Routing Policies - Cisco ASR 5000 Series Administration Manual

Staros release 21.4
Hide thumbs Also See for ASR 5000 Series:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

Routing
This chapter provides information on configuring an enhanced, or extended, service. The product
administration guides provide examples and procedures for configuring basic services on the system. You
should select the configuration example that best meets your service model, and configure the required
elements for that model before using the procedures described below.
This chapter includes the following sections:

Routing Policies

This section describes how to configure the elements needed to define routing policies. Routing policies
modify and redirect routes to and from the system to satisfy specific network deployment requirements.
Use the following building blocks to configure routing policies:
• Route Access Lists – The basic building block of a routing policy. Route access lists filter routes based
• IP Prefix Lists – A more advanced element of a routing policy. An IP Prefix list filters routes based on
• AS Path Access Lists – A basic building block used for Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) routing. These
• Route Maps – Route-maps provide detailed control over routes during route selection or route
Routing Policies, page 271
Static Routing, page 273
OSPF Routing, page 274
OSPFv3 Routing, page 277
Equal Cost Multiple Path (ECMP), page 278
BGP-4 Routing, page 279
Bidirectional Forwarding Detection, page 286
Viewing Routing Information, page 296
on a range of IP addresses.
IP prefixes.
lists filter Autonomous System (AS) paths.
advertisement by a routing protocol, and in route redistribution between routing protocols. For this level
C H A P T E R
ASR 5500 System Administration Guide, StarOS Release 21.4
20
271

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

This manual is also suitable for:

Asr 5500

Table of Contents