[Contents] [Prev] [Next] [Index] [Report an Error]

Table of Contents

About This Guide
Objectives
Audience
Supported Routing Platforms
Using the Indexes
Using the Examples in This Manual
Documentation Conventions
List of Technical Publications
Documentation Feedback
Requesting Technical Support
Overview
Routing Protocols Concepts
Routing Databases
Routing Protocol Databases
JUNOS Routing Tables
Forwarding Tables
How the Routing and Forwarding Tables Are Synchronized
Configuring Interfaces
Route Preferences
Alternate and Tiebreaker Preferences
How the Active Route Is Determined
Multiple Active Routes
Default Route Preference Values
Equal-Cost Paths and Load Sharing
IPv6
IPv6 Standards
IPv6 Packet Headers
Header Structure
Extension Headers
IPv6 Addressing
Address Representation
Address Types
Address Scope
Address Structure
Complete Routing and Routing Protocol Configuration Statements
[edit logical-systems] Hierarchy Level
[edit protocols] Hierarchy Level
[edit routing-instances] Hierarchy Level
[edit routing-options] Hierarchy Level
Protocol-Independent Routing Properties
Protocol-Independent Routing Properties Overview
Protocol-Independent Routing Properties Configuration Statements
Minimum Protocol-Independent Routing Properties Configuration
Configuring Routing Tables and Routes
Creating Routing Tables
Example: Creating Routing Tables
Configuring Static Routes
Specifying the Destination of the Static Route
Specifying the Next Hop of the Static Route
Specifying an Independent Preference for a Static Route
Example: Configuring Independent Preferences for an IPv4 Static Route
Example: Configuring Independent Preferences for an IPv6 Static Route
Example: Configuring Independent Preferences for an Unnumbered Ethernet Interface
Specifying an LSP as the Next Hop for a Static Route
Installing a Static Route into More than One Routing Table
Examples: Installing a Static Route into More than One Routing Table
Configuring a Connectionless Network Services Static Route
Example: Configuring a Static CLNS Route
Specifying Static Route Options
Specifying the Route Metric
Specifying the Route Preference
Specifying Community Information
Specifying the AS Path
Specifying the OSPF Tag
Specifying Whether a Route Is Installed in the Forwarding Table
Specifying Whether the Route Is Permanently Installed in the Forwarding Table
Specifying Whether Inactive Routes Are Removed from the Routing or Forwarding Table
Specifying When the Route Can Be Readvertised
Specifying When the Route Can Be Resolved to a Prefix That Is Not Directly Connected
Configuring Bidirectional Forwarding Detection
Configuring a Default Route
Propagating Static Routes into Routing Protocols
Examples: Configuring Static Routes
Configuring Aggregate Routes
Specifying the Destination of the Aggregate Route
Specifying Aggregate Route Options
Specifying the Route Metric
Specifying the Route Preference
Specifying a Next Hop for a Route
Specifying Community Information
Specifying the AS Path
Specifying Which AS Numbers to Include in the Aggregate Route
Specifying the OSPF Tag
Specifying Whether Inactive Routes Are Removed from the Routing or Forwarding Table
Specifying Policy with Aggregate Routes
Advertising Aggregate Routes
Configuring Generated Routes
Specifying the Destination of a Generated Route
Specifying Generated Route Options
Specifying the Route Metric
Specifying the Route Preference
Specifying a Next Hop for a Route
Specifying Community Information
Specifying the AS Path
Specifying the OSPF Tag
Specifying Which AS Numbers to Include in the Generated Route
Specifying Whether Inactive Routes Are Removed from the Routing or Forwarding Table
