Dell C9000 Series Reference Manual page 527

Networking command-line reference guide
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The Lines
Description
Beginning
with:
BGP neighbor
Displays the BGP neighbor address and its AS number. The last
phrase in the line indicates whether the link between the BGP
router and its neighbor is an external or internal one. If they are
located in the same AS, the link is internal; otherwise the link is
external.
BGP version
Displays the BGP version (always version 4) and the remote
router ID.
BGP state
Displays the neighbor's BGP state and the amount of time in
hours:minutes:seconds it has been in that state.
Last read
This line displays the following information:
Received
This line displays the number of BGP messages received, the
messages
number of notifications (error messages), and the number of
messages waiting in a queue for processing.
Sent messages
The line displays the number of BGP messages sent, the number
of notifications (error messages), and the number of messages
waiting in a queue for processing.
Received updates
This line displays the number of BGP updates received and sent.
Soft
This line indicates that soft reconfiguration inbound is
reconfiguration
configured.
Minimum time
Displays the minimum time, in seconds, between
advertisements.
(list of inbound
Displays the policy commands configured and the names of the
and outbound
Route map, AS-PATH ACL, or Prefix list configured for the
policies)
policy.
For address
Displays the IPv4 Unicast as the address family.
family:
BGP table version
Displays which version of the primary BGP routing table the
router and the neighbor are using.
accepted prefixes
Displays the number of network prefixes the router accepts and
the amount of memory used to process those prefixes.
Prefix advertised
Displays the number of network prefixes advertised, the number
rejected, and the number withdrawn from the BGP routing table.
last read is the time (hours:minutes:seconds) the router
read a message from its neighbor
hold time is the number of seconds configured between
messages from its neighbor
keepalive interval is the number of seconds between
keepalive messages to help ensure that the TCP session is
still alive.
Border Gateway Protocol
527

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