Distribute
: Allow this static route to be distributed via a routing protocol (
Network Settings
→
Routing Protocols
).
Routing Protocols
NOTE: Routing Protocols require a feature license. Go to
System Settings
→
Feature Licenses
to enable these features.
A routing protocol is a protocol that specifies how routers communicate with each other, disseminating information that enables them to select routes between any two nodes
on a computer network. Routing algorithms choose the route. Each router has a prior knowledge only of networks attached to it directly. A routing protocol shares this
information first among immediate neighbors, and then throughout the network. This way, routers gain knowledge of the topology of the network.
Choose from the following tabs to configure routing protocols:
BGP Routing
OSPF Routing
RIP Routing
RIPNG Routing
Route Maps and Filters
BGP Routing
The latest version of BGP (Border Gateway Protocol) is version 4. BGP-4 is one of the Exterior Gateway Protocols and de facto standard of Inter Domain routing protocol.
BGP-4 is described in RFC1771, A Border Gateway Protocol 4 (BGP-4). BGP is a distance vector routing protocol, and the AS-Path framework provides distance vector
metric and loop detection to BGP. RFC1930.
BGP Editor
Name
: Unique name of the policy.
ASN
: The AS (Autonomous System) number is one of the essential elements of BGP.
Router-ID
: This sets the router-ID of the BGP process. The router-ID may be an IP address of the router, but need not be – it can be any arbitrary 32-bit
number. However it MUST be unique within the entire BGP domain to the BGP speaker: bad things will happen if multiple BGP speakers are configured with the
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