Specifying Policy with Generated Routes
Configuring Martian Addresses
Adding Martian Addresses
Deleting Martian Addresses
Configuring a Flow Route
Configuring the Match Condition
Configuring the Action
Validating Flow Routes
Applying a Filter to a Forwarding Table
Configuring Other Protocol-Independent Routing Properties
Configuring the AS Number
Configuring the Router Identifier
Configuring AS Confederation Members
Configuring Route Recording for Flow Aggregation
Creating Routing Table Groups
Examples: Creating Routing Table Groups
Configuring How Interface Routes Are Imported into Routing Tables
Configuring Multicast Scoping
Example: Configuring Multicast Scoping
Enabling Multicast on an Interface
Configuring Additional Source-Specific Multicast Groups
Configuring Multicast Forwarding Cache Limits
Configuring Per-Packet Load Balancing
Examples: Configuring Per-Packet Load Balancing
Configuring Unicast Reverse-Path-Forwarding Check
Example: Configuring Unicast RPF
Configuring Graceful Restart
Configuring a Route Distinguisher
Configuring a Dynamic Tunnel
Configuring Logging for the Routing Protocol Process
Examples: Configuring Logging for the Routing Protocol Process
Configuring Route Resolution
Enabling an Indirect Next Hop
Enabling Nonstop Routing
Tracing Global Routing Protocol Operations
Examples: Tracing Global Routing Protocol Operations
Enabling Distributed Periodic Packet Management
Enabling Source Routing
Configuring a Timer to Delay Multiple Exit Discriminator IGP Updates
Logical System Overview
Overview
Logical Systems and Virtual Routers
Logical System Configuration Statements
Minimum Logical System Configuration
Logical System Configuration Guidelines
Configuring a Logical System
Logical System Configuration Statement
logical-systems
Summary of Protocol-Independent Routing Properties Configuration Statements
active
aggregate
as-path
auto-export
autonomous-system
bfd-liveness-detection
brief
color
community
confederation
destination-networks
disable
discard
dynamic-tunnels
export
export-rib
fate-sharing
filter
flow
forwarding-cache
forwarding-table
full
generate
graceful-restart
import
import-policy
import-rib
independent-domain
indirect-next-hop
input
install
instance-export
instance-import
interface
interface (Multicast via Static Routes)
interface (Multicast Scoping)
interface-routes
lsp-next-hop
martians
maximum-paths
maximum-prefixes
med-igp-update-interval
metric
metric (Aggregate, Generated, or Static Route)
metric (Qualified Next Hop on Static Route)
multicast
no-install
no-readvertise
no-retain
nonstop-routing
options
p2mp-lsp-next-hop
passive
policy
ppm
preference
prefix
qualified-next-hop
readvertise
resolution
resolution-ribs
resolve
restart-duration
retain
rib
rib (General)
rib (Route Resolution)
rib-group
rib-groups
route-distinguisher-id
route-record
router-id
routing-options
scope
source-address
source-routing
ssm-groups
static
tag
threshold
traceoptions
tunnel-type
unicast-reverse-path
Routing Instances
Routing Instances Overview
Routing Instances Configuration Guidelines
Configuring Routing Instances
Routing Instances Minimum Configuration
BGP
IS-IS
Layer 2 VPN
LDP
MSDP
Multiprotocol BGP-Based Multicast VPNs
OSPF
OSPFv3
PIM
RIP
VPLS
Configuring Multiple Instances of BGP
Example: Configuring Multiple Instances of BGP
Configuring Multiple Instances of IS-IS
Example: Configuring Multiple Routing Instances of IS-IS
Configuring Multiple Instances of LDP
Configuring Multiple Instances of MSDP
Configuring Multiple Instances of OSPF
Example: Configuring Multiple Routing Instances of OSPF
Configuring Multiple Instances of PIM
Configuring Multiple Instances of RIP
