I see something like read.more.at.beagle.....
Then it gets through two hops and times out. Am I missing something?
is this bad to do at work? i just did it and stopped it realizing i have no clue wtf i'm doing with a traceroute call.
That's fucking awesome!
How did you find out about this?
OMG that is freaking awesome! I wonder how they did that, because each one of those routers would need to be "internet routers" with an actual valid internet IP, and physical connectivity, as opposed to something you could just setup at home. That's just freaking awesome.
Reminds me of Star Wars telnet. Telnet to towel.blinkenlights.nl to see it. That's been up for over 10 years, awesome that it's actually still there.
Edit: Hmm actually I think I know how it was done, they probably just owns a large chunk of IPs so they could probably just do it with VMs and subnet it for each router network.
Actually, you could do it all on one router with VRFs. The main thing is the IP space, which you'd need at least a /25 to do it.
Why don't you just ask him? He posted in the thread.:awe:
Its still blocked at a few major ISP's from the ddos that it got hit with on sunday night.
The whole story is on my blog at beaglenetworks.net
hi!
its all explained on my website however a quick synopsis is that its a lot of VRF's on two Cisco 1841 routers. I had an unused /24 from an ISP i do work for and i borrowed its reverse DNS. It runs out of my basement - however you would need access to authoritative DNS for the reverse zone. The IP addresses are not actually routed to me, but because they are valid to go outside of the ISP, the TTL expiration gets routed all the way back to you.
As for it not working everywhere, I know - I'm sorry. You can submit a request to your ISP to have them remove blocking for 216.81.59.173. You know the first thing they are going to do when they check that is a traceroute.. which makes it that much more funny!
You guys can ask me anything on my website..