Cisco CCNP / BSCI Certification:  BGP Route Reflector Tutorial Article Cisco CCNP / BSCI Certification: BGP Route Reflector Tutorial Article
    home | all categories | submit articles | about us | links | link to us | site map | contact us | recommended resources
 
Home » Articles » Computers » networks » Cisco CCNP / BSCI Certification: BGP Route Reflector Tutorial

Cisco CCNP / BSCI Certification: BGP Route Reflector Tutorial


By Chris Bryant

Cisco CCNP / BSCI Certification:  BGP Route Reflector Tutorial

When you're studying for your BSCI exam and CCNP certification, you quickly realize that BGP is a whole new world from anything you've previously studies. One topic that sometimes confuses CCNP candidates is when a BGP route reflector needs to be configured.

In the following example, the routers R1, R2, and R3 are all in BGP AS 100. This is not a full mesh, however. There are peer relationships between R1-R2 and R1-R3, but not between R2 and R3. R3 is advertising network 3.3.3.0/24 via BGP, and the route is seen on R1. R1's iBGP neighbor, R2 does not see the route.

A basic rule of BGP is that a BGP speaker cannot advertise a route to an iBGP neighbor if that route was learned from another iBGP neighbor. Configuring R1 as a route reflector will allow us to circumvent this rule. The entire route reflector process is transparent to the clients, and no configuration is necessary on those clients. We'll configure R1 as a route reflector for both R2 and R3.

R1(config)#router bgp 100

R1(config-router)#neighbor 172.12.123.2 route-reflector-client

3d18h: %BGP-5-ADJCHANGE: neighbor 172.12.123.2 Down RR client config change

R1(config-router)#neighbor 172.12.123.3 route-reflector-client

3d18h: %BGP-5-ADJCHANGE: neighbor 172.12.123.3 Down RR client config change

The BGP adjacencies do come down when this configuration is added, so this isn't something you want to do during a peak traffic time.

Once the adjacencies come back up, R2 will have the route to 3.3.3.0/24.

There are other possible solutions to this iBGP limitation, such as configuring BGP confederations. Those solutions are generally used on larger BGP deployments and with other concerns in mind, though, and configuring route reflectors serves this purpose just as well.



About the author

Chris Bryant, CCIE #12933, is the owner of The Bryant Advantage , home of free CCNA and CCNP tutorials! Pass the CCNA exam with Chris Bryant! from http://www.FreeArticlesAndContent.com

Copy This Article For FREE!!!

You can use this article and copy it on your own website for free! All you have to do is make sure the article is copied with no changes and includes the "About The Author" text. Also please ensure that all url's are hyperlinked according. Thank you.

Link To This Article - And We'll Link Back To Your Website!

You are more then welcome to link to this article! All you have to do is copy this webpage address from the address bar and create a link on your website. Please use the title of this article for your link text. Please get in contact once you have linked to this article and we'll link back to you! Thank you.
 
Other great articles from this category...


Discovering Your Local Area Network
Friday, 5th September 2008

Use a Proxy Site for Anonymous Browsing
Wednesday, 20th August 2008

Moving To An NGN Platform
Friday, 1st August 2008

What can WiMAX technology offer?
Tuesday, 15th July 2008

Why Use Ethernet Routers
Sunday, 25th May 2008


Related Sites





Free Articles

Unsecured Credit Card Application   Free Proxy   Motorola MotoPEBL   Dog Training
Copyright © 2005-2008 Your Marketing Ltd. All Rights Reserved