Configuring an Instance
Configuring VPNs
Configuring a Virtual Switch
Configuring an Instance Type
Configuring a VRF Routing Instance
Configuring a Non-VPN VRF Routing Instance
Configuring a VPLS Routing Instance
Configuring a Route Distinguisher
Configuring Filter-Based Forwarding
Configuring Class-of-Service-Based Forwarding
Configuring Secondary VRF Import and Export Policy
Configuring Policy-Based Export for Routing Instances
Example: Configuring Policy-Based Export for an Overlapping VPN
Example: Configuring Policy-Based Export for a Nonforwarding Instance
Configuring a VRF Table Label
Configuring a VRF Target
Configuring an OSPF Domain ID
Examples: Configuring an OSPF Domain ID
Configuring Route Limits for Routing Tables
Configuring an Independent AS Domain
Summary of Routing Instances Configuration Statements
description
forwarding-options
instance-type
interface
no-vrf-advertise
protocols
route-distinguisher
routing-instances
routing-options
vrf-export
vrf-import
vrf-table-label
vrf-target
Multitopology Routing
Multitopology Routing Overview
Routing Table Naming Conventions for Multitopology Routing
Routing Protocol Support for Multitopology Routing
Filter-Based Forwarding Support
Multitopology Routing Standards
Configuring Multitopology Routing
Configuring Topologies
Configuring Multitopology Routing in OSPF
Configuring Topologies and SPF Options for MT-OSPF
Configuring a Prefix Export Limit for MT-OSPF
Configuring a Topology to Appear Overloaded
Configuring Interface Properties for MT-OSPF
Disabling MT-OSPF on an OSPF Interface
Disabling MT-OSPF on a Virtual Link
Advertising MPLS Label-Switched Paths into MT-OSPF
Configuring Other MT-OSPF Properties
Configuring Multitopology Routing in Static Routes
Configuring Multitopology Routing in BGP
BGP Route Resolution in Multitopology Routing
Configuring Filter-Based Forwarding for Multitopology Routing
Summary of Multitopology Routing Configuration Statements
community
rib
topologies
topology
topology (Filter-Based Forwarding)
topology (Multitopology Routing)
topology (OSPF)
topology (OSPF Interface)
topology-id
Interior Gateway Protocols
IS-IS Overview
IS-IS Standards
IS-IS Terminology
ISO Network Addresses
IS-IS Packets
Persistent Route Reachability
IS-IS Extensions to Support Traffic Engineering
Configuring IS-IS IGP Shortcuts
IS-IS Extensions to Support Route Tagging
IS-IS Configuration Guidelines
Minimum IS-IS Configuration
Configuring IS-IS Authentication
Configuring Interface-Specific Properties
Enabling Checksum
Configuring the CSNP Interval
Configuring Mesh Groups
Modifying the Interface Metric
Modifying the Maximum Number of Areas Advertised
Enabling Wide Metrics for Traffic Engineering
Configuring Route Preferences
Configuring a Prefix Export Limit
Configuring IS-IS Levels on an Interface
Disabling IS-IS on a Level
Example: Disabling IS-IS on a Level
Advertising Interface Addresses Without Running IS-IS
Configuring Authentication for Hello Packets
Modifying the Hello Interval
Modifying the Hold-Time Value
Modifying the IS-IS Metric
Modifying the Traffic Engineering Metric
Configuring the Priority for Becoming the Designated Router
Configuring the Router to Advertise Without Running IS-IS
Modifying the LSP Interval
Configuring Label Distribution Protocol Synchronization
Modifying the LSP Lifetime
Advertising Label-Switched Paths into IS-IS
Configuring the Router to Appear Overloaded
Configuring SPF Options for IS-IS
Configuring Graceful Restart
IS-IS and Multipoint Configurations
Configuring Point-to-Point Interfaces
Configuring IS-IS Traffic Engineering Attributes
Configuring IS-IS to Use IGP Shortcuts
