Depending on the requirements:
I would use a low MED value to annouce the network out the link you want
traffic to come in on and a high MED on the other link for this network.
This will accomplish the desired effect of the network being reached through
a certain link, as well as provide redundancy incase that link fails.  If it
fails the higher MED will be the only link available, the network will still
be reachable from the world until the prefered link comes back up...and the
origianal link will take over again because of the lower MED value.




""Atef Rostom"" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
94h6j8$4fd$[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:94h6j8$4fd$[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> Hi All,
>
> I have a 7206 with 64M RAM (not enough to host all internet routes), I am
> running BGP and peering with my upstream ISP's router but filtering all
> incoming updates (low memory).
>
> Should this be any problem ?
>
> What I think is: I am using a static route to forward upstream traffic to
my
> provider so I don't need the internet's routing table. I want traffic
> destined to a certain network in my AS to reach me through this link so I
> will advertise this network only to that neighbor using a prefix-list.
>
> Please comment
>
> TIA, Atef
>
>
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