Friday, September 24, 2010

Routed or not?

Routed or not?
Given the sheer size of the Class C + netblocks, it would take forever to do a reverse scan or traceroute to all the blocks. The European and some of the American blocks seems very straight forward - most of them are only parts of a subnet. Why not find out which networks in the larger netblocks are routed on the Internet? How do we do this? Only the core routers on the Internet know which networks are routed. We can get access to these routers - very easily, and totally legally. Such a router is route1.saix.net. We simply telnet to this giant of a Cisco router, do a show ip route | include [start of large netblock] and capture the output. This core router contains over 40 000 routes. Having done this for the larger netblocks, we find the following:
199.228.157.0-199.228.159.0 None
198.73.228.0-198.73.239.0 None
194.41.64.0-194.41.95.255 None
193.32.128.0-193.32.159.255
193.32.161.0/24
193.32.254.0/24
193.32.208.0/23
193.32.192.0/20
193.32.176.0/20
159.17.0.0-159.17.255.255 None
161.75.0.0-161.75.255.255 None
163.35.0.0-163.39.255.255 None
169.160.0.0-169.195.0.0 None 192.193.0.0-192.193.255.255
192.193.183.0/24
192.193.192.0/24
192.193.73.0/24
192.193.182.0/24
192.193.208.0/24
192.193.193.0/24
192.193.74.0/24
192.193.194.0/24
192.193.211.0/24
192.193.75.0/24
192.193.180.0/24
192.193.210.0/24
192.193.195.0/24
192.193.196.0/24
192.193.77.0/24
192.193.201.0/24
192.193.172.0/24
192.193.188.0/24
192.193.187.0/24
192.193.186.0/24
192.193.70.0/24
192.193.184.0/24
192.193.71.0/24

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