Bgp - Fortinet FortiGate Series Administration Manual

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BGP

BGP
How BGP works
370
IP
Enter the IP address that has been assigned to the OSPF-enabled
interface. The interface becomes OSPF-enabled because its IP address
matches the OSPF network address space.
For example, if you defined an OSPF network of 172.20.120.0/24 and
port1 has been assigned the IP address 172.20.120.140, type
172.20.120.140.
Authentication Select an authentication method for LSA exchanges on the specified
interface:
None — Disable authentication.
Text — Authenticate LSA exchanges using a plain-text password. The
password can be up to 35 characters, and is sent in clear text over the
network.
MD5 — Use one or more keys to generate an MD5 cryptographic hash.
Password
Enter the plain-text password. Enter an alphanumeric value of up to 15
characters. The OSPF neighbors that send link-state advertisements to
this FortiGate interface must be configured with an identical password.
This field is available only if you selected plain-text authentication.
MD5 Keys
Enter the key identifier for the (first) password in the ID field (the range is
from 1 to 255) and then type the associated password in the Key field.
The password is a 128-bit hash, represented by an alphanumeric string of
up to 16 characters.
The OSPF neighbors that send link-state advertisements to this FortiGate
interface must be configured with an identical MD5 key. If the OSPF
neighbor uses more than one password to generate MD5 hash, select the
Add icon to add additional MD5 keys to the list.
This field is available only if you selected MD5 authentication.
Hello Interval
Optionally, set the Hello Interval to be compatible with Hello Interval
settings on all OSPF neighbors.
This setting defines the period of time (in seconds) that the FortiGate unit
waits between sending Hello packets through this interface.
Dead Interval
Optionally, set the Dead Interval to be compatible with Dead Interval
settings on all OSPF neighbors.
This setting defines the period of time (in seconds) that the FortiGate unit
waits to receive a Hello packet from an OSPF neighbor through the
interface. If the FortiGate unit does not receive a Hello packet within the
specified amount of time, the FortiGate unit declares the neighbor
inaccessible.
By convention, the Dead Interval value is usually four times greater than
the Hello Interval value.
Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) is an Internet routing protocol typically used by ISPs to
exchange routing information between different ISP networks. For example, BGP enables
the sharing of network paths between the ISP network and an autonomous system (AS)
that uses RIP, OSPF, or both to route packets within the AS. The FortiGate implementation
of BGP supports BGP-4 and complies with RFC 1771 and RFC 2385.
When BGP is enabled on an interface, the FortiGate unit sends routing table updates to
neighboring autonomous systems connected to that interface whenever any part of the
FortiGate routing table changes. Each AS to which the unit belongs is associated with an
AS number. The AS number references a particular destination network.
BGP updates advertise the best path to a destination network. When the FortiGate unit
receives a BGP update, the FortiGate unit examines the Multi-Exit Discriminator (MED)
attributes of potential routes to determine the best path to a destination network before
recording the path in the FortiGate unit routing table.
FortiGate Version 4.0 MR1 Administration Guide
01-410-89802-20090903
http://docs.fortinet.com/
Router Dynamic
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