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Match Conditions

Each term can consist of two statements, from and to, which define match conditions:

[edit]
policy-options {
policy-statement policy-name {
term term-name {
from {
family family-name;
match-conditions;
policy subroutine-policy-name;
prefix-list name;
route-filter destination-prefix match-type <actions>;
source-address-filter source-prefix match-type <actions>;
}
to {
match-conditions;
policy subroutine-policy-name;
}
}
}
}

In the from statement, you define the criteria that an incoming route must match. You can specify one or more match conditions. If you specify more than one, they all must match the route for a match to occur.

The from statement is optional. If you omit the from and the to statements, all routes are considered to match.

Note: In export policies, omitting the from statement from a routing policy term might lead to unexpected results. For more information, see Side Effects of Omitting the "from" Statement from an Export Policy.

In the to statement, you define the criteria that an outgoing route must match. You can specify one or more match conditions. If you specify more than one, they all must match the route for a match to occur. You can specify most of the same match conditions in the to statement that you can in the from statement. In most cases, specifying a match condition in the to statement produces the same result as specifying the same match condition in the from statement.

The to statement is optional. If you omit both the to and the from statements, all routes are considered to match.

Note: All conditions in the from and to statements must match for the action to be taken. The match conditions are effectively a logical AND operation. Matching in prefix lists and route lists is handled differently. For more information about these match conditions, including how they are evaluated, see Configuring Prefix Lists and Configuring Route Lists.

Table 14 describes the match conditions available for matching an incoming or outgoing route. The table indicates whether you can use the match condition in both from and to statements and whether the match condition functions the same or differently when used with both statements. If a match condition functions differently in a from statement than in a to statement, or if the condition cannot be used in one type of statement, there is a separate description for each type of statement. Otherwise, the same description applies to both types of statements.

Table 14 also indicates whether the match condition is standard or extended. In general, the extended match conditions include criteria that are defined separately from the routing policy (autonomous system [AS] path regular expressions, communities, and prefix lists) and are more complex than standard match conditions. The extended match conditions provide many powerful capabilities. For more information about them, see Extended Match Conditions Configuration. The standard match conditions include criteria that are defined within a routing policy and are less complex than the extended match conditions.

For examples of how to use the from and to statements, see Examples: Routing Policy Configuration.

Table 14: Routing Policy Match Conditions

Match Condition

Match Condition Category

from Statement Description

to Statement Description

aggregate-contributor

Standard

Match routes that are contributing to a configured aggregate. This match condition can be used to suppress a contributor in an aggregate route.

area area-id

Standard

(Open Shortest Path First [OSPF] only) Area identifier.

In a from statement used with an export policy, match a route learned from the specified OSPF area when exporting OSPF routes into other protocols.

as-path name

Extended

(Border Gateway Protocol [BGP] only) Name of an AS path regular expression. For more information, see Configuring AS Path Regular Expressions.

as-path-group group-name

Extended

(BGP only) Name of an AS path group regular expression. For more information, see Configuring AS Path Regular Expressions.

color preference color2 preference

Standard

Color value. You can specify preference values (color and color2) that are finer-grained than those specified in the preference and preference2 match conditions. The color value can be a number in the range from 0 through 4,294,967,295 (232 –1). A lower number indicates a more preferred route. For more information about preference values, see the JUNOS Routing Protocols Configuration Guide.

community [ names ]

Extended

Name of one or more communities. If you list more than one name, only one name needs to match for a match to occur (the matching is effectively a logical OR operation). For more information, see Configuring Communities.

external [ type metric-type ]

Standard

(OSPF only) Match external routes, including routes exported from one level to another. type is an optional keyword. metric can either be 1 or 2. When you do not specify type, this condition matches all external routes. When you specify type, this condition matches only OSPF routes with the specified OSPF metric type.

family family-name

Standard

Name of an address family. family-name can be either inet or inet6. Match the address family IP version 4 (IPv4) or IP version 6 (IPv6) of the route. Default setting is inet.

instance instance-name

Standard

Name of one or more routing instances.

Match a route learned from one of the specified instances.

Name of one or more routing instances.

Match a route to be advertised over one of the specified instances.

interface interface-name

Standard

Name or IP address of one or more router interfaces. Do not use this qualifier with protocols that are not interface-specific, such as internal BGP (IBGP).

Match a route learned from one of the specified interfaces. Direct routes match routes configured on the specified interface.

Name or IP address of one or more router interfaces. Do not use this qualifier with protocols that are not interface-specific, such as IBGP.

Match a route to be advertised from one of the specified interfaces.

internal

Standard

Match a routing policy against the internal flag for simplified next-hop self policies.

level level

Standard

(Intermediate System-to-Intermediate System [IS-IS] only) IS-IS level.

Match a route learned from a specified level.

(IS-IS only) IS-IS level.

Match a route to be advertised to a specified level.

local-preference value

Standard

(BGP only) BGP local preference (LOCAL_PREF) attribute. The preference value can be a number in the range 0 through 4,294,967,295 (232 – 1).

metric metric metric2 metric metric3 metric metric4 metric

Standard

Metric value. You can specify up to four metric values, starting with metric (for the first metric value) and continuing with metric2, metric3, and metric4.

(BGP only) metric corresponds to the multiple exit discriminator (MED), and metric2 corresponds to the interior gateway protocol (IGP) metric if the BGP next hop runs back through another route.

multicast-scoping (scoping-name | number) < (orhigher | orlower) >

Standard

Multicast scope value of IPv4 or IPv6 multicast group address. The multicast-scoping name corresponds to an IPv4 prefix. You can match on a specific multicast-scoping prefix or on a range of prefixes. Specify orhigher to match on a scope and numerically higher scopes, or orlower to match on a scope and numerically lower scopes. For more information, see the JUNOS Multicast Protocols Configuration Guide.

