proper peers. If the peers are members of a peer group however, the information can be sent to one place
and then passed onto the peers within the group.
Route Reflectors
Route reflectors reorganize the iBGP core into a hierarchy and allow some route advertisement rules.
NOTE:
Do not use route reflectors (RRs) in the forwarding path. In iBGP, hierarchal RRs maintaining
forwarding plane RRs could create routing loops.
Route reflection divides iBGP peers into two groups: client peers and nonclient peers. A route reflector and its
client peers form a route reflection cluster. Because BGP speakers announce only the best route for a given
prefix, route reflector rules are applied after the router makes its best path decision.
• If a route was received from a nonclient peer, reflect the route to all client peers.
• If the route was received from a client peer, reflect the route to all nonclient and all client peers.
To illustrate how these rules affect routing, refer to the following illustration and the following steps. Routers
B, C, D, E, and G are members of the same AS (AS100). These routers are also in the same Route Reflection
Cluster, where Router D is the Route Reflector. Router E and H are client peers of Router D; Routers B and C
and nonclient peers of Router D.
Figure 24. BGP Router Rules
1
Router B receives an advertisement from Router A through eBGP. Because the route is learned through
eBGP, Router B advertises it to all its iBGP peers: Routers C and D.
2
Router C receives the advertisement but does not advertise it to any peer because its only other peer is
Router D, an iBGP peer, and Router D has already learned it through iBGP from Router B.
3
Router D does not advertise the route to Router C because Router C is a nonclient peer and the route
advertisement came from Router B who is also a nonclient peer.
4
Router D does reflect the advertisement to Routers E and G because they are client peers of Router D.
5
Routers E and G then advertise this iBGP learned route to their eBGP peers Routers F and H.
Border Gateway Protocol IPv4 (BGPv4)
211
Summary of Contents for S4048T
Page 1: ...Dell Configuration Guide for the S4048T ON System 9 10 0 1 ...
Page 98: ... saveenv 7 Reload the system uBoot mode reset Management 98 ...
Page 113: ...Total CFM Pkts 10303 CCM Pkts 0 LBM Pkts 0 LTM Pkts 3 LBR Pkts 0 LTR Pkts 0 802 1ag 113 ...
Page 411: ...mode transit no disable Force10 Resilient Ring Protocol FRRP 411 ...
Page 590: ...Figure 67 Inspecting the LAG Configuration Link Aggregation Control Protocol LACP 590 ...
Page 646: ...Figure 87 Configuring Interfaces for MSDP Multicast Source Discovery Protocol MSDP 646 ...
Page 647: ...Figure 88 Configuring OSPF and BGP for MSDP Multicast Source Discovery Protocol MSDP 647 ...
Page 653: ...Figure 91 MSDP Default Peer Scenario 2 Multicast Source Discovery Protocol MSDP 653 ...
Page 654: ...Figure 92 MSDP Default Peer Scenario 3 Multicast Source Discovery Protocol MSDP 654 ...
Page 955: ...Figure 119 Single and Double Tag First byte TPID Match Service Provider Bridging 955 ...