' Addresses   Job Snijders   NTT Communications   Theodorus Majofskistraat 100   Amsterdam  1065 SZ   The Netherlands   Email: job@ntt.net   John Heasley   NTT Communications   1111 NW 53rd Drive   Portland, OR  97210   United States of America   Email: heas@shrubbery.net   Martijn Schmidt   i3D.net   Rivium 1e Straat 1   Capelle aan den IJssel  2909 LE   The Netherlands   Email: martijnschmidt@i3d.netSnijders, et al.              Informational                    [Page 15]

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