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bgpd: Add BGP Software Version Capability
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1 .. _bgp:
2
3 ***
4 BGP
5 ***
6
7 :abbr:`BGP` stands for Border Gateway Protocol. The latest BGP version is 4.
8 BGP-4 is one of the Exterior Gateway Protocols and the de facto standard
9 interdomain routing protocol. BGP-4 is described in :rfc:`1771` and updated by
10 :rfc:`4271`. :rfc:`2858` adds multiprotocol support to BGP-4.
11
12 .. _starting-bgp:
13
14 Starting BGP
15 ============
16
17 The default configuration file of *bgpd* is :file:`bgpd.conf`. *bgpd* searches
18 the current directory first, followed by |INSTALL_PREFIX_ETC|/bgpd.conf. All of
19 *bgpd*'s commands must be configured in :file:`bgpd.conf` when the integrated
20 config is not being used.
21
22 *bgpd* specific invocation options are described below. Common options may also
23 be specified (:ref:`common-invocation-options`).
24
25 .. program:: bgpd
26
27 .. option:: -p, --bgp_port <port>
28
29 Set the bgp protocol's port number. When port number is 0, that means do not
30 listen bgp port.
31
32 .. option:: -l, --listenon
33
34 Specify specific IP addresses for bgpd to listen on, rather than its default
35 of ``0.0.0.0`` / ``::``. This can be useful to constrain bgpd to an internal
36 address, or to run multiple bgpd processes on one host. Multiple addresses
37 can be specified.
38
39 In the following example, bgpd is started listening for connections on the
40 addresses 100.0.1.2 and fd00::2:2. The options -d (runs in daemon mode) and
41 -f (uses specific configuration file) are also used in this example as we
42 are likely to run multiple bgpd instances, each one with different
43 configurations, when using -l option.
44
45 Note that this option implies the --no_kernel option, and no learned routes will be installed into the linux kernel.
46
47 .. code-block:: shell
48
49 # /usr/lib/frr/bgpd -d -f /some-folder/bgpd.conf -l 100.0.1.2 -l fd00::2:2
50
51 .. option:: -n, --no_kernel
52
53 Do not install learned routes into the linux kernel. This option is useful
54 for a route-reflector environment or if you are running multiple bgp
55 processes in the same namespace. This option is different than the --no_zebra
56 option in that a ZAPI connection is made.
57
58 This option can also be toggled during runtime by using the
59 ``[no] bgp no-rib`` commands in VTY shell.
60
61 Note that this option will persist after saving the configuration during
62 runtime, unless unset by the ``no bgp no-rib`` command in VTY shell prior to
63 a configuration write operation.
64
65 .. option:: -S, --skip_runas
66
67 Skip the normal process of checking capabilities and changing user and group
68 information.
69
70 .. option:: -e, --ecmp
71
72 Run BGP with a limited ecmp capability, that is different than what BGP
73 was compiled with. The value specified must be greater than 0 and less
74 than or equal to the MULTIPATH_NUM specified on compilation.
75
76 .. option:: -Z, --no_zebra
77
78 Do not communicate with zebra at all. This is different than the --no_kernel
79 option in that we do not even open a ZAPI connection to the zebra process.
80
81 .. option:: -s, --socket_size
82
83 When opening tcp connections to our peers, set the socket send buffer
84 size that the kernel will use for the peers socket. This option
85 is only really useful at a very large scale. Experimentation should
86 be done to see if this is helping or not at the scale you are running
87 at.
88
89 LABEL MANAGER
90 -------------
91
92 .. option:: -I, --int_num
93
94 Set zclient id. This is required when using Zebra label manager in proxy mode.
95
96 .. _bgp-basic-concepts:
97
98 Basic Concepts
99 ==============
100
101 .. _bgp-autonomous-systems:
102
103 Autonomous Systems
104 ------------------
105
106 From :rfc:`1930`:
107
108 An AS is a connected group of one or more IP prefixes run by one or more
109 network operators which has a SINGLE and CLEARLY DEFINED routing policy.
110
111 Each AS has an identifying number associated with it called an :abbr:`ASN
112 (Autonomous System Number)`. This is a two octet value ranging in value from 1
113 to 65535. The AS numbers 64512 through 65535 are defined as private AS numbers.
114 Private AS numbers must not be advertised on the global Internet.
115
116 The :abbr:`ASN (Autonomous System Number)` is one of the essential elements of
117 BGP. BGP is a distance vector routing protocol, and the AS-Path framework
118 provides distance vector metric and loop detection to BGP.
119
120 .. seealso:: :rfc:`1930`
121
122 .. _bgp-address-families:
123
124 Address Families
125 ----------------
126
127 Multiprotocol extensions enable BGP to carry routing information for multiple
128 network layer protocols. BGP supports an Address Family Identifier (AFI) for
129 IPv4 and IPv6. Support is also provided for multiple sets of per-AFI
130 information via the BGP Subsequent Address Family Identifier (SAFI). FRR
131 supports SAFIs for unicast information, labeled information (:rfc:`3107` and
132 :rfc:`8277`), and Layer 3 VPN information (:rfc:`4364` and :rfc:`4659`).
133
134 .. _bgp-route-selection:
135
136 Route Selection
137 ---------------
138
139 The route selection process used by FRR's BGP implementation uses the following
140 decision criterion, starting at the top of the list and going towards the
141 bottom until one of the factors can be used.
142
143 1. **Weight check**
144
145 Prefer higher local weight routes to lower routes.
146
147 2. **Local preference check**
148
149 Prefer higher local preference routes to lower.
150
151 If ``bgp bestpath aigp`` is enabled, and both paths that are compared have
152 AIGP attribute, BGP uses AIGP tie-breaking unless both of the paths have the
153 AIGP metric attribute. This means that the AIGP attribute is not evaluated
154 during the best path selection process between two paths when one path does
155 not have the AIGP attribute.
156
157 3. **Local route check**
158
159 Prefer local routes (statics, aggregates, redistributed) to received routes.
160
161 4. **AS path length check**
162
163 Prefer shortest hop-count AS_PATHs.
164
165 5. **Origin check**
166
167 Prefer the lowest origin type route. That is, prefer IGP origin routes to
168 EGP, to Incomplete routes.
169
170 6. **MED check**
171
172 Where routes with a MED were received from the same AS, prefer the route
173 with the lowest MED. :ref:`bgp-med`.
174
175 7. **External check**
176
177 Prefer the route received from an external, eBGP peer over routes received
178 from other types of peers.
179
180 8. **IGP cost check**
181
182 Prefer the route with the lower IGP cost.
183
184 9. **Multi-path check**
185
186 If multi-pathing is enabled, then check whether the routes not yet
187 distinguished in preference may be considered equal. If
188 :clicmd:`bgp bestpath as-path multipath-relax` is set, all such routes are
189 considered equal, otherwise routes received via iBGP with identical AS_PATHs
190 or routes received from eBGP neighbours in the same AS are considered equal.
191
192 10. **Already-selected external check**
193
194 Where both routes were received from eBGP peers, then prefer the route
195 which is already selected. Note that this check is not applied if
196 :clicmd:`bgp bestpath compare-routerid` is configured. This check can
197 prevent some cases of oscillation.
198
199 11. **Router-ID check**
200
201 Prefer the route with the lowest `router-ID`. If the route has an
202 `ORIGINATOR_ID` attribute, through iBGP reflection, then that router ID is
203 used, otherwise the `router-ID` of the peer the route was received from is
204 used.
205
206 12. **Cluster-List length check**
207
208 The route with the shortest cluster-list length is used. The cluster-list
209 reflects the iBGP reflection path the route has taken.
210
211 13. **Peer address**
212
213 Prefer the route received from the peer with the higher transport layer
214 address, as a last-resort tie-breaker.
