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Route Filtering Best Practices for Newly Leased IPv4 Space

Newly leased IPv4 space must be announced only after routing authorization, registry records, and peer filters are aligned. If a prefix is visible in BGP before databases and filters are updated, traffic can fail even when the router configuration is correct.

BGP route filtering is the process of accepting or rejecting route announcements based on prefix, ASN, IRR, RPKI, and local policy. It protects routing security, helps prevent leaks and hijacks, and reduces route dropped events during new block announcement or leased address activation.

Why does filtering matter for newly leased IPv4 space?

When a company starts using a leased network prefix block, the address holder, tenant, origin ASN, upstream, and peers must agree on routing. A prefix can be legally leased but still rejected by an upstream if the ROA, IRR object, LOA, or prefix list is missing.

The risk is higher during newly subnet deployment because many filters are built from external databases. If those records lag behind the change, the route may be accepted in one region and rejected in another. This creates partial reachability.

Common failure points include:

  • stale prefix lists at transit providers;
  • missing ROA or wrong maximum length;
  • IRR route object with the wrong origin ASN;
  • LOA that does not match the announcement;
  • route filters that reject more-specific prefixes;
  • bogon or reputation lists that still include the block.

How should teams announce leased IP space safely?

Before teams announce leased IP ranges, they should treat the first announcement as a controlled change. The goal is not only to make BGP visible. The goal is to make the route accepted by the right peers and rejected by the wrong ones.

Use this sequence:

  1. confirm the lease contract and permitted origin ASN;
  2. create or update ROA and IRR records;
  3. send LOA and prefix data to upstreams;
  4. request a peer update before traffic migration;
  5. test visibility from route collectors and looking glasses;
  6. monitor packet loss, path changes, and rejected routes.

Teams that lease IPv4 addresses should define who controls ROA, IRR, and LOA updates before production use. If the block becomes strategic, compare leasing with Buy IPv4 Addresses.

What does IRR RPKI update work include?

An IRR RPKI update must make registry-based authorization match the real route. RPKI confirms which ASN may originate the prefix. IRR route objects help many networks build prefix filters and route sets. Both should be checked before and after the announcement.

A practical database record sync should cover:

  • prefix length and allowed more-specifics;
  • origin ASN and backup ASN;
  • maintainer, source registry, and object status;
  • ROA max length and expiration date;
  • route-set membership used by upstreams;
  • WHOIS/RDAP and abuse contact consistency.

Do not assume that one update reaches every network at once. Some peers rebuild filters hourly. Others rebuild daily or manually.

Which filtering policy examples reduce risk?

Good policy examples are simple and narrow. Allow only the prefixes you own or are authorized to use. Reject routes with invalid RPKI status. Set max-prefix limits. Block bogons and private ranges. Use AS-path filters where needed.

For an inbound customer policy, the provider can accept only the leased prefix and the approved ASN. For an outbound policy, the tenant can advertise only the leased block to selected upstreams. For route servers, the team should confirm IRR and RPKI validation behavior before enabling sessions.

Avoid broad filters such as “accept all from this neighbor.” They are easy to deploy but dangerous during mistakes, leaks, or hijack attempts.

How does prefix filter clearing work?

Prefix filter clearing is the process of removing stale blocks from peer and upstream filters after authorization has changed. It may be needed when a prefix was transferred, newly leased, returned from quarantine, or moved to a new ASN.

The clearing request should include the prefix, origin ASN, LOA, ROA state, IRR object, expected announcement date, and contact details. If a peer still rejects the route, ask which rule caused the drop: prefix list, RPKI invalid, IRR mismatch, bogon list, or manual block.

What configuration checks should be done before traffic migration?

Routing configuration should be reviewed before customer traffic moves. Validate local BGP policy, communities, AS-path prepending, blackhole communities, route maps, and prefix limits. Then test from several networks.

A safe checklist includes:

  • ROA state is Valid or expected;
  • IRR object matches the live ASN;
  • upstream prefix filters are refreshed;
  • monitoring sees the route in target regions;
  • DDoS and blackhole workflows are tested;
  • rollback path is ready if reachability fails.

FAQ: What do teams ask about route filtering?

Can a valid leased prefix still be filtered?
Yes. A peer may use stale IRR data, old prefix filters, or strict RPKI policy.

Should traffic move right after BGP appears?
No. Visibility is not enough. Test reachability, latency, packet loss, and peer acceptance first.

Who should update ROA and IRR for a leased block?
The contract should define this. Usually the resource holder or delegated manager controls these records.

What is the main security benefit of route filtering?
It limits unauthorized announcements and reduces the risk of route leaks or prefix hijacks.

How can InterLIR Global support leased IPv4 routing?

If your team needs IPv4 space with clear authorization, lease activation support, routing checks, or filter-clearing coordination, contact InterLIR. The company provides infrastructure for IPv4 leasing, buying, lease-out, and marketplace workflows, so network teams can align leased address use with BGP policy, routing security, and operational controls.

Evgeny Sevastyanov

Support Team Leader

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