Configuring IS-IS to Ignore the Metric of RSVP Label-Switched Paths
Disabling IS-IS Support for Traffic Engineering
Installing IPv4 Routes into the Multicast Routing Table
Configuring the BFD Protocol
Configuring Loose Authentication Check
Disabling Adjacency Hold-Down Timers
Configuring Hello Packet Padding
Configuring Support for Connectionless Network Services
Example: Configuring CLNS for IS-IS
Disabling IS-IS
Disabling IPv4 Routing
Disabling IPv6 Routing
Configuring IS-IS Routing Policy
Examples: Configuring IS-IS Routing Policy
Configuring IS-IS Multicast Topologies
Example: Configuring IS-IS Multicast Topologies
Configuring IS-IS IPv6 Unicast Topologies
Installing a Default Route to the Nearest Level 1/Level 2 Router
Tracing IS-IS Protocol Traffic
Examples: Tracing IS-IS Protocol Traffic
Summary of IS-IS Configuration Statements
authentication-key
authentication-type
bfd-liveness-detection
checksum
clns-routing
csnp-interval
disable
disable (IS-IS)
disable (LDP Synchronization)
export
external-preference
family
graceful-restart
hello-authentication-key
hello-authentication-type
hello-interval
hello-padding
hold-time
hold-time (IS-IS)
hold-time (LDP Synchronization)
ignore-attached-bit
ignore-lsp-metrics
interface
ipv4-multicast
ipv4-multicast-metric
ipv6-multicast
ipv6-multicast-metric
ipv6-unicast
ipv6-unicast-metric
isis
label-switched-path
ldp-synchronization
level
level (Global IS-IS)
level (IS-IS Interfaces)
loose-authentication-check
lsp-interval
lsp-lifetime
max-areas
mesh-group
metric
multicast-rpf-routes
no-adjacency-holddown
no-authentication-check
no-csnp-authentication
no-hello-authentication
no-ipv4-multicast
no-ipv4-routing
no-ipv6-multicast
no-ipv6-routing
no-ipv6-unicast
no-psnp-authentication
no-unicast-topology
overload
passive
point-to-point
preference
prefix-export-limit
priority
reference-bandwidth
rib-group
shortcuts
spf-options
te-metric
topologies
traceoptions
traffic-engineering
wide-metrics-only
ES-IS Overview
Overview
ES-IS Configuration Guidelines
Minimum ES-IS Configuration
Configuring ES-IS on an Interface
Configuring the Hello Interval
Configuring the End System Configuration Timer
Configuring Graceful Restart for ES-IS
Configuring the Preference
Tracing ES-IS Protocol Traffic
Summary of ES-IS Configuration Statements
disable
esct
esis
graceful-restart
hello-interval
interface
preference
traceoptions
OSPF Overview
OSPF Protocol Overview
OSPF Version 3
OSPF Standards
OSPF Area Terminology
Areas
Area Border Routers
Backbone Areas
AS Boundary Routers
Stub Areas
Not-So-Stubby Areas
Transit Areas
OSPF Routing Algorithm
OSPF Packets
OSPF Packet Header
Hello Packets
Database Description Packets
Link-State Request Packets
Link-State Update Packets
Link-State Acknowledgment Packets
Link-State Advertisement Packet Types
External Metrics
Designated Router
OSPF Extensions to Support Traffic Engineering
Configuring OSPF IGP Shortcuts
OSPF Configuration Guidelines
Minimum OSPF Configuration
Configuring the Backbone Area and Other Areas
Configuring the Backbone Area
Configuring a Nonbackbone Area
Configuring a Stub Area
Configuring a Not-So-Stubby Area
Configuring an OSPF Virtual Link
Example: Configuring an OSPF Virtual Link
Disabling NSSA Support on an ASBR ABR
Disabling Compatibility with RFC 1583
Configuring OSPF on Router Interfaces
Configuring an Interface on a Broadcast or Point-to-Point Network
Configuring an Interface on a Point-to-Multipoint Network
Configuring an Interface on a Nonbroadcast, Multiaccess Network
Configuring an OSPF Demand Circuit Interface
Configuring Multiarea Adjacency in OSPFv2
Configuring Multiple Address Families for OSPFv3
