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- Basic of BGP routing Protocol – A Two Napkin Protocol – Part 1
Basic of BGP routing Protocol – A Two Napkin Protocol – Part 1 This series focuses on the BGP routing protocol and will be presented across multiple articles due to the depth and length of the content Some information may be referenced from other sources and simplified for better understanding
- BGP Zero to Hero Part 8, BGP filtering methods - Cisco Learning Network
The BGP Prefix-Based Outbound Route Filtering feature uses Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) outbound route filter (ORF) send and receive capabilities to minimize the number of BGP updates that are sent between BGP peers
- BGP Zero to Hero Part 9, AS-Path Attribute Manipulation
BGP Replace Autonomous System Numbers (ASNs) feature is a BGP policy on the router that allows replacing any of the configured AS number with its own AS Many AS numbers can be specified to allow such a replace to happen to more than one AS number using the AS_PATH attribute
- BGP - Understanding Inbound Traffic Engineering
Understanding of the BGP Best-Path selection process In order to show the various options that you have to try an manipulate how traffic enters your network I will be using the following topology
- BGP Zero to Hero Part 7, BGP Communities - Cisco Learning Network
' BGP standard communities using numeric values In the previous lab, we used ACL to identify routes then match them in a route map then assign one of the four standard well-known communities (tags) , In such as case routers know what to do with these tagged routes based on which one of the four standard well-known communities we are using
- how to view BGP neighbor status in a VRF setup
BGP show command for VRFs can become very long You need to issue the show bgp vrf [VRF-NAME] all summary command to view the same information as you would with the show bgp summary command but specific for the VRF in question
- Introduction to VXLAN and EVPN - Cisco Learning Network
Ability to discover VTEPs through BGP messaging rather than based on receiving VXLAN-encapsulated frames This is more secure than blindly accepting all VXLAN-encapsulated frames
- BGP lt;-- gt; OSPF route redistribution - Cisco Learning Network
I think BGP on RTR-1 is seeing a better route in the routing table because of OSPF (Higher Weight) and never adds the OSPF routes to its BGP table I was expecting eBGP to come in and supersede the OSPF route
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