Next Hop; Multiprotocol Bgp - Dell S4048–ON Configuration Manual

S-series 10gbe switches
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The AS path is shown in the following example. The origin attribute is shown following the AS path information (shown in bold).
Example of Viewing AS Paths
Dell#show ip bgp paths
Total 30655 Paths
Address
Hash Refcount Metric Path
0x4014154
0
3
0x4013914
0
3
0x5166d6c
0
3
0x5e62df4
0
2
0x3a1814c
0
26
0x567ea9c
0
75
0x6cc1294
0
2
0x6cc18d4
0
1
0x5982e44
0
162
0x67d4a14
0
2
0x559972c
0
31
0x59cd3b4
0
2
0x7128114
0
10
0x536a914
0
3
0x2ffe884
0
1

Next Hop

The next hop is the IP address used to reach the advertising router.
For EBGP neighbors, the next-hop address is the IP address of the connection between the neighbors. For IBGP, the EBGP next-
hop address is carried into the local AS. A next hop attribute is set when a BGP speaker advertises itself to another BGP speaker
outside its local AS and when advertising routes within an AS. The next hop attribute also serves as a way to direct traffic to another
BGP speaker, rather than waiting for a speaker to advertise. When a next-hop BGP neighbor is unreachable, then the connection to
that BGP neighbor goes down after hold down timer expiry. The connection flap can also be obtained immediately with Fallover
enabled. BGP routes that contain the next-hop as the neighbor address are not sent to the neighbor. You can enable this feature
using the neighbor sender-side-loopdetect command.
NOTE: For EBGP neighbors, the next-hop address corresponding to a BGP route is not resolved if the next-hop address
is not the same as the neighbor IP address.
NOTE: The connection between a router and its next-hop BGP neighbor terminates immediately only if the router has
received routes from the BGP neighbor in the past.

Multiprotocol BGP

Multiprotocol extensions for BGP (MBGP) is defined in IETF RFC 2858. MBGP allows different types of address families to be
distributed in parallel.
MBGP allows information about the topology of the IP multicast-capable routers to be exchanged separately from the topology of
normal IPv4 and IPv6 unicast routers. It allows a multicast routing topology different from the unicast routing topology.
MBGP uses either an IPv4 address configured on the interface (which is used to establish the IPv6 session) or a stable IPv4 address
that is available in the box as the next-hop address. As a result, while advertising an IPv6 network, exchange of IPv4 routes does not
lead to martian next-hop message logs.
NOTE: It is possible to configure BGP peers that exchange both unicast and multicast network layer reachability
information (NLRI), but you cannot connect multiprotocol BGP with BGP. Therefore, you cannot redistribute
multiprotocol BGP routes into BGP.
178
Border Gateway Protocol IPv4 (BGPv4)
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