Configuring Authentication for OSPFv2
Example: Configuring IPsec Authentication for an OSPFv2 Interface
Example: Configuring a Transition of MD5 Keys
Example: Configuring MD5 Authentication
Configuring Authentication for OSPFv3
Configuring a Prefix Export Limit
Configuring the Priority for Becoming the Designated Router
Configuring Route Summarization
Modifying the Interface Metric
Configuring Route Preferences
Configuring OSPF Timers
Modifying the Hello Interval
Controlling the LSA Retransmission Interval
Modifying the Router Dead Interval
Specifying the Transit Delay
Configuring the BFD Protocol
Configuring Label Distribution Protocol Synchronization with the IGP
Configuring Graceful Restart
Configuring SPF Options for OSPF
Advertising Interface Addresses Without Running OSPF
Configuring OSPF Passive Traffic Engineering Mode
Advertising Label-Switched Paths into OSPF
Configuring the Router to Appear Overloaded
Enabling OSPF Traffic Engineering Support
Example: Enabling OSPF Traffic Engineering Support
Modifying the Traffic Engineering Metric
Configuring OSPF Routing Policy
Configuring Import and Export Policies for Network Summaries
Configuring Priority for Prefixes in Import Policy
Example: Configure a Route Filter Policy to Specify Priority for Prefixes Learned Through OSPF
Configuring OSPF Routing Table Groups
Configuring a Sham Link
Configuring a Peer Interface
Tracing OSPF Protocol Traffic
Examples: Tracing OSPF Protocol Traffic
Summary of OSPF Configuration Statements
area
area-range
authentication
bfd-liveness-detection
dead-interval
default-lsa
default-metric
demand-circuit
disable
disable (LDP Synchronization)
disable (OSPF)
domain-id
domain-vpn-tag
export
external-preference
graceful-restart
hello-interval
hold-time
ignore-lsp-metrics
import
inter-area-prefix-export
inter-area-prefix-import
interface
interface-type
ipsec-sa
label-switched-path
ldp-synchronization
lsp-metric-into-summary
md5
metric
metric-type
neighbor
network-summary-export
network-summary-import
no-nssa-abr
no-rfc-1583
no-summaries
nssa
ospf
ospf3
overload
passive
peer-interface
poll-interval
preference
prefix-export-limit
priority
realm
reference-bandwidth
retransmit-interval
rib-group
route-type-community
secondary
sham-link
sham-link-remote
shortcuts
simple-password
spf-options
stub
summaries
te-metric
traceoptions
traffic-engineering
traffic-engineering (OSPF)
traffic-engineering (Passive TE Mode)
transit-delay
transmit-interval
type-7
virtual-link
RIP Overview
RIP Overview
RIP Standards
RIP Packets
RIP Configuration Guidelines
Minimum RIP Configuration
Defining RIP Global Properties
Defining RIP Neighbor Properties
Configuring Authentication
Modifying the Incoming Metric
Configuring RIP Timers
Configuring the Number of Route Entries in an Update Message
Accepting Packets Whose Reserved Fields Are Nonzero
Configuring Update Messages
Configuring Routing Table Groups
Applying Import Policy
Configuring Group-Specific Properties
Applying Export Policy
Controlling Route Preference
Modifying the Outgoing Metric
Configuring Graceful Restart
Configuring the BFD Protocol
Disabling Strict Address Check
Tracing RIP Protocol Traffic
Example: Tracing RIP Protocol Traffic
Example: Configuring RIP
Summary of RIP Configuration Statements
any-sender
authentication-key
authentication-type
bfd-liveness-detection
check-zero
export
graceful-restart
group
holddown
import
message-size
metric-in
metric-out
neighbor
no-check-zero
preference
receive
rib-group
rip
route-timeout
send
traceoptions
update-interval
RIPng Overview
RIPng Overview
RIPng Standards
RIPng Packets
RIPng Configuration Guidelines
Minimum RIPng Configuration
Defining RIPng Global Properties
