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What is Edge to Edge Routing?


What is “anycast” and how is it helpful?How does IPv4 Subnetting Work?What is “deterministic latency”OpenVPN not routing on DD-WRTWhat CAN cause 'RTNETLINK answers : No such process' when adding a routeHow is the split horizon rule used to prevent routing loops?Internet Routing with BIRDRemove the unspecified gateway from linux routing tableOdd Routing Issues With LAN & VPNRouting troubles on secondary FIB/routing table on FreeBSD






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4















I've heard the term edge to edge routing several times, but I'm having a hard time finding a formal definition as to what exactly this means. Can someone please explain what edge to edge routing is?










share|improve this question




























    4















    I've heard the term edge to edge routing several times, but I'm having a hard time finding a formal definition as to what exactly this means. Can someone please explain what edge to edge routing is?










    share|improve this question
























      4












      4








      4








      I've heard the term edge to edge routing several times, but I'm having a hard time finding a formal definition as to what exactly this means. Can someone please explain what edge to edge routing is?










      share|improve this question














      I've heard the term edge to edge routing several times, but I'm having a hard time finding a formal definition as to what exactly this means. Can someone please explain what edge to edge routing is?







      networking routing






      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question











      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question










      asked May 1 at 14:18









      The Gilbert Arenas DaggerThe Gilbert Arenas Dagger

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          5














          Like most IT terms, there is no formal definition. It means whatever the vendor wants it to mean.



          But edge-to-edge routing in a cloud provider context means essentially using a "virtual cloud"** as a transit between another cloud and some other network (i.e., routing from one edge of the cloud to another).



          For example, you have a corporate network connected to one Amazon VPC (A). That VPC is also connected to another VPC (B). Routing from your corporate network through VPC A to reach VPC B is an example of edge to edge routing (and it's not allowed).



          Here is an Amazon document that uses the term extensively.



          ** Cloud providers have different product names for this: Virtual Private Cloud or Virtual Network.






          share|improve this answer


















          • 1





            Not allowed by Amazon or not allowed in some other way?

            – Paul
            May 1 at 21:54






          • 1





            Amazon doesn’t allow VPCs to be transitive. So they don’t allow it. But if you use your own routers, you can make it happen.

            – Ron Trunk
            May 1 at 23:04











          Your Answer








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          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

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          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          5














          Like most IT terms, there is no formal definition. It means whatever the vendor wants it to mean.



          But edge-to-edge routing in a cloud provider context means essentially using a "virtual cloud"** as a transit between another cloud and some other network (i.e., routing from one edge of the cloud to another).



          For example, you have a corporate network connected to one Amazon VPC (A). That VPC is also connected to another VPC (B). Routing from your corporate network through VPC A to reach VPC B is an example of edge to edge routing (and it's not allowed).



          Here is an Amazon document that uses the term extensively.



          ** Cloud providers have different product names for this: Virtual Private Cloud or Virtual Network.






          share|improve this answer


















          • 1





            Not allowed by Amazon or not allowed in some other way?

            – Paul
            May 1 at 21:54






          • 1





            Amazon doesn’t allow VPCs to be transitive. So they don’t allow it. But if you use your own routers, you can make it happen.

            – Ron Trunk
            May 1 at 23:04















          5














          Like most IT terms, there is no formal definition. It means whatever the vendor wants it to mean.



          But edge-to-edge routing in a cloud provider context means essentially using a "virtual cloud"** as a transit between another cloud and some other network (i.e., routing from one edge of the cloud to another).



          For example, you have a corporate network connected to one Amazon VPC (A). That VPC is also connected to another VPC (B). Routing from your corporate network through VPC A to reach VPC B is an example of edge to edge routing (and it's not allowed).



          Here is an Amazon document that uses the term extensively.



          ** Cloud providers have different product names for this: Virtual Private Cloud or Virtual Network.






          share|improve this answer


















          • 1





            Not allowed by Amazon or not allowed in some other way?

            – Paul
            May 1 at 21:54






          • 1





            Amazon doesn’t allow VPCs to be transitive. So they don’t allow it. But if you use your own routers, you can make it happen.

            – Ron Trunk
            May 1 at 23:04













          5












          5








          5







          Like most IT terms, there is no formal definition. It means whatever the vendor wants it to mean.



          But edge-to-edge routing in a cloud provider context means essentially using a "virtual cloud"** as a transit between another cloud and some other network (i.e., routing from one edge of the cloud to another).



          For example, you have a corporate network connected to one Amazon VPC (A). That VPC is also connected to another VPC (B). Routing from your corporate network through VPC A to reach VPC B is an example of edge to edge routing (and it's not allowed).



          Here is an Amazon document that uses the term extensively.



          ** Cloud providers have different product names for this: Virtual Private Cloud or Virtual Network.






          share|improve this answer













          Like most IT terms, there is no formal definition. It means whatever the vendor wants it to mean.



          But edge-to-edge routing in a cloud provider context means essentially using a "virtual cloud"** as a transit between another cloud and some other network (i.e., routing from one edge of the cloud to another).



          For example, you have a corporate network connected to one Amazon VPC (A). That VPC is also connected to another VPC (B). Routing from your corporate network through VPC A to reach VPC B is an example of edge to edge routing (and it's not allowed).



          Here is an Amazon document that uses the term extensively.



          ** Cloud providers have different product names for this: Virtual Private Cloud or Virtual Network.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered May 1 at 14:47









          Ron TrunkRon Trunk

          452313




          452313







          • 1





            Not allowed by Amazon or not allowed in some other way?

            – Paul
            May 1 at 21:54






          • 1





            Amazon doesn’t allow VPCs to be transitive. So they don’t allow it. But if you use your own routers, you can make it happen.

            – Ron Trunk
            May 1 at 23:04












          • 1





            Not allowed by Amazon or not allowed in some other way?

            – Paul
            May 1 at 21:54






          • 1





            Amazon doesn’t allow VPCs to be transitive. So they don’t allow it. But if you use your own routers, you can make it happen.

            – Ron Trunk
            May 1 at 23:04







          1




          1





          Not allowed by Amazon or not allowed in some other way?

          – Paul
          May 1 at 21:54





          Not allowed by Amazon or not allowed in some other way?

          – Paul
          May 1 at 21:54




          1




          1





          Amazon doesn’t allow VPCs to be transitive. So they don’t allow it. But if you use your own routers, you can make it happen.

          – Ron Trunk
          May 1 at 23:04





          Amazon doesn’t allow VPCs to be transitive. So they don’t allow it. But if you use your own routers, you can make it happen.

          – Ron Trunk
          May 1 at 23:04

















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