215
216 .. _bgp-capability-negotiation:
217
218 Capability Negotiation
219 ----------------------
220
221 When adding IPv6 routing information exchange feature to BGP. There were some
222 proposals. :abbr:`IETF (Internet Engineering Task Force)`
223 :abbr:`IDR (Inter Domain Routing)` adopted a proposal called Multiprotocol
224 Extension for BGP. The specification is described in :rfc:`2283`. The protocol
225 does not define new protocols. It defines new attributes to existing BGP. When
226 it is used exchanging IPv6 routing information it is called BGP-4+. When it is
227 used for exchanging multicast routing information it is called MBGP.
228
229 *bgpd* supports Multiprotocol Extension for BGP. So if a remote peer supports
230 the protocol, *bgpd* can exchange IPv6 and/or multicast routing information.
231
232 Traditional BGP did not have the feature to detect a remote peer's
233 capabilities, e.g. whether it can handle prefix types other than IPv4 unicast
234 routes. This was a big problem using Multiprotocol Extension for BGP in an
235 operational network. :rfc:`2842` adopted a feature called Capability
236 Negotiation. *bgpd* use this Capability Negotiation to detect the remote peer's
237 capabilities. If a peer is only configured as an IPv4 unicast neighbor, *bgpd*
238 does not send these Capability Negotiation packets (at least not unless other
239 optional BGP features require capability negotiation).
240
241 By default, FRR will bring up peering with minimal common capability for the
242 both sides. For example, if the local router has unicast and multicast
243 capabilities and the remote router only has unicast capability the local router
244 will establish the connection with unicast only capability. When there are no
245 common capabilities, FRR sends Unsupported Capability error and then resets the
246 connection.
247
248 .. _bgp-router-configuration:
249
250 BGP Router Configuration
251 ========================
252
253 ASN and Router ID
254 -----------------
255
256 First of all you must configure BGP router with the :clicmd:`router bgp ASN`
257 command. The AS number is an identifier for the autonomous system. The BGP
258 protocol uses the AS number for detecting whether the BGP connection is
259 internal or external.
260
261 .. clicmd:: router bgp ASN
262
263 Enable a BGP protocol process with the specified ASN. After
264 this statement you can input any `BGP Commands`.
265
266 .. clicmd:: bgp router-id A.B.C.D
267
268 This command specifies the router-ID. If *bgpd* connects to *zebra* it gets
269 interface and address information. In that case default router ID value is
270 selected as the largest IP Address of the interfaces. When `router zebra` is
271 not enabled *bgpd* can't get interface information so `router-id` is set to
272 0.0.0.0. So please set router-id by hand.
273
274
275 .. _bgp-multiple-autonomous-systems:
276
277 Multiple Autonomous Systems
278 ---------------------------
279
280 FRR's BGP implementation is capable of running multiple autonomous systems at
281 once. Each configured AS corresponds to a :ref:`zebra-vrf`. In the past, to get
282 the same functionality the network administrator had to run a new *bgpd*
283 process; using VRFs allows multiple autonomous systems to be handled in a
284 single process.
285
286 When using multiple autonomous systems, all router config blocks after the
287 first one must specify a VRF to be the target of BGP's route selection. This
288 VRF must be unique within respect to all other VRFs being used for the same
289 purpose, i.e. two different autonomous systems cannot use the same VRF.
290 However, the same AS can be used with different VRFs.
291
292 .. note::
293
294 The separated nature of VRFs makes it possible to peer a single *bgpd*
295 process to itself, on one machine. Note that this can be done fully within
296 BGP without a corresponding VRF in the kernel or Zebra, which enables some
297 practical use cases such as :ref:`route reflectors <bgp-route-reflector>`
298 and route servers.
299
300 Configuration of additional autonomous systems, or of a router that targets a
301 specific VRF, is accomplished with the following command:
302
303 .. clicmd:: router bgp ASN vrf VRFNAME
304
305 ``VRFNAME`` is matched against VRFs configured in the kernel. When ``vrf
306 VRFNAME`` is not specified, the BGP protocol process belongs to the default
307 VRF.
308
309 An example configuration with multiple autonomous systems might look like this:
310
311 .. code-block:: frr
312
313 router bgp 1
314 neighbor 10.0.0.1 remote-as 20
315 neighbor 10.0.0.2 remote-as 30
316 !
317 router bgp 2 vrf blue
318 neighbor 10.0.0.3 remote-as 40
319 neighbor 10.0.0.4 remote-as 50
320 !
321 router bgp 3 vrf red
322 neighbor 10.0.0.5 remote-as 60
323 neighbor 10.0.0.6 remote-as 70
324 ...
325
326 .. seealso:: :ref:`bgp-vrf-route-leaking`
327 .. seealso:: :ref:`zebra-vrf`
328
329
330 .. _bgp-views:
331
332 Views
333 -----
334
335 In addition to supporting multiple autonomous systems, FRR's BGP implementation
336 also supports *views*.
337
338 BGP views are almost the same as normal BGP processes, except that routes
339 selected by BGP are not installed into the kernel routing table. Each BGP view
340 provides an independent set of routing information which is only distributed
341 via BGP. Multiple views can be supported, and BGP view information is always
342 independent from other routing protocols and Zebra/kernel routes. BGP views use
343 the core instance (i.e., default VRF) for communication with peers.
344
345 .. clicmd:: router bgp AS-NUMBER view NAME
346
347 Make a new BGP view. You can use an arbitrary word for the ``NAME``. Routes
348 selected by the view are not installed into the kernel routing table.
349
350 With this command, you can setup Route Server like below.
351
352 .. code-block:: frr
353
354 !
355 router bgp 1 view 1
356 neighbor 10.0.0.1 remote-as 2
357 neighbor 10.0.0.2 remote-as 3
358 !
359 router bgp 2 view 2
360 neighbor 10.0.0.3 remote-as 4
361 neighbor 10.0.0.4 remote-as 5
362
363 .. clicmd:: show [ip] bgp view NAME
364
365 Display the routing table of BGP view ``NAME``.
366
367
368 Route Selection
369 ---------------
370
371 .. clicmd:: bgp bestpath as-path confed
372
373 This command specifies that the length of confederation path sets and
374 sequences should should be taken into account during the BGP best path
375 decision process.
376
377 .. clicmd:: bgp bestpath as-path multipath-relax
378
379 This command specifies that BGP decision process should consider paths
380 of equal AS_PATH length candidates for multipath computation. Without
381 the knob, the entire AS_PATH must match for multipath computation.
382
383 .. clicmd:: bgp bestpath compare-routerid
384
385 Ensure that when comparing routes where both are equal on most metrics,
386 including local-pref, AS_PATH length, IGP cost, MED, that the tie is broken
387 based on router-ID.
388
389 If this option is enabled, then the already-selected check, where
390 already selected eBGP routes are preferred, is skipped.
391
392 If a route has an `ORIGINATOR_ID` attribute because it has been reflected,
393 that `ORIGINATOR_ID` will be used. Otherwise, the router-ID of the peer the
394 route was received from will be used.
395
396 The advantage of this is that the route-selection (at this point) will be
397 more deterministic. The disadvantage is that a few or even one lowest-ID
398 router may attract all traffic to otherwise-equal paths because of this
399 check. It may increase the possibility of MED or IGP oscillation, unless
400 other measures were taken to avoid these. The exact behaviour will be
401 sensitive to the iBGP and reflection topology.
402
403 .. clicmd:: bgp bestpath peer-type multipath-relax
404
405 This command specifies that BGP decision process should consider paths
406 from all peers for multipath computation. If this option is enabled,
407 paths learned from any of eBGP, iBGP, or confederation neighbors will
408 be multipath if they are otherwise considered equal cost.
409
410 .. clicmd:: bgp bestpath aigp
411
412 Use the bgp bestpath aigp command to evaluate the AIGP attribute during
413 the best path selection process between two paths that have the AIGP
414 attribute.
