Re: BGP Question...?? [7:66919]

2003-04-05 Thread Salvatore De Luca
You are both right.. but the problem scenario does'nt give you that mutch info.. I am trying to deduce all and any ways of going about possible peering 128.1.1.254. The scenario does not specify if it is a directly connected peer on the lan segment. That is why I tried updating the source to the Et

Re: BGP Question...?? [7:66919]

2003-04-05 Thread Peter van Oene
At 03:46 PM 4/5/2003 +, Salvatore De Luca wrote: >Hi All, > > I am trying to better understand a particular BGP scenario, thought >someone might shed some light. This is probably very simple, i am just >missing the punchline. If you have 2 routers, one let's say running in AS100 >the other

Re: BGP Question...?? [7:66919]

2003-04-05 Thread Bullwinkle
unless the peers are on the same segment, you also need the neighbor ebgp-multihop command configured on both routers. HTH -- - Bullwinkle: Hey, Rocky, watch me pull a CCIE out of my hat! Rocky: Bullwinkle, that trick NEVER works Bullwinkle:

BGP Question...?? [7:66919]

2003-04-05 Thread Salvatore De Luca
Hi All, I am trying to better understand a particular BGP scenario, thought someone might shed some light. This is probably very simple, i am just missing the punchline. If you have 2 routers, one let's say running in AS100 the other running in AS200, and you had to EBGP peer with 128.1.1.254

address utilization for SWIP'd space (was BGP question) [7:62958]

2003-02-13 Thread bergenpeak
Sort of related question. When you SWIP the /24 to your customer, who is responsible for the address utilization? Said differently, can you get more addresses if you show that your /19 minus the customer /24 has the right level of utilization? Or, must the overall /19, including the customer's

Re: BGP Question [7:62914]

2003-02-12 Thread Darrell Newcomb
Jim, Continue to announce the /19 as before. You MAY want to also announce the /24 you've allocated to your downstream; depending upon the business relationship around this connectivity you may really want to announce the more specific /24. This is probably the critical choice you'll make. More

BGP Question [7:62914]

2003-02-12 Thread Jim Devane
Hi all, I am looking for some guidelines and I cannot find any relevant examples. I have a situation where I have SWIP'd a /24 of my address block to a customer downstream. They have their own AS and are multi-homed. My concern/question is: the /24 will originate from their AS and not mine. Is th

Re: BGP question. [7:62519]

2003-02-05 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Kaj J. Niemi)
Hi Rajesh, In mail.net.groupstudy.pro, you wrote: > I come across some situations where I could see some routes in the BGP > table, but those routes aren't there in the regular routing table. The > configuration has "no sync" configured and couldn't guess how to go > about it. Can somebody

Re: BGP question. [7:62519]

2003-02-05 Thread neil K.
Rajesh, Check the next hop for the BGP routes and see if it is reachable. If not you can use next-hop-self command to fix the issue or have IGP reach that next hop address. Hope this helps. Sunil Soporie ""Rajesh Kumar"" wrote in message [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]... > Hi all, >

BGP question. [7:62519]

2003-02-05 Thread Rajesh Kumar
Hi all, I come across some situations where I could see some routes in the BGP table, but those routes aren't there in the regular routing table. The configuration has "no sync" configured and couldn't guess how to go about it. Can somebody help me out here? thanks, r Message Posted at: h

RE: Specific BGP Question [7:58428]

2002-12-04 Thread Ozan Akdemir
: Jim Devane [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Tuesday, December 03, 2002 9:17 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Specific BGP Question [7:58428] Hello all, Long time lurker, first time poster. I have a router that is multi-homed between 16631 and 701. I have a new client who is buying transit

RE: Specific BGP Question [7:58428]

2002-12-04 Thread Jim Devane
All, First, thank you for all who replied! I appreciate the help. To summarize public and private responses, let me first point out there are likely several solutions to my problem. I am posting the one that I am most familiar with. nei Client_AS remote-as 18687 nei Client_AS version 4 nei Clien

Re: Specific BGP Question [7:58428]