Defining RIPng Neighbor Properties
Modifying the Incoming Metric
Configuring RIPng Timers
Configuring Update Messages
Applying Import Policy
Configuring Group-Specific Properties
Applying Export Policy
Controlling Route Preference
Modifying the Outgoing Metric
Configuring Graceful Restart
Tracing RIPng Protocol Traffic
Example: Configuring RIPng
Summary of RIPng Configuration Statements
export
graceful-restart
group
holddown
import
metric-in
metric-out
neighbor
preference
receive
ripng
route-timeout
send
traceoptions
update-interval
ICMP Router Discovery Overview
ICMP Router Discovery Standards
Operation of a Router Discovery Server
Router Advertisement Messages
ICMP Router Discovery Configuration Guidelines
Minimum Router Discovery Server Configuration
Configuring the Addresses to Include in Router Advertisements
Configuring the Frequency of Router Advertisements
Modifying the Router Advertisement Lifetime
Tracing ICMP Protocol Traffic
Example: Tracing ICMP Protocol Traffic
Summary of ICMP Router Discovery Configuration Statements
address
advertise
broadcast
disable
ignore
ineligible
interface
lifetime
max-advertisement-interval
min-advertisement-interval
multicast
priority
router-discovery
traceoptions
Neighbor Discovery Overview
Neighbor Discovery Standards
Router Discovery
Address Resolution
Redirect
Neighbor Discovery Configuration Guidelines
Minimum Neighbor Discovery Configuration
Configuring Router Advertisement on an Interface
Configuring the Hop Limit
Modifying the Default Router Lifetime
Enabling Stateful Autoconfiguration
Configuring the Frequency of Router Advertisements
Modifying the Reachable Time Limit
Modifying the Frequency of Neighbor Solicitation Messages
Configuring Prefix Information
Setting the Prefix for Onlink Determination
Setting the Prefix for Stateless Address Autoconfiguration
Configuring the Preferred Lifetime
Configuring the Valid Lifetime
Tracing Router Advertisement Traffic
Summary of Neighbor Discovery Router Advertisement Configuration Statements
autonomous
current-hop-limit
default-lifetime
interface
managed-configuration
max-advertisement-interval
min-advertisement-interval
no-autonomous
no-managed-configuration
no-on-link
no-other-stateful-configuration
on-link
other-stateful-configuration
preferred-lifetime
prefix
reachable-time
retransmit-timer
router-advertisement
traceoptions
valid-lifetime
Secure Neighbor Discovery Configuration Guidelines
Enabling Secure Neighbor Discovery
Configuring Cryptographic Address Parameters
Specifying the Pathname for the Key File
Specifying the RSA Key Length
Configuring Timestamp Parameters
Tracing Secure Neighbor Discovery Traffic
Summary of Secure Neighbor Discovery Configuration Statements
cryptographic-address
key-length
key-pair
neighbor-discovery
secure
security-level
timestamp
traceoptions
BGP
BGP Overview
BGP Standards
Autonomous Systems
AS Paths and Attributes
External and Internal BGP
BGP Routes
BGP Messages
Open Messages
Update Messages
Keepalive Messages
Notification Messages
BGP Configuration Guidelines
Minimum BGP Configuration
Enabling BGP
Specifying the Local Router’s AS Number
Defining an AS Confederation and Its Members
Assigning a BGP Identifier
Defining BGP Global Properties
Defining BGP Groups and Peers
Defining a Group with Static Peers
Example: Defining a Large Number of Groups with Static Peers
Example: Defining a Small Number of Groups with Static Peers for Better Scalability
Defining a Group with Dynamic Peers
Defining the Group Type
Specifying the Peer’s AS Number
Defining Group Properties
Defining Peer Properties
Examples: Enabling BGP
Modifying the Hold-Time Value