415
416 When bgp bestpath aigp is disabled, BGP does not use AIGP tie-breaking
417 rules unless paths have the AIGP attribute.
418
419 Disabled by default.
420
421 .. clicmd:: maximum-paths (1-128)
422
423 Sets the maximum-paths value used for ecmp calculations for this
424 bgp instance in EBGP. The maximum value listed, 128, can be limited by
425 the ecmp cli for bgp or if the daemon was compiled with a lower
426 ecmp value. This value can also be set in ipv4/ipv6 unicast/labeled
427 unicast to only affect those particular afi/safi's.
428
429 .. clicmd:: maximum-paths ibgp (1-128) [equal-cluster-length]
430
431 Sets the maximum-paths value used for ecmp calculations for this
432 bgp instance in IBGP. The maximum value listed, 128, can be limited by
433 the ecmp cli for bgp or if the daemon was compiled with a lower
434 ecmp value. This value can also be set in ipv4/ipv6 unicast/labeled
435 unicast to only affect those particular afi/safi's.
436
437 .. _bgp-distance:
438
439 Administrative Distance Metrics
440 -------------------------------
441
442 .. clicmd:: distance bgp (1-255) (1-255) (1-255)
443
444 This command changes distance value of BGP. The arguments are the distance
445 values for external routes, internal routes and local routes
446 respectively.
447
448 .. clicmd:: distance (1-255) A.B.C.D/M
449
450 .. clicmd:: distance (1-255) A.B.C.D/M WORD
451
452 Sets the administrative distance for a particular route.
453
454 .. _bgp-requires-policy:
455
456 Require policy on EBGP
457 -------------------------------
458
459 .. clicmd:: bgp ebgp-requires-policy
460
461 This command requires incoming and outgoing filters to be applied
462 for eBGP sessions as part of RFC-8212 compliance. Without the incoming
463 filter, no routes will be accepted. Without the outgoing filter, no
464 routes will be announced.
465
466 This is enabled by default for the traditional configuration and
467 turned off by default for datacenter configuration.
468
469 When you enable/disable this option you MUST clear the session.
470
471 When the incoming or outgoing filter is missing you will see
472 "(Policy)" sign under ``show bgp summary``:
473
474 .. code-block:: frr
475
476 exit1# show bgp summary
477
478 IPv4 Unicast Summary (VRF default):
479 BGP router identifier 10.10.10.1, local AS number 65001 vrf-id 0
480 BGP table version 4
481 RIB entries 7, using 1344 bytes of memory
482 Peers 2, using 43 KiB of memory
483
484 Neighbor V AS MsgRcvd MsgSent TblVer InQ OutQ Up/Down State/PfxRcd PfxSnt Desc
485 192.168.0.2 4 65002 8 10 0 0 0 00:03:09 5 (Policy) N/A
486 fe80:1::2222 4 65002 9 11 0 0 0 00:03:09 (Policy) (Policy) N/A
487
488 Additionally a `show bgp neighbor` command would indicate in the `For address family:`
489 block that:
490
491 .. code-block:: frr
492
493 exit1# show bgp neighbor
494 ...
495 For address family: IPv4 Unicast
496 Update group 1, subgroup 1
497 Packet Queue length 0
498 Inbound soft reconfiguration allowed
499 Community attribute sent to this neighbor(all)
500 Inbound updates discarded due to missing policy
501 Outbound updates discarded due to missing policy
502 0 accepted prefixes
503
504 Reject routes with AS_SET or AS_CONFED_SET types
505 ------------------------------------------------
506
507 .. clicmd:: bgp reject-as-sets
508
509 This command enables rejection of incoming and outgoing routes having AS_SET or AS_CONFED_SET type.
510
511 Suppress duplicate updates
512 --------------------------
513
514 .. clicmd:: bgp suppress-duplicates
515
516 For example, BGP routers can generate multiple identical announcements with
517 empty community attributes if stripped at egress. This is an undesired behavior.
518 Suppress duplicate updates if the route actually not changed.
519 Default: enabled.
520
521 Send Hard Reset CEASE Notification for Administrative Reset
522 -----------------------------------------------------------
523
524 .. clicmd:: bgp hard-administrative-reset
525
526 Send Hard Reset CEASE Notification for 'Administrative Reset' events.
527
528 When disabled, and Graceful Restart Notification capability is exchanged
529 between the peers, Graceful Restart procedures apply, and routes will be
530 retained.
531
532 Enabled by default.
533
534 Disable checking if nexthop is connected on EBGP sessions
535 ---------------------------------------------------------
536
537 .. clicmd:: bgp disable-ebgp-connected-route-check
538
539 This command is used to disable the connection verification process for EBGP peering sessions
540 that are reachable by a single hop but are configured on a loopback interface or otherwise
541 configured with a non-directly connected IP address.
542
543 .. _bgp-route-flap-dampening:
544
545 Route Flap Dampening
546 --------------------
547
548 .. clicmd:: bgp dampening (1-45) (1-20000) (1-50000) (1-255)
549
550 This command enables BGP route-flap dampening and specifies dampening parameters.
551
552 half-life
553 Half-life time for the penalty
554
555 reuse-threshold
556 Value to start reusing a route
557
558 suppress-threshold
559 Value to start suppressing a route
560
561 max-suppress
562 Maximum duration to suppress a stable route
563
564 The route-flap damping algorithm is compatible with :rfc:`2439`. The use of
565 this command is not recommended nowadays.
566
567 At the moment, route-flap dampening is not working per VRF and is working only
568 for IPv4 unicast and multicast.
569
570 .. seealso::
571 https://www.ripe.net/publications/docs/ripe-378
572
573 .. _bgp-med:
574
575 Multi-Exit Discriminator
576 ------------------------
577
578 The BGP :abbr:`MED (Multi-Exit Discriminator)` attribute has properties which
579 can cause subtle convergence problems in BGP. These properties and problems
580 have proven to be hard to understand, at least historically, and may still not
581 be widely understood. The following attempts to collect together and present
582 what is known about MED, to help operators and FRR users in designing and
583 configuring their networks.
584
585 The BGP :abbr:`MED` attribute is intended to allow one AS to indicate its
586 preferences for its ingress points to another AS. The MED attribute will not be
587 propagated on to another AS by the receiving AS - it is 'non-transitive' in the
588 BGP sense.
589
590 E.g., if AS X and AS Y have 2 different BGP peering points, then AS X might set
591 a MED of 100 on routes advertised at one and a MED of 200 at the other. When AS
592 Y selects between otherwise equal routes to or via AS X, AS Y should prefer to
593 take the path via the lower MED peering of 100 with AS X. Setting the MED
594 allows an AS to influence the routing taken to it within another, neighbouring
595 AS.
596
597 In this use of MED it is not really meaningful to compare the MED value on
598 routes where the next AS on the paths differs. E.g., if AS Y also had a route
599 for some destination via AS Z in addition to the routes from AS X, and AS Z had
600 also set a MED, it wouldn't make sense for AS Y to compare AS Z's MED values to
601 those of AS X. The MED values have been set by different administrators, with
602 different frames of reference.
603
604 The default behaviour of BGP therefore is to not compare MED values across
605 routes received from different neighbouring ASes. In FRR this is done by
606 comparing the neighbouring, left-most AS in the received AS_PATHs of the routes
607 and only comparing MED if those are the same.
608
609 Unfortunately, this behaviour of MED, of sometimes being compared across routes
610 and sometimes not, depending on the properties of those other routes, means MED
611 can cause the order of preference over all the routes to be undefined. That is,
612 given routes A, B, and C, if A is preferred to B, and B is preferred to C, then
613 a well-defined order should mean the preference is transitive (in the sense of
614 orders [#med-transitivity-rant]_) and that A would be preferred to C.
