Hi;
1)Regarding to RFC 1997 and 1998, the RFC describe the usage of AA:NN
format.
2)The communitiy is a set of four octet and represent as hex.
3)The first 2 octetc are the autononus systeerm and the last 2 octets
are an administratively definied identifier.
4)The default by cisco
I would say,
All routes will be matched and send out with a community of 6461:701.
I'm not 100% sure, but I think the additive keyword, just specifies to
keep previous communities that were attached to the routes.
The communities can be used by your BGP peer to apply some route
filtering/modific
hi Anyone knows what this means in BGP communities
context ?
route-map BBB permit 10
set community 6461:701 additive
regards,
suaveguru
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>good explanation but still can you be a bit more
>layman ?
To be quite honest, no, not within an email message. Generating BGP
routes can foul up not just one's own network, but the Internet as a
whole. It is not a simple subject.
At CertificationZone, I wrote a 3-part tutorial, perhaps 100
>suaveguru wrote:
>>
>> knows anything below what it does ?
>>
>> route-map MikeTest permit 10
>> set community 6461:701 additive
>
>Adds community 6461:701 to the list of communities
>carried with the route. Without keyword 'additive',
>it will remove other communities.
>
>It is used with BGP
suaveguru wrote:
>
> knows anything below what it does ?
>
> route-map MikeTest permit 10
> set community 6461:701 additive
Adds community 6461:701 to the list of communities
carried with the route. Without keyword 'additive',
it will remove other communities.
It is used with BGP.
Saa
hi anyone
knows anything below what it does ?
route-map MikeTest permit 10
set community 6461:701 additive
suaveguru
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