You can apply this scoping policy to the routing table by including the scope-policy statement at the [edit routing-options] hierarchy level.

The number value can be any hexadecimal number from 0 through F. The multicast-scope value is a number from 0 through 15, or one of the following keywords with the associated meanings:

  • node-local (value=1)—No corresponding prefix
  • link-local (value=2)—Corresponding prefix 224.0.0.0/24
  • site-local (value=5)—No corresponding prefix
  • global (value=14)—Corresponding prefix 224.0.1.0 through 238.255.255.255
  • organization-local (value=8)—Corresponding prefix 239.192.0.0/14

neighbor address

Standard

Address of one or more neighbors (peers).

For BGP, the address can be a directly connected or indirectly connected peer.

For all other protocols, the address is the neighbor from which the advertisement is received.

Note: The neighbor address match condition is not valid for the Routing Information Protocol (RIP).

Address of one or more neighbors (peers).

For BGP import policies, specifying to neighbor produces the same result as specifying from neighbor.

For BGP export policies, specifying the neighbor match condition has no effect and is ignored.

For all other protocols, the to statement matches the neighbor to which the advertisement is sent.

Note: The neighbor address match condition is not valid for the Routing Information Protocol (RIP).

next-hop address

Standard

Next-hop address or addresses specified in the routing information for a particular route. For BGP routes, matches are performed against each protocol next hop.

next-hop-type merged

Standard

LDP generates next hop based on RSVP and IP next hops available to use combined with the forwarding-class mapping.

You cannot specify this match condition.

origin value

Standard

(BGP only) BGP origin attribute, which is the origin of the AS path information. The value can be one of the following:

  • egp—Path information originated in another AS.
  • igp—Path information originated within the local AS.
  • incomplete—Path information was learned by some other means.

policy [ policy-name ]

Extended

Name of a policy to evaluate as a subroutine.

For information about this extended match condition, see Configuring Subroutines.

preference preference preference2 preference

Standard

Preference value. You can specify a primary preference value (preference) and a secondary preference value (preference2). The preference value can be a number from 0 through 4,294,967,295 (232 – 1). A lower number indicates a more preferred route.

To specify even finer-grained preference values, see the color and color2 match conditions in this table.

For more information about preference values, see the JUNOS Routing Protocols Configuration Guide.

prefix-list prefix-list-name ip-addresses

Extended

Named list of IP addresses. You can specify an exact match with incoming routes.

For information about this extended match condition, see Configuring Prefix Lists.

You cannot specify this match condition.

prefix-list-filter prefix-list-name match-type

Extended

Named prefix list. You can specify prefix length qualifiers for the list of prefixes in the prefix list.

For information about this extended match condition, see Configuring Prefix Lists.

You cannot specify this match condition.

protocol protocol

Standard

Name of the protocol from which the route was learned or to which the route is being advertised. It can be one of the following: access, access-internal, aggregate, bgp, direct, dvmrp, isis, local, ospf, ospf2, ospf3pim-dense, pim-sparse, rip, ripng, or static.

Note: The ospf2 statement matches on OSPFv2 routes. The ospf3 statement matches on OSPFv3 routes. The ospf statement matches on both OSPFv2 and OSPFv3 routes.

For more information about access routes and access-internal routes, see Importing and Exporting Access and Access-Internal Routes in a Routing Policy.

rib routing-table

Standard

Name of a routing table. The value of routing-table can be one of the following:

  • inet.0—Unicast IPv4 routes
  • instance-name inet.0—Unicast IPv4 routes for a particular routing instance
  • inet.1—Multicast IPv4 routes
  • inet.2—Unicast IPv4 routes for multicast reverse-path forwarding (RPF) lookup
  • inet.3—Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS) routes
  • mpls.0—MPLS routes for label-switched path (LSP) next hops
  • inet6.0—Unicast IPv6 routes

route-filter destination-prefix match-type <actions>

Extended

List of destination prefixes. When specifying a destination prefix, you can specify an exact match with a specific route or a less precise match using match types. You can configure either a common action that applies to the entire list or an action associated with each prefix. For more information, see Configuring Route Lists.

You cannot specify this match condition.

route-type value

Standard

Type of route. The value can be one of the following:

  • external—External route.
  • internal—Internal route.

source-address-filter destination-prefix match-type <actions>

Extended

List of multicast source addresses. When specifying a source address, you can specify an exact match with a specific route or a less precise match using match types. You can configure either a common action that applies to the entire list or an action associated with each prefix. For more information, see Configuring Route Lists.

You cannot specify this match condition.

state (active | inactive)

Standard

(BGP export only) Match on the following types of advertised routes:

  • active—An active BGP route
  • inactive—A route advertised to internal BGP peers as the best external path even if the best path is an internal route
  • inactive—A route advertised by BGP as the best route even if the routing table did not select it to be an active route

tag string tag2 string

Standard

Tag value. You can specify two tag strings: tag (for the first string) and tag2. These values are local to the router and can be set on configured routes or by using an import routing policy.

You can specify multiple tags under one match condition by including the tags within a bracketed list. For example: from tag [ tag1 tag2 tag3 ];

For OSPF and IS-IS, the tag match conditions match the 32-bit tag field in external link-state advertisement (LSA) packets.


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