615
616 However, when MED is involved this need not be the case. With MED it is
617 possible that C is actually preferred over A. So A is preferred to B, B is
618 preferred to C, but C is preferred to A. This can be true even where BGP
619 defines a deterministic 'most preferred' route out of the full set of A,B,C.
620 With MED, for any given set of routes there may be a deterministically
621 preferred route, but there need not be any way to arrange them into any order
622 of preference. With unmodified MED, the order of preference of routes literally
623 becomes undefined.
624
625 That MED can induce non-transitive preferences over routes can cause issues.
626 Firstly, it may be perceived to cause routing table churn locally at speakers;
627 secondly, and more seriously, it may cause routing instability in iBGP
628 topologies, where sets of speakers continually oscillate between different
629 paths.
630
631 The first issue arises from how speakers often implement routing decisions.
632 Though BGP defines a selection process that will deterministically select the
633 same route as best at any given speaker, even with MED, that process requires
634 evaluating all routes together. For performance and ease of implementation
635 reasons, many implementations evaluate route preferences in a pair-wise fashion
636 instead. Given there is no well-defined order when MED is involved, the best
637 route that will be chosen becomes subject to implementation details, such as
638 the order the routes are stored in. That may be (locally) non-deterministic,
639 e.g.: it may be the order the routes were received in.
640
641 This indeterminism may be considered undesirable, though it need not cause
642 problems. It may mean additional routing churn is perceived, as sometimes more
643 updates may be produced than at other times in reaction to some event .
644
645 This first issue can be fixed with a more deterministic route selection that
646 ensures routes are ordered by the neighbouring AS during selection.
647 :clicmd:`bgp deterministic-med`. This may reduce the number of updates as routes
648 are received, and may in some cases reduce routing churn. Though, it could
649 equally deterministically produce the largest possible set of updates in
650 response to the most common sequence of received updates.
651
652 A deterministic order of evaluation tends to imply an additional overhead of
653 sorting over any set of n routes to a destination. The implementation of
654 deterministic MED in FRR scales significantly worse than most sorting
655 algorithms at present, with the number of paths to a given destination. That
656 number is often low enough to not cause any issues, but where there are many
657 paths, the deterministic comparison may quickly become increasingly expensive
658 in terms of CPU.
659
660 Deterministic local evaluation can *not* fix the second, more major, issue of
661 MED however. Which is that the non-transitive preference of routes MED can
662 cause may lead to routing instability or oscillation across multiple speakers
663 in iBGP topologies. This can occur with full-mesh iBGP, but is particularly
664 problematic in non-full-mesh iBGP topologies that further reduce the routing
665 information known to each speaker. This has primarily been documented with iBGP
666 :ref:`route-reflection <bgp-route-reflector>` topologies. However, any
667 route-hiding technologies potentially could also exacerbate oscillation with MED.
668
669 This second issue occurs where speakers each have only a subset of routes, and
670 there are cycles in the preferences between different combinations of routes -
671 as the undefined order of preference of MED allows - and the routes are
672 distributed in a way that causes the BGP speakers to 'chase' those cycles. This
673 can occur even if all speakers use a deterministic order of evaluation in route
674 selection.
675
676 E.g., speaker 4 in AS A might receive a route from speaker 2 in AS X, and from
677 speaker 3 in AS Y; while speaker 5 in AS A might receive that route from
678 speaker 1 in AS Y. AS Y might set a MED of 200 at speaker 1, and 100 at speaker
679 3. I.e, using ASN:ID:MED to label the speakers:
680
681 ::
682
683 .
684 /---------------\\
685 X:2------|--A:4-------A:5--|-Y:1:200
686 Y:3:100--|-/ |
687 \\---------------/
688
689
690
691 Assuming all other metrics are equal (AS_PATH, ORIGIN, 0 IGP costs), then based
692 on the RFC4271 decision process speaker 4 will choose X:2 over Y:3:100, based
693 on the lower ID of 2. Speaker 4 advertises X:2 to speaker 5. Speaker 5 will
694 continue to prefer Y:1:200 based on the ID, and advertise this to speaker 4.
695 Speaker 4 will now have the full set of routes, and the Y:1:200 it receives
696 from 5 will beat X:2, but when speaker 4 compares Y:1:200 to Y:3:100 the MED
697 check now becomes active as the ASes match, and now Y:3:100 is preferred.
698 Speaker 4 therefore now advertises Y:3:100 to 5, which will also agrees that
699 Y:3:100 is preferred to Y:1:200, and so withdraws the latter route from 4.
700 Speaker 4 now has only X:2 and Y:3:100, and X:2 beats Y:3:100, and so speaker 4
701 implicitly updates its route to speaker 5 to X:2. Speaker 5 sees that Y:1:200
702 beats X:2 based on the ID, and advertises Y:1:200 to speaker 4, and the cycle
703 continues.
704
705 The root cause is the lack of a clear order of preference caused by how MED
706 sometimes is and sometimes is not compared, leading to this cycle in the
707 preferences between the routes:
708
709 ::
710
711 .
712 /---> X:2 ---beats---> Y:3:100 --\\
713 | |
714 | |
715 \\---beats--- Y:1:200 <---beats---/
716
717
718
719 This particular type of oscillation in full-mesh iBGP topologies can be
720 avoided by speakers preferring already selected, external routes rather than
721 choosing to update to new a route based on a post-MED metric (e.g. router-ID),
722 at the cost of a non-deterministic selection process. FRR implements this, as
723 do many other implementations, so long as it is not overridden by setting
724 :clicmd:`bgp bestpath compare-routerid`, and see also
725 :ref:`bgp-route-selection`.
726
727 However, more complex and insidious cycles of oscillation are possible with
728 iBGP route-reflection, which are not so easily avoided. These have been
729 documented in various places. See, e.g.:
730
731 - [bgp-route-osci-cond]_
732 - [stable-flexible-ibgp]_
733 - [ibgp-correctness]_
734
735 for concrete examples and further references.
736
737 There is as of this writing *no* known way to use MED for its original purpose;
738 *and* reduce routing information in iBGP topologies; *and* be sure to avoid the
739 instability problems of MED due the non-transitive routing preferences it can
740 induce; in general on arbitrary networks.
741
742 There may be iBGP topology specific ways to reduce the instability risks, even
743 while using MED, e.g.: by constraining the reflection topology and by tuning
744 IGP costs between route-reflector clusters, see :rfc:`3345` for details. In the
745 near future, the Add-Path extension to BGP may also solve MED oscillation while
746 still allowing MED to be used as intended, by distributing "best-paths per
747 neighbour AS". This would be at the cost of distributing at least as many
748 routes to all speakers as a full-mesh iBGP would, if not more, while also
749 imposing similar CPU overheads as the "Deterministic MED" feature at each
750 Add-Path reflector.
751
752 More generally, the instability problems that MED can introduce on more
753 complex, non-full-mesh, iBGP topologies may be avoided either by:
754
755 - Setting :clicmd:`bgp always-compare-med`, however this allows MED to be compared
756 across values set by different neighbour ASes, which may not produce
757 coherent desirable results, of itself.
758 - Effectively ignoring MED by setting MED to the same value (e.g.: 0) using
759 :clicmd:`set metric METRIC` on all received routes, in combination with
760 setting :clicmd:`bgp always-compare-med` on all speakers. This is the simplest
761 and most performant way to avoid MED oscillation issues, where an AS is happy
762 not to allow neighbours to inject this problematic metric.
