BGP speaker to send a notification message to the peer generating the error and to
terminate the session. By default, lenient behavior is disabled.
neighbor lenient
■
Use to enable a BGP speaker to be more tolerant of some errors generated by a
peer, such as malformed BGP messages or finite state machine errors.
■
The speaker attempts to recover from the errors and avoid bringing down the
BGP session with the peer.
■
Lenient behavior is disabled by default.
■
Example
host1(router-config)#
neighbor 10.12.45.23 lenient
■
Use the
no
version to restore the default condition, disabling lenient behavior.
■
See neighbor lenient.
Configuring Promiscuous Peers and Dynamic Peering
You can use the
neighbor allow
command to enable a peer group to accept incoming
BGP connections from any remote address that matches an access list. Such a peer
group is known as a promiscuous peer group; the member peers are sometimes
referred to as promiscuous peers.
Promiscuous peers are useful when the remote address of the peer is not known
ahead of time. An example is in B-RAS applications, in which interfaces for subscribers
are created dynamically and the remote address of the subscriber is assigned
dynamically from a local pool or by using RADIUS or some other method.
BGP automatically creates a dynamic peer when a peer group member accepts the
incoming BGP connection. Dynamic peers are passive, meaning that when they are
not in the established state, they will accept inbound connections but they will not
initiate outbound connections. You cannot configure any attributes for the dynamic
peers. You cannot remove a dynamic peer with the
no neighbor ip-address
command.
When a dynamic peer goes from the established state to the idle state for any reason,
BGP removes the dynamic peer only if it does not go back to the established state
within 1 minute. This delay enables you to see the dynamic peer in
show
command
output; for example, you might want to see the reason for the last reset or how many
times the session flapped.
While a dynamic peer is not in the established state, the
show ip bgp neighbor
command displays the number of seconds remaining until the dynamic peer will be
removed.
If you have configured the
neighbor allow
command for multiple peer groups, when
an incoming BGP connection matches the access list of more than one of these peer
groups, the dynamic peer is created only in the first peer group. (BGP orders peer
groups alphabetically by name.)
Configuring BGP Peer Groups
■
47
Chapter 1: Configuring BGP Routing
Summary of Contents for JUNOSE
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Page 8: ...viii JUNOSe 11 0 x BGP and MPLS Configuration Guide...
Page 24: ...xxiv Table of Contents JUNOSe 11 0 x BGP and MPLS Configuration Guide...
Page 37: ...Part 1 Border Gateway Protocol Configuring BGP Routing on page 3 Border Gateway Protocol 1...
Page 38: ...2 Border Gateway Protocol JUNOSe 11 0 x BGP and MPLS Configuration Guide...
Page 234: ...198 Monitoring BGP JUNOSe 11 0 x BGP and MPLS Configuration Guide...
Page 236: ...200 Multiprotocol Layer Switching JUNOSe 11 0 x BGP and MPLS Configuration Guide...
Page 298: ...262 Point to Multipoint LSPs Configuration JUNOSe 11 0 x BGP and MPLS Configuration Guide...
Page 536: ...500 Monitoring BGP MPLS VPNs JUNOSe 11 0 x BGP and MPLS Configuration Guide...
Page 538: ...502 Layer 2 Services Over MPLS JUNOSe 11 0 x BGP and MPLS Configuration Guide...
Page 604: ...568 Virtual Private LAN Service JUNOSe 11 0 x BGP and MPLS Configuration Guide...
Page 618: ...582 VPLS References JUNOSe 11 0 x BGP and MPLS Configuration Guide...
Page 674: ...638 Virtual Private Wire Service JUNOSe 11 0 x BGP and MPLS Configuration Guide...
Page 718: ...682 Monitoring MPLS Forwarding Table for VPWS JUNOSe 11 0 x BGP and MPLS Configuration Guide...
Page 719: ...Part 6 Index Index on page 685 Index 683...
Page 720: ...684 Index JUNOSe 11 0 x BGP and MPLS Configuration Guide...