Configuring MTU Discovery
Configuring Graceful Restart
Advertising an Explicit Null Label
Configuring Aggregate Labels for VPNs
Configuring Authentication
Applying IPsec Security Association
Opening a Peer Connection Passively
Configuring the Local IP Address
Configuring the Multiple Exit Discriminator Metric
Defining a MED Metric Directly
Using Routing Policy to Define a MED Metric
Examples: Configuring the MED Metric
Controlling the Aggregator Path Attribute
Configuring an EBGP Multihop Session
Configuring a Single-Hop EBGP Peer to Accept a Remote Next Hop
Example: Configure an Import Routing Policy for an EBGP Peer to Accept a Remote Next Hop
Configuring the BGP Local Preference
Controlling Route Preference
Examples: Controlling Route Preference
Configuring Routing Table Path Selection
Example: Always Comparing MEDs
Configuring BGP to Select Multiple BGP Paths
Configuring a Local AS
Examples: Configuring a Local AS
Removing Private AS Numbers from AS Paths
Configuring Route Reflection
Examples: Configuring Route Reflection
Enabling Route Flap Damping
Enabling Multiprotocol BGP
Limiting the Number of Prefixes Received on a BGP Peering Session
Limiting the Number of Prefixes Accepted on a BGP Peering Session
Configuring BGP Routing Table Groups
Resolving Routes to PE Routers Located in Other ASs
Allowing Labeled and Unlabeled Routes
Enabling BGP to Carry Flow-Specification Routes
Configuring Flow-Specification Routes for IPv4 Unicast
Configuring Flow-Specification Routes for Layer 3 VPNs
Enabling BGP to Carry Connectionless Network Services Routes
Example: Enabling CLNS Between Two Routers
Example: Configuring CLNS Within a VPN
Enabling Route Target Filtering
Configuring Prefix-Based Outbound Route Filtering
Enabling Layer 2 VPN and VPLS Signaling
Configuring BGP Routing Policy
Applying Routing Policy
Applying Policies to Routes Being Imported into the Routing Table from BGP
Applying Policies to Routes Being Exported from the Routing Table into BGP
Setting BGP to Advertise Inactive Routes
Configuring BGP to Advertise the Best External Route to Internal Peers
Configuring How Often BGP Exchanges Routes with the Routing Table
Disabling Suppression of Route Advertisements
Configuring EBGP Peering Using IPv6 Link-Local Address
Configuring IPv6 BGP Routes over IPv4 Transport
Example: Configuring IPv6 BGP Routes over IPv4 Transport
Configuring BGP to Log System Log Messages
Describing BGP Router Configuration
Blocking Nonpeer TCP Connection Attempts
Applying BGP Export Policy to VRF Routes
Enabling Next-Hop Reachability Information
Configuring the BFD Protocol
Configuring the Segment Size for TCP
Tracing BGP Protocol Traffic
Examples: Tracing BGP Protocol Traffic
Summary of BGP Configuration Statements
accept-remote-nexthop
accepted-prefix-limit
advertise-external
advertise-inactive
advertise-peer-as
aggregate-label
allow
as-override
authentication-algorithm
authentication-key
authentication-key-chain
authentication-key-chains
bfd-liveness-detection
bgp
bgp-orf-cisco-mode
cluster
damping
description
disable
explicit-null
export
family
flow
graceful-restart
group
hold-time
import
include-mp-next-hop
ipsec-sa
iso-vpn
keep
labeled-unicast
local-address
local-as
local-interface
local-preference
log-updown
metric-out
mtu-discovery
multihop
multipath
neighbor
no-advertise-peer-as
no-aggregator-id
no-client-reflect
no-validate
out-delay
outbound-route-filter
passive
path-selection
peer-as
preference
prefix-limit
remove-private
resolve-vpn
rib
rib-group
route-target
tcp-mss
traceoptions
type
vpn-apply-export
Indexes
Index
Index of Statements and Commands

[Contents] [Prev] [Next] [Index] [Report an Error]