763
764 As MED is evaluated after the AS_PATH length check, another possible use for
765 MED is for intra-AS steering of routes with equal AS_PATH length, as an
766 extension of the last case above. As MED is evaluated before IGP metric, this
767 can allow cold-potato routing to be implemented to send traffic to preferred
768 hand-offs with neighbours, rather than the closest hand-off according to the
769 IGP metric.
770
771 Note that even if action is taken to address the MED non-transitivity issues,
772 other oscillations may still be possible. E.g., on IGP cost if iBGP and IGP
773 topologies are at cross-purposes with each other - see the Flavel and Roughan
774 paper above for an example. Hence the guideline that the iBGP topology should
775 follow the IGP topology.
776
777 .. clicmd:: bgp deterministic-med
778
779 Carry out route-selection in way that produces deterministic answers
780 locally, even in the face of MED and the lack of a well-defined order of
781 preference it can induce on routes. Without this option the preferred route
782 with MED may be determined largely by the order that routes were received
783 in.
784
785 Setting this option will have a performance cost that may be noticeable when
786 there are many routes for each destination. Currently in FRR it is
787 implemented in a way that scales poorly as the number of routes per
788 destination increases.
789
790 The default is that this option is not set.
791
792 Note that there are other sources of indeterminism in the route selection
793 process, specifically, the preference for older and already selected routes
794 from eBGP peers, :ref:`bgp-route-selection`.
795
796 .. clicmd:: bgp always-compare-med
797
798 Always compare the MED on routes, even when they were received from
799 different neighbouring ASes. Setting this option makes the order of
800 preference of routes more defined, and should eliminate MED induced
801 oscillations.
802
803 If using this option, it may also be desirable to use
804 :clicmd:`set metric METRIC` to set MED to 0 on routes received from external
805 neighbours.
806
807 This option can be used, together with :clicmd:`set metric METRIC` to use
808 MED as an intra-AS metric to steer equal-length AS_PATH routes to, e.g.,
809 desired exit points.
810
811
812 .. _bgp-graceful-restart:
813
814 Graceful Restart
815 ----------------
816
817 BGP graceful restart functionality as defined in
818 `RFC-4724 <https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4724/>`_ defines the mechanisms that
819 allows BGP speaker to continue to forward data packets along known routes
820 while the routing protocol information is being restored.
821
822
823 Usually, when BGP on a router restarts, all the BGP peers detect that the
824 session went down and then came up. This "down/up" transition results in a
825 "routing flap" and causes BGP route re-computation, generation of BGP routing
826 updates, and unnecessary churn to the forwarding tables.
827
828 The following functionality is provided by graceful restart:
829
830 1. The feature allows the restarting router to indicate to the helping peer the
831 routes it can preserve in its forwarding plane during control plane restart
832 by sending graceful restart capability in the OPEN message sent during
833 session establishment.
834 2. The feature allows helping router to advertise to all other peers the routes
835 received from the restarting router which are preserved in the forwarding
836 plane of the restarting router during control plane restart.
837
838
839 ::
840
841
842
843 (R1)-----------------------------------------------------------------(R2)
844
845 1. BGP Graceful Restart Capability exchanged between R1 & R2.
846
847 <--------------------------------------------------------------------->
848
849 2. Kill BGP Process at R1.
850
851 ---------------------------------------------------------------------->
852
853 3. R2 Detects the above BGP Restart & verifies BGP Restarting
854 Capability of R1.
855
856 4. Start BGP Process at R1.
857
858 5. Re-establish the BGP session between R1 & R2.
859
860 <--------------------------------------------------------------------->
861
862 6. R2 Send initial route updates, followed by End-Of-Rib.
863
864 <----------------------------------------------------------------------
865
866 7. R1 was waiting for End-Of-Rib from R2 & which has been received
867 now.
868
869 8. R1 now runs BGP Best-Path algorithm. Send Initial BGP Update,
870 followed by End-Of Rib
871
872 <--------------------------------------------------------------------->
873
874
875 .. _bgp-GR-preserve-forwarding-state:
876
877 BGP-GR Preserve-Forwarding State
878 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
879
880 BGP OPEN message carrying optional capabilities for Graceful Restart has
881 8 bit “Flags for Address Family” for given AFI and SAFI. This field contains
882 bit flags relating to routes that were advertised with the given AFI and SAFI.
883
884 .. code-block:: frr
885
886 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
887 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
888 |F| Reserved |
889 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
890
891 The most significant bit is defined as the Forwarding State (F) bit, which
892 can be used to indicate whether the forwarding state for routes that were
893 advertised with the given AFI and SAFI has indeed been preserved during the
894 previous BGP restart. When set (value 1), the bit indicates that the
895 forwarding state has been preserved.
896 The remaining bits are reserved and MUST be set to zero by the sender and
897 ignored by the receiver.
898
899 .. clicmd:: bgp graceful-restart preserve-fw-state
900
901 FRR gives us the option to enable/disable the "F" flag using this specific
902 vty command. However, it doesn't have the option to enable/disable
903 this flag only for specific AFI/SAFI i.e. when this command is used, it
904 applied to all the supported AFI/SAFI combinations for this peer.
905
906 .. _bgp-end-of-rib-message:
907
908 End-of-RIB (EOR) message
909 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
910
911 An UPDATE message with no reachable Network Layer Reachability Information
912 (NLRI) and empty withdrawn NLRI is specified as the End-of-RIB marker that can
913 be used by a BGP speaker to indicate to its peer the completion of the initial
914 routing update after the session is established.
915
916 For the IPv4 unicast address family, the End-of-RIB marker is an UPDATE message
917 with the minimum length. For any other address family, it is an UPDATE message
918 that contains only the MP_UNREACH_NLRI attribute with no withdrawn routes for
919 that <AFI, SAFI>.
920
921 Although the End-of-RIB marker is specified for the purpose of BGP graceful
922 restart, it is noted that the generation of such a marker upon completion of
923 the initial update would be useful for routing convergence in general, and thus
924 the practice is recommended.
925
926 .. _bgp-route-selection-deferral-timer:
927
928 Route Selection Deferral Timer
929 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
930
931 Specifies the time the restarting router defers the route selection process
932 after restart.
933
934 Restarting Router : The usage of route election deferral timer is specified
935 in https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4724#section-4.1
936
937 Once the session between the Restarting Speaker and the Receiving Speaker is
938 re-established, the Restarting Speaker will receive and process BGP messages
939 from its peers.
940
941 However, it MUST defer route selection for an address family until it either.
942
943 1. Receives the End-of-RIB marker from all its peers (excluding the ones with
944 the "Restart State" bit set in the received capability and excluding the ones
945 that do not advertise the graceful restart capability).
946 2. The Selection_Deferral_Timer timeout.
947
948 .. clicmd:: bgp graceful-restart select-defer-time (0-3600)
949
950 This is command, will set deferral time to value specified.
951
952
953 .. clicmd:: bgp graceful-restart rib-stale-time (1-3600)
954
955 This is command, will set the time for which stale routes are kept in RIB.
956
957 .. clicmd:: bgp graceful-restart restart-time (0-4095)
958
959 Set the time to wait to delete stale routes before a BGP open message
960 is received.
961
962 Using with Long-lived Graceful Restart capability, this is recommended
963 setting this timer to 0 and control stale routes with
964 ``bgp long-lived-graceful-restart stale-time``.
965
966 Default value is 120.
967
968 .. clicmd:: bgp graceful-restart stalepath-time (1-4095)
969
970 This is command, will set the max time (in seconds) to hold onto
971 restarting peer's stale paths.
972
973 It also controls Enhanced Route-Refresh timer.
974
975 If this command is configured and the router does not receive a Route-Refresh EoRR
976 message, the router removes the stale routes from the BGP table after the timer
977 expires. The stale path timer is started when the router receives a Route-Refresh
978 BoRR message.
979
980 .. clicmd:: bgp graceful-restart notification
981
982 Indicate Graceful Restart support for BGP NOTIFICATION messages.
983
984 After changing this parameter, you have to reset the peers in order to advertise
985 N-bit in Graceful Restart capability.
986
987 Without Graceful-Restart Notification capability (N-bit not set), GR is not
988 activated when receiving CEASE/HOLDTIME expire notifications.