2002-12-03 Thread YASSER ALY
Jim, I am confused here on what u are trying to accomplish. If your target is to make downstream traffic of your client to enter your AS through the 16631 rather than the 701, then what u need to do is prepend the routes received from your client using your AS many times before advertising them i

Re: Specific BGP Question [7:58428]

2002-12-03 Thread Kent Yu
From: "Jim Devane" To: Sent: Tuesday, December 03, 2002 2:16 AM Subject: Specific BGP Question [7:58428] > Hello all, > > Long time lurker, first time poster. > > I have a router that is multi-homed between 16631 and 701. > I have a new client who is buying transit from

Re: Specific BGP Question [7:58428]

2002-12-03 Thread Peter van Oene
Hi Jim, Some thoughts inline. On Tue, 2002-12-03 at 02:16, Jim Devane wrote: > Hello all, > > Long time lurker, first time poster. > > I have a router that is multi-homed between 16631 and 701. > I have a new client who is buying transit from us. > They are multi-homed to us and 1239. > A bu

Re: Specific BGP Question [7:58428]

2002-12-03 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED]
; To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] cc:(bcc: Vinay S Jamwal/HSS) Subject: Specific BGP Question [7:58428] Hello all, Long time lurker, first time poster. I have a router that is multi-homed between 16631 and 701. I have a new client who is buying transit from us. They are multi-homed to us and 1239

Specific BGP Question [7:58428]

2002-12-02 Thread Jim Devane
Hello all, Long time lurker, first time poster. I have a router that is multi-homed between 16631 and 701. I have a new client who is buying transit from us. They are multi-homed to us and 1239. A business decision was made to policy route their traffic out 16631. As a result I will only publi

Re: BGP question. [7:55944]

2002-10-22 Thread Jose Tomás Pinal Salvador
TED] >CC: [EMAIL PROTECTED] >Subject: Re: BGP question. [7:55944] >Date: Sat, 19 Oct 2002 18:57:12 + > _ Unlimited Internet access -- and 2 months free! Try MSN. http://resourcecenter.msn.com/access/plans/2m

Re: BGP question. [7:55944]

2002-10-19 Thread YASSER ALY
1- Try to remove the prepending you did and see whether things will come back to normal or not. 2- If it came back to normal condition then check the way you are configuring this route-map and discuss it with your ISP to get more feedback from him The processor & memory readings you provided are

BGP question. [7:55944]

2002-10-19 Thread Jose Tomás Pinal Salvador
Hello Study Group. Currently I have 3 differents BGP sesions establish with 3 differents providers. Each provider announce me about 115400 prefixs. Yesterday I was making traffic load balacing between then, using the prepend comand such others days (this actions are doing often in order to use

RE: unusual BGP question. [7:54429]

2002-10-04 Thread Radoslav Vasilev
you're right MED is used for outgoing routing decisions, but... 1.as a optional nontransit path-atribute, it's only important for the neighboring AS. as such, it determines the neighboring AS outgoing decisions, not our own AS ones. e.g if you change MEDs in our routing updates, it causes change

RE: unusual BGP question. [7:54429]

2002-09-29 Thread Jim Brown
. -Original Message- From: suaveguru [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Sunday, September 29, 2002 1:31 AM To: Jim Brown; [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: RE: unusual BGP question. [7:54429] I have the impression that MED is only for outbound traffic . For inbound traffic try prepending the routes that you

RE: unusual BGP question. [7:54429]

2002-09-29 Thread suaveguru
hat about modify the MED of the route? > > -Original Message- > From: Casey, Paul (6822) [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] > Sent: Saturday, September 28, 2002 9:51 AM > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Subject: unusual BGP question. [7:54429] > > > Hello, > > Anyone

RE: unusual BGP question. [7:54429]

2002-09-28 Thread Jim Brown
What about modify the MED of the route? -Original Message- From: Casey, Paul (6822) [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Saturday, September 28, 2002 9:51 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: unusual BGP question. [7:54429] Hello, Anyone any thought on the following lab Im working on, AS

Re: unusual BGP question. [7:54429]

