Hi all. TC IRR, an IRR operator focused on Brazilian networks, just changed to IRRd 4.2. The new version allowed TC to deploy RPKI validation (thanks NTT for sponsoring that development) and expose HTTPS endpoints for WHOIS and submission that we hope will foster innovation around the database. Every precaution was taken for this migration to be seamless for other IRR operators, including matching of serial numbers. Every IRR server that mirrored TC and supported -j status query was verified that it followed and still correctly follows database journals. But if anything appears broken, please let me know or e-mail db-admin@bgp.net.br. Thanks, Rubens
Dear Rubens, all, On Tue, Apr 27, 2021 at 10:18:32PM -0300, Rubens Kuhl wrote:
TC IRR, an IRR operator focused on Brazilian networks, just changed to IRRd 4.2. The new version allowed TC to deploy RPKI validation (thanks NTT for sponsoring that development) and expose HTTPS endpoints for WHOIS and submission that we hope will foster innovation around the database.
Every precaution was taken for this migration to be seamless for other IRR operators, including matching of serial numbers. Every IRR server that mirrored TC and supported -j status query was verified that it followed and still correctly follows database journals.
But if anything appears broken, please let me know or e-mail db-admin@bgp.net.br.
Congratulations to you and the TC team for reaching this milestone! TC's use of RPKI-based IRR Object filtering combined with the efforts of NIC.BR, IX.br, and LACNIC to promote RPKI in Brazil, make the Brazilian community a positive example of a seamless integration between IRR and RPKI. Thank you for your efforts to increase the data quality of the TC registry. Kind regards, Job
participants (2)
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Job Snijders
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Rubens Kuhl