So if the lab task actually said "using a prefix-list" I would probably do
exactly what it says and use the prefix-list directly on the neighbor,
particularly if I've read the entire lab (you did that, right?) and
determined that I wouldn't have to do any other outbound policy that would
require a route-map.

That said, if the lab did not specify "using a prefix-list" and just said
"ensure R2 advertises only a default route to blah blah blah", then I think
either the route-map or prefix-list would be acceptable.



On Tue, Mar 4, 2014 at 6:10 PM, freddy morales <[email protected]>wrote:

> Sorry I meant the command neighbor prefix-list!
>
> From: [email protected]
> Sent: Tuesday, March 04, 2014 6:07 PM
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: LAB 18 volume 1
>
> OK so this task asked to only allow a default route using a prefix-list
> and it is all bgp... I created the prefix-list but used a route-map to
> match it and on the solutions guide I noticed the neighbor filter-list
> command was used instead. So my question is: in the actual exam, if I do
> the route-map matching the prefix-list instead of the neighbor filter-list
> command.. does that still counts? I mean I AM using a prefix-list after all.
>
>
> Thanks!
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