2002-09-28 Thread Russell Heilling
""Casey, Paul (6822)"" wrote in message [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]... > Hello, > > Anyone any thought on the following lab Im working on, > > AS 1 and AS2 are connected to AS3 via EBGP as well as each other. > (Triangular fashion) > AS1 and AS2 both originate and advertise the ne

Re: unusual BGP question. [7:54429]

2002-09-28 Thread Chuck's Long Road
First of all, there are no "unusual" questions regarding BGP. BGP is all about doing bizarre things in order to meet SLA's or fulfill contractual obligations and customer requirements. One might conclude that there is nothing "usual" or "normal" about BGP Focus on how BGP installs a route, and

unusual BGP question. [7:54429]

2002-09-28 Thread Casey, Paul (6822)
Hello, Anyone any thought on the following lab Im working on, AS 1 and AS2 are connected to AS3 via EBGP as well as each other. (Triangular fashion) AS1 and AS2 both originate and advertise the network 81.0.0.0/8 in to EBGP to AS3 Objective: Ensure that AS3 routes to 81.0.0.0/8 via AS 1. Lo

Re: BGP Question [7:47646]

2002-06-27 Thread Georg Pauwen
>[EMAIL PROTECTED] >Subject: Re: BGP Question >Date: Thu, 27 Jun 2002 17:28:45 -0700 > >configs seem right, unless i overlooked something...some people have >reported that it works on some IOS, what IOS are you using? have you tried >different versions? > >At 0

RE: BGP Question [7:47600]

2002-06-27 Thread Vicuna, Mark
Annju, seems like you are missing the 192.net statement in R2 for IGRP. HTH, Mark. -Original Message- From: Andy Fang [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Friday, 28 June 2002 8:09 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: RE: BGP Question [7:47600] Backdoor net admin distance = 200 EBGP net

Re: BGP Question [7:47618]

2002-06-27 Thread David Luu
configs seem right, unless i overlooked something...some people have reported that it works on some IOS, what IOS are you using? have you tried different versions? At 01:23 PM 6/27/2002 -0700, Annu Roopa wrote: >Group, > >Here is a BGP scenario whic is troubling me. what am i >doing wrong ? The

RE: BGP Question [7:47600]

2002-06-27 Thread Andy Fang
: Thursday, June 27, 2002 4:23 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: BGP Question Group, Here is a BGP scenario whic is troubling me. what am i doing wrong ? The scenario is about BGP backdoor and it looks like this. eBGP eBGP 172.16.1.0 10.1.1.0 R2-R10

RE: BGP Question [7:47597]

2002-06-27 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Roopa Sent: Thursday, June 27, 2002 4:23 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: BGP Question Group, Here is a BGP scenario whic is troubling me. what am i doing wrong ? The scenario is about BGP backdoor and it looks like this. eBGP eBGP 172.16.1.0 10.

RE: BGP Question [7:46255]

2002-06-11 Thread timothy thielen
I may be off on this, but I think the bgp always-compare-med command enables the comparison of MEDs from different AS's for best path determination, but it does not make it the primary criteria. MED comparison is like step 6 in the path determination algorithm. check the following link on the Ci

Re: BGP question? [7:46230]

2002-06-11 Thread MADMAN
You could configure BGP on this link also but prepend the AS a few times to make it less attactive. Don't learn any routes over this link but instead point a default route with a high metric. This is ASSuming you want to use this T1 only in the event you loose the other two links, this is not cle

BGP Question [7:46255]

2002-06-11 Thread Hunt Lee
Hello, I have 3 routers:- 150.150.150.0/24 | | | | R1 R2R3 (AS1)(AS2) (AS3) R1 - R2,

Re: BGP question? [7:46230]

2002-06-10 Thread Julian Eccli
Hi Nabil, If you want to ensure your NLRI is propogated through the net on the T1 actively before any possible DR scenarios take place I would recommend prepending your AS number a bunch of times (5-6 times should be more than enough) on the T1 backup link for your outbound route-map. This would

BGP question? [7:46230]

2002-06-10 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Greetings, We currently have to internet connections, one UUNET and one Sprint with full routing table. We're adding an additional site with a T1 to UUNET as a disaster recovery. What's the best way to setup the new T1 list? We need to advertise our network so users can get to our web server. A

