Peering

Peering information for networks that want cleaner traffic exchange.

Publish routing-policy information, peering requirements, exchange-point notes, and the preferred contact path for AS64013 peering requests.

ASN Peer identity
IX Exchange notes
PNI Private interconnect
IRR Filter data

Overview

Good peering pages reduce back-and-forth

Make the policy visible: where peering is available, what routes are accepted, what max-prefix limits apply, and which contacts handle requests or outages.

  • Request workflow
    Collect ASN, PeeringDB profile, estimated traffic, locations, and technical contacts before accepting a request.
  • Policy clarity
    Explain whether the policy is open, selective, or private-case-by-case, and publish maintenance expectations.
  • Routing controls
    Mention IRR/RPKI filtering, max-prefix handling, and invalid-route rejection practices where applicable.

Peering request checklist

  1. ASN and network name
  2. PeeringDB profile or equivalent details
  3. Common locations or exchange points
  4. Expected traffic profile
  5. NOC and routing-policy contact

Policy fields to publish

  • Peering policy type
  • Locations and exchanges
  • Route-server participation
  • IRR and RPKI expectations
  • Operational contact path

Useful links

  • PeeringDB profile
  • Looking Glass
  • NOC email
  • Maintenance announcements
  • Route policy documentation

Next Step

Send a peering request

Include ASN, PeeringDB link, traffic profile, common locations, and routing contacts.

Contact Peering