
Chapter 29
| IP Routing Commands
Policy-based Routing for BGP
– 1006 –
Console(config-route-map)#set community 20:01
Console(config-route-map)#
Related Commands
set extcommunity
This command sets the extended community attributes of routing messages. Use
the
no
form to remove this entry from a route map.
Syntax
set extcommunity
{
rt
extended
-
community-value
|
soo
extended
-
community-value
}
no set extcommunity
[
rt
|
soo
]
rt
– The route target extended community attribute.
soo
– The site of origin extended community attribute.
extended
-
community-value
– The route target or site of origin in one of the
following formats:
AAAA
:
NN
or
AA
:
NNNN
– Community-number to deny or permit. The
community number can either be formatted as a 4-byte autonomous
system number and a 2-byte network number, or as a 2-byte
autonomous system number and a 4-byte network number, separated
by one colon. Each 2-byte number can range from 0 to 65535, and 4-
byte numbers from 0 to 4294967295.
IP
:
NN
– Community to deny or permit. The community number is
composed of a 4-byte IP address (representing the autonomous system
number) and a 2-byte network number, separated by one colon. The 2-
byte network number can range from 0 to 65535.
One or more community numbers can be entered, separated by a
space. Up to 3 community numbers are supported.
Command Mode
Route Map
Command Usage
◆
Using the
rt
keyword to specify new route targets replaces existing route
targets.
◆
The route target (RT) attribute is used to identify sites that may receive routes
tagged with a specific route target. Using this attribute allows that route to be
placed in per-site forwarding tables used for routing traffic received from the
corresponding sites.
◆
The site of origin (SOO) attribute is used to identify the site from which the
provider edge (PE) router learned the route. All routes learned from a particular
Summary of Contents for AS5700-54X
Page 42: ...Contents 42...
Page 44: ...Figures 44...
Page 52: ...Tables 52...
Page 54: ...Section I Getting Started 54...
Page 80: ...Chapter 1 Initial Switch Configuration Setting the System Clock 80...
Page 210: ...Chapter 6 Remote Monitoring Commands 210...
Page 358: ...Chapter 9 Access Control Lists ACL Information 358...
Page 418: ...Chapter 12 Port Mirroring Commands RSPAN Mirroring Commands 418...
Page 436: ...Chapter 15 UniDirectional Link Detection Commands 436...
Page 442: ...Chapter 16 Address Table Commands 442...
Page 506: ...Chapter 18 VLAN Commands Configuring VXLAN Tunneling 506...
Page 526: ...Chapter 19 Class of Service Commands Priority Commands Layer 3 and 4 526...
Page 544: ...Chapter 20 Quality of Service Commands 544...
Page 652: ...Chapter 22 Multicast Filtering Commands MLD Proxy Routing 652...
Page 680: ...Chapter 23 LLDP Commands 680...
Page 722: ...Chapter 24 CFM Commands Delay Measure Operations 722...
Page 732: ...Chapter 25 Domain Name Service Commands 732...
Page 790: ...Chapter 27 IP Interface Commands ND Snooping 790...
Page 1072: ...Section III Appendices 1072...
Page 1102: ...List of CLI Commands 1102...
Page 1115: ......
Page 1116: ...AS5700 54X AS6700 32X E032016 ST R02 149100000198A...