Hi,
I'd like to establish a session with a peer I don't want to accept any
route of.
My first guess would be to set max-prefix 0
It seems however max-prefix 0 means no limit on the number of received
prefixes.
What is the best way to achieve this ?
Thanks
Laurent CARON(lca...@unix-scripts.info) on 2012.10.09 09:14:43 +0200:
Hi,
I'd like to establish a session with a peer I don't want to accept any
route of.
My first guess would be to set max-prefix 0
your first guess is wrong.
It seems however max-prefix 0 means no limit on the number
On Tue, Oct 09, 2012 at 10:18:24AM +0200, Sebastian Benoit wrote:
deny from $peer
Thanks Sebastian
Sylvain Coutant [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
well, your 2 plus the 5 from your other customers plus the
$max-prefix
The 5 is the $max_prefix. We have just only one BGP customer. Total is 7. I
should never have announced more than 7 routes in any case.
Is there any reason why you don't
Hi,
One funny thing today. One of our customer did announce us too many routes. The
max-prefix has been reached (was 5) and the session closed.
A few seconds later I saw several peering sessions go down in the logs but did
not thought about any links between events. Having had exchange with
* Sylvain Coutant [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2006-04-28 18:23]:
Hi,
One funny thing today. One of our customer did announce us too many routes.
The max-prefix has been reached (was 5) and the session closed.
A few seconds later I saw several peering sessions go down in the logs but
did not
well, your 2 plus the 5 from your other customers plus the
$max-prefix
The 5 is the $max_prefix. We have just only one BGP customer. Total is 7. I
should never have announced more than 7 routes in any case.
--
Sylvain COUTANT
ADVISEO
http://www.adviseo.fr/
http://www.open-sp.fr/
Tel: +33
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