RE: BGP question [7:43163]

2002-05-03 Thread Ladrach, Daniel E.
Customer needs to get their own AS. Daniel Ladrach CCNA, CCNP WorldCom > -Original Message- > From: Junkie [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] > Sent: Thursday, May 02, 2002 9:48 PM > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Subject: RE: BGP question [7:43163] > > > You shouldn

RE: BGP question [7:43163]

2002-05-02 Thread Junkie
ehalf Of Steven A. Ridder Sent: Thursday, May 02, 2002 4:28 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: BGP question [7:43163] Here's a question I can't seem to answer. I came up with a scenario in my head, and now I can't find a solution. Example: I have a dual homed network via BGP. I hav

RE: BGP question [7:43163]

2002-05-02 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED]
3:36 PM To: cisco Cc: lafraia Subject: Re: BGP question [7:43163] AFAIK, they couldn't. In this case you would have to apply for your own independent range of addresses and ISP1 and ISP2 would have to advertise these routes for you. In this case you would use communities, med, as_path prepend and

Re: BGP question [7:43163]

2002-05-02 Thread Peter van Oene
If you don't advertise reachability, you aren't reachable. You should however be able to get one ISP to allow the other to route its space. Otherwise, you're looking at getting some PI space, multihoming to the same ISP, or using some load balancing tools to handle things via dns. Pete At

Re: BGP question [7:43163]

2002-05-02 Thread John Neiberger
In this scenario it wouldn't matter who assigned the addresses to you. You will be advertising those addresses via BGP to both ISPs, who in turn should propagate those advertisements. I believe there are situations where ISP2 would need some sort of verification from ISP1 that it's okay to adver

Re: BGP question [7:43163]

2002-05-02 Thread Daniel Lafraia
AFAIK, they couldn't. In this case you would have to apply for your own independent range of addresses and ISP1 and ISP2 would have to advertise these routes for you. In this case you would use communities, med, as_path prepend and other stuff to influence the incoming traffic. ""Steven A. Ridder

BGP question [7:43163]

2002-05-02 Thread Steven A. Ridder
Here's a question I can't seem to answer. I came up with a scenario in my head, and now I can't find a solution. Example: I have a dual homed network via BGP. I have ISP 1 and they give me 209.21.220.1/20 for use, and ISP gives me 199.33.23.1/21. Say I use the 209.x.x.x for my web servers, mai

Re: BGP Question [7:42847]

2002-04-29 Thread Johnny Routin
The number of entries only implies the number of alternate paths available to reach that network. BGP will only use the best path available by default. In your example there is only one path available to that network. This is not indicative of any problems with BGP, only a lack of redundancy to

BGP Question [7:42847]

2002-04-29 Thread Anil Gupte
If I look for BGP info on an IP using one of the Looking Glass sites (specifically Mae-East) does the number of entries returned mean anything? I have noticed that sometimes there are five or six entries and sometimes only one or two. The number of upstream connections is two. If only one entry

Re: BGP question [7:41132]

2002-04-10 Thread Steven A. Ridder
I guess it would eb possible with route-maps. -- RFC 1149 Compliant. Get in my head: http://sar.dynu.com ""Kim Seng"" wrote in message [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]... > My network has an Internet Border router. The router > has two ISPs connection: UUNET(T3) and SPRINT(T1). We >

Re: BGP question [7:41132]

2002-04-10 Thread Anthony Pace
You could set the local preference to be higher on the routes comming in via the prefered provider and prepend your own AS onto the aggrigate route you send out to the non-prefered provider. For the one /24 that you want to go in/out via the backup provider you could use a route-map to "source-r

BGP question [7:41132]

2002-04-10 Thread Kim Seng
My network has an Internet Border router. The router has two ISPs connection: UUNET(T3) and SPRINT(T1). We have a supernet class B: 18x.18x.0.0/16. Can I configure the router so that only one of the class C subnet of this supernet for example 18x.18x.1.0/24 to use the SPRINT link for both inbound

Re: BGP question [7:40525]

