Dell Force10 C150 Configuration Manual page 226

Ftos configuration guide ftos 8.4.2.7 e-series terascale, c-series, s-series (s50/s25)
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Configure passive peering
Maintain existing AS numbers during an AS migration
Allow an AS number to appear in its own AS path
Enable graceful restart
Filter on an AS-Path attribute
Configure IP community lists
Manipulate the COMMUNITY attribute
Change MED attribute
Change LOCAL_PREFERENCE attribute
Change NEXT_HOP attribute
Change WEIGHT attribute
Enable multipath
Filter BGP routes
Redistribute routes on page 246
Configure BGP route reflectors
Aggregate routes
Configure BGP confederations
Enable route flap dampening
Change BGP timers
BGP neighbor soft-reconfiguration
Route map continue
Enable BGP
By default, BGP is not enabled on the system. FTOS supports one Autonomous System (AS) and you must
assign the AS Number (ASN). To establish BGP sessions and route traffic, you must configure at least one
BGP neighbor or peer.
In BGP, routers with an established TCP connection are called neighbors or peers. Once a connection is
established, the neighbors exchange full BGP routing tables with incremental updates afterwards. In
addition, neighbors exchange KEEPALIVE messages to maintain the connection.
In BGP, neighbor routers or peers can be classified as internal or external. External BGP peers must be
connected physically to one another (unless you enable the EBGP multihop feature), while internal BGP
peers do not need to be directly connected. The IP address of an EBGP neighbor is usually the IP address
of the interface directly connected to the router. First, the BGP process determines if all internal BGP peers
are reachable, and then it determines which peers outside the AS are reachable.
Note:
Sample Configurations
226
|
Border Gateway Protocol IPv4 (BGPv4)
for enabling BGP routers are found at the end of this chapter.

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