Creating A Route Policy And Attaching It To An Eigrp Process - Cisco ASR 9000 Series Configuration Manual

Aggregation services router
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Implementing EIGRP

Creating a Route Policy and Attaching It to an EIGRP Process

This task defines a route policy and shows how to attach it to an EIGRP process.
A route policy definition consists of the route-policy command and name argument followed by a sequence
of optional policy statements, and then closed with the end-policy command.
A route policy is not useful until it is applied to routes of a routing protocol.
SUMMARY STEPS
1. configure
2. route-policy name
3. set eigrp-metric bandwidth delay reliability load mtu
4. end-policy
5. commit
6. configure
7. router eigrp as-number
8. address-family { ipv4 }
9. route-policy route-policy-name { in | out }
10. commit
DETAILED STEPS
Command or Action
Step 1
configure
Step 2
route-policy name
Example:
RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router(config)# route-policy IN-IPv4
Step 3
set eigrp-metric bandwidth delay reliability load mtu
Example:
RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router(config-rpl)# set eigrp metric
42 100 200 100 1200
Step 4
end-policy
Example:
RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router(config-rpl)# end-policy
Step 5
commit
Step 6
configure
OL-30423-03
Cisco ASR 9000 Series Aggregation Services Router Routing Configuration Guide, Release 5.1.x
Creating a Route Policy and Attaching It to an EIGRP Process
Purpose
Defines a route policy and enters route-policy
configuration mode.
(Optional) Sets the EIGRP metric attribute.
Ends the definition of a route policy and exits
route-policy configuration mode.
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