2002-04-06 Thread Peter van Oene
gt; > routers rather badly. The original poster referred to 2600s and 3600s > > inside the AS. > > > > JMcL > > - Forwarded by Jenny Mcleod/NSO/CSDA on 05/04/2002 09:36 am - > > > > "Lomker, Michael" > > Sent by: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > 05/04/

Re: BGP question [7:40525]

2002-04-05 Thread MADMAN
Simple. Run HSRP between the two routers. All packets are sent to the active router and if the other 7206 has a better route the packet goes back on to the LAN and out that 7206's Internet link. Dave "Steven A. Ridder" wrote: > If I had 2 7206 routers dual homed to two different ISP's for

Re: BGP question [7:40525]

2002-04-05 Thread MADMAN
- Forwarded by Jenny Mcleod/NSO/CSDA on 05/04/2002 09:36 am > > - > > > > > > "Lomker, Michael" > > Sent by: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > 05/04/2002 08:38 am > > Please respond to "Lomker, Michael" > > > > > > To:

Re: BGP question [7:40525]

2002-04-05 Thread MADMAN
leod/NSO/CSDA on 05/04/2002 09:36 am - > > "Lomker, Michael" > Sent by: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > 05/04/2002 08:38 am > Please respond to "Lomker, Michael" > > > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > cc: > Subject:RE: BGP question [7

RE: BGP question [7:40525]

2002-04-05 Thread John Jackson
This is how I would skin this cat ;) Run Ethernet between your two gateway routers, then make them IBGP peers. Have have your other routers connected to both gateway routers. Your 3600, and 2600's should then do per-dest load balancing for their default route. The smaller routers send their tr

RE: BGP question [7:40525]

2002-04-05 Thread Gregory Stemberger
Steve, If it is optimal routing that your after, I would think that you could still have your some of your internal 3600's or 2600's run BGP with your 2 gateway routers, but just don't send the full internet routing table to them. For instance, you could possibly put up as-path filters to allow

Re: BGP question [7:40525]

2002-04-05 Thread Peter van Oene
Short answer. If you want all the routers in your AS to have full knowledge of prefixes, buy some memory and extend your BGP cloud to include them. Otherwise, follow a dynamic default and live with suboptimal routing. Adding the third router as you suggest is a helpful option. However, in

RE: BGP question [7:40525]

2002-04-05 Thread Fly Ers
aren't the 2 7206 dual homed, 2 connections to each ISP? why not run hsrp on the 7206 and let those routers make decisions for all internal routers? >From: "Ouellette, Tim" >Reply-To: "Ouellette, Tim" >To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] >Subject: RE: BGP question [

Re: BGP question [7:40525]

2002-04-04 Thread nrf
It is absolutely not what people do, at least they better not be doing that. Think about this. The current BGP route table is about 100,000 routes. If you want redundancy, that means multiple routers as ASBR's, and if you're talking OSPF as an IGP, then each ASBR then has to generate a type-5 LS

RE: BGP question [7:40525]

2002-04-04 Thread Alex Lei
enny Mcleod/NSO/CSDA on 05/04/2002 09:36 am > - > > > "Lomker, Michael" > Sent by: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > 05/04/2002 08:38 am > Please respond to "Lomker, Michael" > > > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > cc: > Subje

RE: BGP question [7:40525]

2002-04-04 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED]
02 09:36 am - "Lomker, Michael" Sent by: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 05/04/2002 08:38 am Please respond to "Lomker, Michael" To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] cc: Subject:RE: BGP question [7:40525] > Why is redistribution into an IGP a big no - no?

RE: BGP question [7:40525]

2002-04-04 Thread Ouellette, Tim
#x27;ve implemented such a design. In short, I'm thinking that if you want a 2600/3600 to make a decision on which 7200 to go out of for a specific route, it has to know about it. Tim -Original Message- From: Steven A. Ridder [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Thursday, April 04, 2002

Re: BGP question [7:40525]

2002-04-04 Thread Scott H.
Smaller routers couldn't handle all these routes. Can anybody say "mushroom cloud"? ""Lomker, Michael"" wrote in message [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]... > > Why is redistribution into an IGP a big no - no? My > > understanding is that this is what people usually do. > > You'd have

