Correct me if I am wrong but this:

> if an iBGP peer learns that another iBGP peer already has a better
> route to a specific prefix,  it will issue a withdrawl to that peer
> for the prefix(es).

is perfectly normal, standart behaviour.
If your Genuity route is better, you will select this route
in your routing table, and if by any chance before you had 
there UUNET route which you have advertised, you need to send
update with new, better, selected route.

BGP will never advertise both routes. 
This is distant vector after all.

So if during convergence phase your route selection 
is shuffling your routes in your Loc-RIB, you should
to expect series of updates to follow up.

Przemek


On Tue, 2002-02-05 at 16:45, W. Alan Robertson wrote:
> Folks,
> 
> Just to let you know, I ran across what looked like a bug in Cisco's
> BGP code...  Turns out, this is undocumented new behavior.
> 
> We just deployed a pair of 3640s for one of our customers, for
> dual-router, dual-homed Internet connectivity.  We are taking full
> tables from Genuity (AS 1), and Worldcom (AS 701).
> 
> Each router was learning 104,000+ prefixes from each of the external
> peers, but the iBGP peering was acting really strange.  One of the
> routers was learning the full table from the other, but the second
> router was only taking like 700 prefixes.
> 
> When we cleared the internal peer (soft or hard), we could see the
> whole table being transferred...  It would climb as though it were
> going to learn them all, and then as it approached 100,000 prefixes,
> it would rapidly drop back down to 700.  I debugged the iBGP peer, and
> saw it issuing withdrawls for all of these routes.
> 
> We opened a ticket with the TAC, and they initially believed it to be
> a bug as well.  Upon further review, they came back and told us that
> this was the desired behavior in the newer code (We are running
> 12.0(20) on these boxes).  In order to conserve memory, and processor,
> if an iBGP peer learns that another iBGP peer already has a better
> route to a specific prefix,  it will issue a withdrawl to that peer
> for the prefix(es).
> 
> I spent quite a while second guessing what seemed to be a very simple,
> straighforward configuration.  I have done several near identical
> deployments in the past.
> 
> I guess the moral is this:  If you know your config is correct, and
> the router behavior is not what you expect, do not hesitate to call
> the TAC.
> 
> I hope they are as helpful on Monday, when I call them from the CCIE
> Lab in RTP.  ;)
> 
> Regards...
> 
> Alan
> _________________________________________________________________
> CCIE Security list: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/security.html




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