989
990 When sending ``CEASE/Administrative Reset`` (``clear bgp``), the session is closed
991 and routes are not retained. When N-bit is set and ``bgp hard-administrative-reset``
992 is turned off Graceful-Restart is activated and routes are retained.
993
994 Enabled by default.
995
996 .. _bgp-per-peer-graceful-restart:
997
998 BGP Per Peer Graceful Restart
999 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1000
1001 Ability to enable and disable graceful restart, helper and no GR at all mode
1002 functionality at peer level.
1003
1004 So bgp graceful restart can be enabled at modes global BGP level or at per
1005 peer level. There are two FSM, one for BGP GR global mode and other for peer
1006 per GR.
1007
1008 Default global mode is helper and default peer per mode is inherit from global.
1009 If per peer mode is configured, the GR mode of this particular peer will
1010 override the global mode.
1011
1012 .. _bgp-GR-global-mode-cmd:
1013
1014 BGP GR Global Mode Commands
1015 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1016
1017 .. clicmd:: bgp graceful-restart
1018
1019 This command will enable BGP graceful restart functionality at the global
1020 level.
1021
1022 .. clicmd:: bgp graceful-restart disable
1023
1024 This command will disable both the functionality graceful restart and helper
1025 mode.
1026
1027
1028 .. _bgp-GR-peer-mode-cmd:
1029
1030 BGP GR Peer Mode Commands
1031 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1032
1033 .. clicmd:: neighbor A.B.C.D graceful-restart
1034
1035 This command will enable BGP graceful restart functionality at the peer
1036 level.
1037
1038 .. clicmd:: neighbor A.B.C.D graceful-restart-helper
1039
1040 This command will enable BGP graceful restart helper only functionality
1041 at the peer level.
1042
1043 .. clicmd:: neighbor A.B.C.D graceful-restart-disable
1044
1045 This command will disable the entire BGP graceful restart functionality
1046 at the peer level.
1047
1048
1049 Long-lived Graceful Restart
1050 ---------------------------
1051
1052 Currently, only restarter mode is supported. This capability is advertised only
1053 if graceful restart capability is negotiated.
1054
1055 .. clicmd:: bgp long-lived-graceful-restart stale-time (1-16777215)
1056
1057 Specifies the maximum time to wait before purging long-lived stale routes for
1058 helper routers.
1059
1060 Default is 0, which means the feature is off by default. Only graceful
1061 restart takes into account.
1062
1063 .. _bgp-shutdown:
1064
1065 Administrative Shutdown
1066 -----------------------
1067
1068 .. clicmd:: bgp shutdown [message MSG...]
1069
1070 Administrative shutdown of all peers of a bgp instance. Drop all BGP peers,
1071 but preserve their configurations. The peers are notified in accordance with
1072 `RFC 8203 <https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc8203/>`_ by sending a
1073 ``NOTIFICATION`` message with error code ``Cease`` and subcode
1074 ``Administrative Shutdown`` prior to terminating connections. This global
1075 shutdown is independent of the neighbor shutdown, meaning that individually
1076 shut down peers will not be affected by lifting it.
1077
1078 An optional shutdown message `MSG` can be specified.
1079
1080
1081 .. _bgp-network:
1082
1083 Networks
1084 --------
1085
1086 .. clicmd:: network A.B.C.D/M
1087
1088 This command adds the announcement network.
1089
1090 .. code-block:: frr
1091
1092 router bgp 1
1093 address-family ipv4 unicast
1094 network 10.0.0.0/8
1095 exit-address-family
1096
1097 This configuration example says that network 10.0.0.0/8 will be
1098 announced to all neighbors. Some vendors' routers don't advertise
1099 routes if they aren't present in their IGP routing tables; `bgpd`
1100 doesn't care about IGP routes when announcing its routes.
1101
1102
1103 .. clicmd:: bgp network import-check
1104
1105 This configuration modifies the behavior of the network statement.
1106 If you have this configured the underlying network must exist in
1107 the rib. If you have the [no] form configured then BGP will not
1108 check for the networks existence in the rib. For versions 7.3 and
1109 before frr defaults for datacenter were the network must exist,
1110 traditional did not check for existence. For versions 7.4 and beyond
1111 both traditional and datacenter the network must exist.
1112
1113 .. _bgp-ipv6-support:
1114
1115 IPv6 Support
1116 ------------
1117
1118 .. clicmd:: neighbor A.B.C.D activate
1119
1120 This configuration modifies whether to enable an address family for a
1121 specific neighbor. By default only the IPv4 unicast address family is
1122 enabled.
1123
1124 .. code-block:: frr
1125
1126 router bgp 1
1127 address-family ipv6 unicast
1128 neighbor 2001:0DB8::1 activate
1129 network 2001:0DB8:5009::/64
1130 exit-address-family
1131
1132 This configuration example says that network 2001:0DB8:5009::/64 will be
1133 announced and enables the neighbor 2001:0DB8::1 to receive this announcement.
1134
1135 By default, only the IPv4 unicast address family is announced to all
1136 neighbors. Using the 'no bgp default ipv4-unicast' configuration overrides
1137 this default so that all address families need to be enabled explicitly.
1138
1139 .. code-block:: frr
1140
1141 router bgp 1
1142 no bgp default ipv4-unicast
1143 neighbor 10.10.10.1 remote-as 2
1144 neighbor 2001:0DB8::1 remote-as 3
1145 address-family ipv4 unicast
1146 neighbor 10.10.10.1 activate
1147 network 192.168.1.0/24
1148 exit-address-family
1149 address-family ipv6 unicast
1150 neighbor 2001:0DB8::1 activate
1151 network 2001:0DB8:5009::/64
1152 exit-address-family
1153
1154 This configuration demonstrates how the 'no bgp default ipv4-unicast' might
1155 be used in a setup with two upstreams where each of the upstreams should only
1156 receive either IPv4 or IPv6 announcements.
1157
1158 Using the ``bgp default ipv6-unicast`` configuration, IPv6 unicast
1159 address family is enabled by default for all new neighbors.
1160
1161
1162 .. _bgp-route-aggregation:
1163
1164 Route Aggregation
1165 -----------------
1166
1167 .. _bgp-route-aggregation-ipv4:
1168
1169 Route Aggregation-IPv4 Address Family
1170 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1171
1172 .. clicmd:: aggregate-address A.B.C.D/M
1173
1174 This command specifies an aggregate address.
1175
1176 In order to advertise an aggregated prefix, a more specific (longer) prefix
1177 MUST exist in the BGP table. For example, if you want to create an
1178 ``aggregate-address 10.0.0.0/24``, you should make sure you have something
1179 like ``10.0.0.5/32`` or ``10.0.0.0/26``, or any other smaller prefix in the
1180 BGP table. The routing information table (RIB) is not enough, you have to
1181 redistribute them into the BGP table.
1182
1183 .. clicmd:: aggregate-address A.B.C.D/M route-map NAME
1184
1185 Apply a route-map for an aggregated prefix.
1186
1187 .. clicmd:: aggregate-address A.B.C.D/M origin <egp|igp|incomplete>
1188
1189 Override ORIGIN for an aggregated prefix.
1190
1191 .. clicmd:: aggregate-address A.B.C.D/M as-set
1192
1193 This command specifies an aggregate address. Resulting routes include
1194 AS set.
1195
1196 .. clicmd:: aggregate-address A.B.C.D/M summary-only
1197
1198 This command specifies an aggregate address.
1199
1200 Longer prefixes advertisements of more specific routes to all neighbors are suppressed.
1201
1202 .. clicmd:: aggregate-address A.B.C.D/M matching-MED-only
1203
1204 Configure the aggregated address to only be created when the routes MED
1205 match, otherwise no aggregated route will be created.