RE: BGP question [7:40525]

2002-04-04 Thread Lomker, Michael
> Why is redistribution into an IGP a big no - no? My > understanding is that this is what people usually do. You'd have to be careful about advertising those routes back out to BGP again. There was a famous case of someone bringing down the Internet by creating such a loop. Needless to say, t

RE: BGP question [7:40525]

2002-04-04 Thread Alex Lei
Steve, Why is redistribution into an IGP a big no - no? My understanding is that this is what people usually do. If you use OSPF and E2 routes on the third router, then OSPF should find the optimal route. Alex Steven A. Ridder wrote: > > If I had 2 7206 routers dual homed to two different ISP

BGP question [7:40525]

2002-04-04 Thread Steven A. Ridder
If I had 2 7206 routers dual homed to two different ISP's for redundancy, I know I don't NEED the full bgp table, but if I were to accept them for optimal routing within my network, how would I tell my internal routers who don;t run BGP which of the two 7206 routers to go to for a specific route o

BGP Question [7:40128]

2002-04-01 Thread Hunt Lee
I found an example of BGP "next-hop" Attribute from Internet Routing Arch (by Halabi) - Any explanation will be appreciate. Router A, B & C are all in the same AS, while Router D is in a separate AS. Not the best diagram :) Basically:-Router A & Router B are running IBGP

BGP Question [7:38858]

2002-03-19 Thread Alejandro Acosta
Hi all, I am having a BGP problem, and I am not sure how to solve it. Like Jeff Doyle's book says: BGP is not a difficult problem, the problem is the scenario. This is the scenario that I have: --- | I N T E R N E T | --- |Link A

BGP question [7:35459]

2002-02-14 Thread Hunt Lee
Tom, Can you please elaborate how the outbound filter with the community tag of no-export would help... as I'm still not too clear what it will achieve. And sorry for the stupid question... Thanks again. Best Regards, Hunt Lee WebCentral ""Tom Martin"" wrote in message [EMAIL PROTECTED]">ne

Re: IPexpert BGP question. [7:34932]

2002-02-08 Thread Engelhard M. Labiro
Configure a confederation inside the AS 200 ! > Point no 4 says : Configure R7 and R8 in AS65078.- >This was done. Configure R7 and R8 such that if any new > routers were added to the 150.50.4.0 subnet they could peer > to R7 or R8 in AS200 > Configure R7 and R8 as peers - This is done too

Re: IPexpert BGP question. [7:34932]

2002-02-08 Thread Chuck Larrieu
think "local-as" happy researching! Chuck ""Rajesh Kumar"" wrote in message [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]... > Hi all, > > I have some queries in the BGP lab scenario - Sec 6 in IPEXPERT lab. > > Point no 4 says : Configure R7 and R8 in AS65078.- This was done. >

IPexpert BGP question. [7:34932]

2002-02-08 Thread Rajesh Kumar
Hi all, I have some queries in the BGP lab scenario - Sec 6 in IPEXPERT lab. Point no 4 says : Configure R7 and R8 in AS65078.- This was done. Configure R7 and R8 such that if any new routers were added to the 150.50.4.0 subnet they could peer to R7 or R8 in AS2

RE: BGP question, why do I get "Not advertised to [7:31468]

2002-01-10 Thread s vermill
I must be going blind. I now see that a couple of other folks had suggestions that sound a little more reasonable. Sorry about that. Let us all know. Message Posted at: http://www.groupstudy.com/form/read.php?f=7&i=31606&t=31468 -- FAQ, list arc

RE: BGP question, why do I get "Not advertised to [7:31468]

2002-01-10 Thread s vermill
Tom, Did you ever get an answer to your question? I had hoped someone would chime in on this one. I was wondering if it had something to do with subnet zero? Something doesn't seem right about that in the back of my mind, but as you pointed out, the configs are pretty much the same otherwise.

Re: Help Please! BGP question, why do I get "Not advertised to [7:31580]

2002-01-10 Thread Curtis Phillips
One thing may be that 100.0.0.0 is a class B network. You have it subnetted. try no auto-summary under BGP process on both routers - Original Message - From: "Kane, Christopher A." To: Sent: Thursday, January 10, 2002 1:46 PM Subject: RE: Help Please! BGP question, why do

RE: Help Please! BGP question, why do I get "Not advertised to [7:31571]

2002-01-10 Thread Kane, Christopher A.
My route-map name matches the route map that I am calling in my nei statement to 10.0.0.33 on rtrB (9.9.9.9). HTH, Chris -Original Message- From: Tom Pruneau [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Thursday, January 10, 2002 8:33 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Help Please! BGP question, why d

RE: Help Please! BGP question, why do I get "Not advertised to [7:31541]

2002-01-10 Thread Kane, Christopher A.
see if that solves the problem. Chris -Original Message- From: Tom Pruneau [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Thursday, January 10, 2002 8:33 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Help Please! BGP question, why do I get "Not advertised to any [7:31528] BGP question, why do I get

RE: Help Please! BGP question, why do I get "Not advertised to [7:31539]

2002-01-10 Thread Kane, Christopher A.
t the problem is. If I don't see anything with the results you give us, I'll lab it up real quick. Chris -Original Message- From: Tom Pruneau [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Thursday, January 10, 2002 8:33 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Help Please! BGP question, why do I get &qu

Help Please! BGP question, why do I get "Not advertised to any [7:31528]

2002-01-10 Thread Tom Pruneau
BGP question, why do I get "Not advertised to any peer" Below is from an isolated lab configuration, appologies to the actual owners of any addresses of AS numbers used. I have two routers connected together via a serial line. They are in AS400. They are both connected to AS100 v

Re: BGP question, why do I get "Not advertised to any peer" [7:31494]

2002-01-09 Thread c1sc0k1d
My guess would be the next hop address is not in the routing table and therefore the route is not advertised to any external peers. The k1d ""Tom Pruneau"" wrote in message [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]... > BGP question, why do I get "Not ad

BGP question, why do I get "Not advertised to any peer" [7:31468]

2002-01-09 Thread Tom Pruneau
BGP question, why do I get "Not advertised to any peer" Below is from an isolated lab configuration, appologies to the actual owners of any addresses of AS numbers used. I have two routers connected together via a serial line. They are in AS400. They are both connected to AS100 v

RE: BGP question [7:27879]

2001-11-30 Thread Jesse Loggins
I am supprised that no one has explained this in normal terms to you so far. Here goes. Under normal operation (in your case) BGP will not advertise a network unless it learns it from an IGP first (in BGP's case it will consider a static route an IGP route). You can make BGP advertise a network n

RE: BGP question [7:27879]

2001-11-30 Thread Stephen C
none line aux 0 line vty 0 4 login ! end -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Mcfadden, Chuck Sent: Friday, November 30, 2001 3:21 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: RE: BGP question [7:27879] Can we see your whole config? ccie1ab -Original

RE: BGP question [7:27879]

2001-11-30 Thread Mcfadden, Chuck
Can we see your whole config? ccie1ab -Original Message- From: Bill Carter [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Friday, November 30, 2001 4:44 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: RE: BGP question [7:27879] You have to have IP connectivity to your neighbor before BGP will work. Static routes

RE: BGP question [7:27879]

2001-11-30 Thread Andy Hoang
router bgp 200 redistribute connected subnet Not having the whole configs, I'm not sure where you pick up the default route. -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Stephen C Sent: Friday, November 30, 2001 12:37 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subj

RE: BGP question [7:27879]

2001-11-30 Thread Bill Carter
It may work, but in real world redistributing from IGP to BGP is very bad practice. -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Stephane LITKOWSKI Sent: Friday, November 30, 2001 3:23 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: BGP question [7:27879] You

RE: BGP question [7:27879]

2001-11-30 Thread Logan, Harold
mmunity College > -Original Message- > From: Stephen C [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] > Sent: Friday, November 30, 2001 3:37 PM > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Subject: BGP question [7:27879] > > > When configuring BGP on a "singlehome" net, everything I read > says

RE: BGP question [7:27879]

2001-11-30 Thread Stephen C
bject: RE: BGP question [7:27879] You have to have IP connectivity to your neighbor before BGP will work. Static routes will get you the same thing as RIP. -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Stephen C Sent: Friday, November 30, 2001 2:37