1206
1207 .. clicmd:: aggregate-address A.B.C.D/M suppress-map NAME
1208
1209 Similar to `summary-only`, but will only suppress more specific routes that
1210 are matched by the selected route-map.
1211
1212
1213 This configuration example sets up an ``aggregate-address`` under the ipv4
1214 address-family.
1215
1216 .. code-block:: frr
1217
1218 router bgp 1
1219 address-family ipv4 unicast
1220 aggregate-address 10.0.0.0/8
1221 aggregate-address 20.0.0.0/8 as-set
1222 aggregate-address 40.0.0.0/8 summary-only
1223 aggregate-address 50.0.0.0/8 route-map aggr-rmap
1224 exit-address-family
1225
1226
1227 .. _bgp-route-aggregation-ipv6:
1228
1229 Route Aggregation-IPv6 Address Family
1230 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1231
1232 .. clicmd:: aggregate-address X:X::X:X/M
1233
1234 This command specifies an aggregate address.
1235
1236 .. clicmd:: aggregate-address X:X::X:X/M route-map NAME
1237
1238 Apply a route-map for an aggregated prefix.
1239
1240 .. clicmd:: aggregate-address X:X::X:X/M origin <egp|igp|incomplete>
1241
1242 Override ORIGIN for an aggregated prefix.
1243
1244 .. clicmd:: aggregate-address X:X::X:X/M as-set
1245
1246 This command specifies an aggregate address. Resulting routes include
1247 AS set.
1248
1249 .. clicmd:: aggregate-address X:X::X:X/M summary-only
1250
1251 This command specifies an aggregate address.
1252
1253 Longer prefixes advertisements of more specific routes to all neighbors are suppressed
1254
1255 .. clicmd:: aggregate-address X:X::X:X/M matching-MED-only
1256
1257 Configure the aggregated address to only be created when the routes MED
1258 match, otherwise no aggregated route will be created.
1259
1260 .. clicmd:: aggregate-address X:X::X:X/M suppress-map NAME
1261
1262 Similar to `summary-only`, but will only suppress more specific routes that
1263 are matched by the selected route-map.
1264
1265
1266 This configuration example sets up an ``aggregate-address`` under the ipv6
1267 address-family.
1268
1269 .. code-block:: frr
1270
1271 router bgp 1
1272 address-family ipv6 unicast
1273 aggregate-address 10::0/64
1274 aggregate-address 20::0/64 as-set
1275 aggregate-address 40::0/64 summary-only
1276 aggregate-address 50::0/64 route-map aggr-rmap
1277 exit-address-family
1278
1279
1280 .. _bgp-redistribute-to-bgp:
1281
1282 Redistribution
1283 --------------
1284
1285 Redistribution configuration should be placed under the ``address-family``
1286 section for the specific AF to redistribute into. Protocol availability for
1287 redistribution is determined by BGP AF; for example, you cannot redistribute
1288 OSPFv3 into ``address-family ipv4 unicast`` as OSPFv3 supports IPv6.
1289
1290 .. clicmd:: redistribute <babel|connected|eigrp|isis|kernel|openfabric|ospf|ospf6|rip|ripng|sharp|static|table> [metric (0-4294967295)] [route-map WORD]
1291
1292 Redistribute routes from other protocols into BGP.
1293
1294 .. clicmd:: redistribute vnc-direct
1295
1296 Redistribute VNC direct (not via zebra) routes to BGP process.
1297
1298 .. clicmd:: bgp update-delay MAX-DELAY
1299
1300 .. clicmd:: bgp update-delay MAX-DELAY ESTABLISH-WAIT
1301
1302 This feature is used to enable read-only mode on BGP process restart or when
1303 a BGP process is cleared using 'clear ip bgp \*'. Note that this command is
1304 configured at the global level and applies to all bgp instances/vrfs. It
1305 cannot be used at the same time as the "update-delay" command described below,
1306 which is entered in each bgp instance/vrf desired to delay update installation
1307 and advertisements. The global and per-vrf approaches to defining update-delay
1308 are mutually exclusive.
1309
1310 When applicable, read-only mode would begin as soon as the first peer reaches
1311 Established status and a timer for max-delay seconds is started. During this
1312 mode BGP doesn't run any best-path or generate any updates to its peers. This
1313 mode continues until:
1314
1315 1. All the configured peers, except the shutdown peers, have sent explicit EOR
1316 (End-Of-RIB) or an implicit-EOR. The first keep-alive after BGP has reached
1317 Established is considered an implicit-EOR.
1318 If the establish-wait optional value is given, then BGP will wait for
1319 peers to reach established from the beginning of the update-delay till the
1320 establish-wait period is over, i.e. the minimum set of established peers for
1321 which EOR is expected would be peers established during the establish-wait
1322 window, not necessarily all the configured neighbors.
1323 2. max-delay period is over.
1324
1325 On hitting any of the above two conditions, BGP resumes the decision process
1326 and generates updates to its peers.
1327
1328 Default max-delay is 0, i.e. the feature is off by default.
1329
1330
1331 .. clicmd:: update-delay MAX-DELAY
1332
1333 .. clicmd:: update-delay MAX-DELAY ESTABLISH-WAIT
1334
1335 This feature is used to enable read-only mode on BGP process restart or when
1336 a BGP process is cleared using 'clear ip bgp \*'. Note that this command is
1337 configured under the specific bgp instance/vrf that the feature is enabled for.
1338 It cannot be used at the same time as the global "bgp update-delay" described
1339 above, which is entered at the global level and applies to all bgp instances.
1340 The global and per-vrf approaches to defining update-delay are mutually
1341 exclusive.
1342
1343 When applicable, read-only mode would begin as soon as the first peer reaches
1344 Established status and a timer for max-delay seconds is started. During this
1345 mode BGP doesn't run any best-path or generate any updates to its peers. This
1346 mode continues until:
1347
1348 1. All the configured peers, except the shutdown peers, have sent explicit EOR
1349 (End-Of-RIB) or an implicit-EOR. The first keep-alive after BGP has reached
1350 Established is considered an implicit-EOR.
1351 If the establish-wait optional value is given, then BGP will wait for
1352 peers to reach established from the beginning of the update-delay till the
1353 establish-wait period is over, i.e. the minimum set of established peers for
1354 which EOR is expected would be peers established during the establish-wait
1355 window, not necessarily all the configured neighbors.
1356 2. max-delay period is over.
1357
1358 On hitting any of the above two conditions, BGP resumes the decision process
1359 and generates updates to its peers.
1360
1361 Default max-delay is 0, i.e. the feature is off by default.
1362
1363 .. clicmd:: table-map ROUTE-MAP-NAME
1364
1365 This feature is used to apply a route-map on route updates from BGP to
1366 Zebra. All the applicable match operations are allowed, such as match on
1367 prefix, next-hop, communities, etc. Set operations for this attach-point are
1368 limited to metric and next-hop only. Any operation of this feature does not
1369 affect BGPs internal RIB.
1370
1371 Supported for ipv4 and ipv6 address families. It works on multi-paths as
1372 well, however, metric setting is based on the best-path only.
1373
1374 .. _bgp-peers:
1375
1376 Peers
1377 -----
1378
1379 .. _bgp-defining-peers:
1380
1381 Defining Peers
1382 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1383
1384 .. clicmd:: neighbor PEER remote-as ASN
1385
1386 Creates a new neighbor whose remote-as is ASN. PEER can be an IPv4 address
1387 or an IPv6 address or an interface to use for the connection.