RE: BGP question [7:27879]

2001-11-30 Thread Bill Carter
You have to have IP connectivity to your neighbor before BGP will work. Static routes will get you the same thing as RIP. -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Stephen C Sent: Friday, November 30, 2001 2:37 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: BGP

Re: BGP question [7:27879]

2001-11-30 Thread Stephane LITKOWSKI
You need to announce all your local subnets : - by using the network command, u can announce all subnets already placed in the routing table by an IGP - by redistributing your IGP on BGP using the "redistribute " command in "router bgp" config mode I see some OSPF routes in your routing table, so

BGP question [7:27879]

2001-11-30 Thread Stephen C
When configuring BGP on a "singlehome" net, everything I read says the basic config commands are ... for S 0\0 to S 0\0 (200.200.1.1 to 200.200.1.2) wire 200.200.1.0 Router-A(config)#router bgp [as#] Router-A(config-router)#network [subnet#] Router-A(config-router)#neighbo

Re: BGP question [7:25130]

2001-11-04 Thread Nigel Taylor
is out yet.. .? Nigel - Original Message - From: "Chuck Larrieu" To: Sent: Sunday, November 04, 2001 5:55 PM Subject: Re: BGP question [7:25130] > OK. I did some basic testing. Here is what I found: > > if you use the neighbor a.b.c.d local-as form of the command, the

RE: BGP question [7:25130]

2001-11-04 Thread Chris White
re the route has been. > -Original Message- > From: news [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] > Sent: Monday, November 05, 2001 2:53 AM > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Subject: Re: BGP question [7:25130] > > Hi > > what I am trying to achieve is as follow > > AS 100 is connec

RE: BGP question [7:25130]

2001-11-04 Thread Baety Wayne A1C 18 CS/SCBX
Systems Trainer -Original Message- From: news [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Monday, November 05, 2001 2:53 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: BGP question [7:25130] Hi what I am trying to achieve is as follow AS 100 is connected to AS 200. AS 200 is connected to AS 300 AS 100 has route from

Re: BGP question [7:25130]

2001-11-04 Thread Chuck Larrieu
have an autonomous system number of > 300 > > for the purpose of peering: > > > > router bgp 109 > > address-family ipv4 multicast > > network 172.20.0.0 > > neighbor 172.20.1.1 local-as 300 > > > > The following router configuration example shows the

Re: BGP question [7:25130]

2001-11-04 Thread news
0.0 > neighbor 172.20.1.1 local-as 300 > > > end of stuff from CCO > - > > > ""adam lee"" wrote in message > [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]... > > What version of IOS is that command in? I am using 12.0(9) and i

Re: BGP question [7:25130]

2001-11-04 Thread Chuck Larrieu
(9) and it's not in > there. > > -Original Message- > From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of > news > Sent: Saturday, November 03, 2001 12:23 PM > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Subject: Re: BGP question [7:25130] > > > I think

RE: BGP question [7:25130]

2001-11-04 Thread adam lee
I am fairly inexperienced with bgp. Could you or anyone tell me what is the purpose of your excercise? -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of adam lee Sent: Saturday, November 03, 2001 7:26 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: RE: BGP question [7

RE: BGP question [7:25130]

2001-11-03 Thread adam lee
What version of IOS is that command in? I am using 12.0(9) and it's not in there. -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of news Sent: Saturday, November 03, 2001 12:23 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: BGP question [7:25130] I think

Re: BGP question [7:25130]

2001-11-03 Thread news
I think I got the correct answer On R3, use neighbor ip address local-as AS# Faisal ""Wojtek Zlobicki"" wrote in message [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]... > Oops, > > I misunderstood the question... what is the correct answer ? > > > How is this command going to change the AS path l

Re: BGP question [7:25130]

2001-11-03 Thread news
I don't know, I am looking for the answer for myself. Faisal ""Wojtek Zlobicki"" wrote in message [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]... > Oops, > > I misunderstood the question... what is the correct answer ? > > > How is this command going to change the AS path list. The require task >

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