1388
1389 .. code-block:: frr
1390
1391 router bgp 1
1392 neighbor 10.0.0.1 remote-as 2
1393
1394 In this case my router, in AS-1, is trying to peer with AS-2 at 10.0.0.1.
1395
1396 This command must be the first command used when configuring a neighbor. If
1397 the remote-as is not specified, *bgpd* will complain like this: ::
1398
1399 can't find neighbor 10.0.0.1
1400
1401 .. clicmd:: neighbor PEER remote-as internal
1402
1403 Create a peer as you would when you specify an ASN, except that if the
1404 peers ASN is different than mine as specified under the :clicmd:`router bgp ASN`
1405 command the connection will be denied.
1406
1407 .. clicmd:: neighbor PEER remote-as external
1408
1409 Create a peer as you would when you specify an ASN, except that if the
1410 peers ASN is the same as mine as specified under the :clicmd:`router bgp ASN`
1411 command the connection will be denied.
1412
1413 .. clicmd:: bgp listen range <A.B.C.D/M|X:X::X:X/M> peer-group PGNAME
1414
1415 Accept connections from any peers in the specified prefix. Configuration
1416 from the specified peer-group is used to configure these peers.
1417
1418 .. note::
1419
1420 When using BGP listen ranges, if the associated peer group has TCP MD5
1421 authentication configured, your kernel must support this on prefixes. On
1422 Linux, this support was added in kernel version 4.14. If your kernel does
1423 not support this feature you will get a warning in the log file, and the
1424 listen range will only accept connections from peers without MD5 configured.
1425
1426 Additionally, we have observed that when using this option at scale (several
1427 hundred peers) the kernel may hit its option memory limit. In this situation
1428 you will see error messages like:
1429
1430 ``bgpd: sockopt_tcp_signature: setsockopt(23): Cannot allocate memory``
1431
1432 In this case you need to increase the value of the sysctl
1433 ``net.core.optmem_max`` to allow the kernel to allocate the necessary option
1434 memory.
1435
1436 .. clicmd:: bgp listen limit <1-65535>
1437
1438 Define the maximum number of peers accepted for one BGP instance. This
1439 limit is set to 100 by default. Increasing this value will really be
1440 possible if more file descriptors are available in the BGP process. This
1441 value is defined by the underlying system (ulimit value), and can be
1442 overridden by `--limit-fds`. More information is available in chapter
1443 (:ref:`common-invocation-options`).
1444
1445 .. clicmd:: coalesce-time (0-4294967295)
1446
1447 The time in milliseconds that BGP will delay before deciding what peers
1448 can be put into an update-group together in order to generate a single
1449 update for them. The default time is 1000.
1450
1451 .. _bgp-configuring-peers:
1452
1453 Configuring Peers
1454 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1455
1456 .. clicmd:: neighbor PEER shutdown [message MSG...] [rtt (1-65535) [count (1-255)]]
1457
1458 Shutdown the peer. We can delete the neighbor's configuration by
1459 ``no neighbor PEER remote-as ASN`` but all configuration of the neighbor
1460 will be deleted. When you want to preserve the configuration, but want to
1461 drop the BGP peer, use this syntax.
1462
1463 Optionally you can specify a shutdown message `MSG`.
1464
1465 Also, you can specify optionally ``rtt`` in milliseconds to automatically
1466 shutdown the peer if round-trip-time becomes higher than defined.
1467
1468 Additional ``count`` parameter is the number of keepalive messages to count
1469 before shutdown the peer if round-trip-time becomes higher than defined.
1470
1471 .. clicmd:: neighbor PEER disable-connected-check
1472
1473 Allow peerings between directly connected eBGP peers using loopback
1474 addresses.
1475
1476 .. clicmd:: neighbor PEER disable-link-bw-encoding-ieee
1477
1478 By default bandwidth in extended communities is carried encoded as IEEE
1479 floating-point format, which is according to the draft.
1480
1481 Older versions have the implementation where extended community bandwidth
1482 value is carried encoded as uint32. To enable backward compatibility we
1483 need to disable IEEE floating-point encoding option per-peer.
1484
1485 .. clicmd:: neighbor PEER extended-optional-parameters
1486
1487 Force Extended Optional Parameters Length format to be used for OPEN messages.
1488
1489 By default, it's disabled. If the standard optional parameters length is
1490 higher than one-octet (255), then extended format is enabled automatically.
1491
1492 For testing purposes, extended format can be enabled with this command.
1493
1494 .. clicmd:: neighbor PEER ebgp-multihop
1495
1496 Specifying ``ebgp-multihop`` allows sessions with eBGP neighbors to
1497 establish when they are multiple hops away. When the neighbor is not
1498 directly connected and this knob is not enabled, the session will not
1499 establish.
1500
1501 If the peer's IP address is not in the RIB and is reachable via the
1502 default route, then you have to enable ``ip nht resolve-via-default``.
1503
1504 .. clicmd:: neighbor PEER description ...
1505
1506 Set description of the peer.
1507
1508 .. clicmd:: neighbor PEER interface IFNAME
1509
1510 When you connect to a BGP peer over an IPv6 link-local address, you have to
1511 specify the IFNAME of the interface used for the connection. To specify
1512 IPv4 session addresses, see the ``neighbor PEER update-source`` command
1513 below.
1514
1515 .. clicmd:: neighbor PEER interface remote-as <internal|external|ASN>
1516
1517 Configure an unnumbered BGP peer. ``PEER`` should be an interface name. The
1518 session will be established via IPv6 link locals. Use ``internal`` for iBGP
1519 and ``external`` for eBGP sessions, or specify an ASN if you wish.
1520
1521 .. clicmd:: neighbor PEER next-hop-self [force]
1522
1523 This command specifies an announced route's nexthop as being equivalent to
1524 the address of the bgp router if it is learned via eBGP. This will also
1525 bypass third-party next-hops in favor of the local bgp address. If the
1526 optional keyword ``force`` is specified the modification is done also for
1527 routes learned via iBGP.
1528
1529 .. clicmd:: neighbor PEER attribute-unchanged [{as-path|next-hop|med}]
1530
1531 This command specifies attributes to be left unchanged for advertisements
1532 sent to a peer. Use this to leave the next-hop unchanged in ipv6
1533 configurations, as the route-map directive to leave the next-hop unchanged
1534 is only available for ipv4.
1535
1536 .. clicmd:: neighbor PEER update-source <IFNAME|ADDRESS>
1537
1538 Specify the IPv4 source address to use for the :abbr:`BGP` session to this
1539 neighbour, may be specified as either an IPv4 address directly or as an
1540 interface name (in which case the *zebra* daemon MUST be running in order
1541 for *bgpd* to be able to retrieve interface state).
1542
1543 .. code-block:: frr
1544
1545 router bgp 64555
1546 neighbor foo update-source 192.168.0.1
1547 neighbor bar update-source lo0
1548
1549
1550 .. clicmd:: neighbor PEER default-originate [route-map WORD]
1551
1552 *bgpd*'s default is to not announce the default route (0.0.0.0/0) even if it
1553 is in routing table. When you want to announce default routes to the peer,
1554 use this command.
1555
1556 If ``route-map`` keyword is specified, then the default route will be
1557 originated only if route-map conditions are met. For example, announce
1558 the default route only if ``10.10.10.10/32`` route exists and set an
1559 arbitrary community for a default route.
1560
1561 .. code-block:: frr
1562
1563 router bgp 64555
1564 address-family ipv4 unicast
1565 neighbor 192.168.255.1 default-originate route-map default
1566 !
1567 ip prefix-list p1 seq 5 permit 10.10.10.10/32
1568 !
1569 route-map default permit 10
1570 match ip address prefix-list p1
1571 set community 123:123
1572 !
1573
1574 .. clicmd:: neighbor PEER port PORT
1575
1576 .. clicmd:: neighbor PEER password PASSWORD
1577
1578 Set a MD5 password to be used with the tcp socket that is being used
1579 to connect to the remote peer. Please note if you are using this
1580 command with a large number of peers on linux you should consider
1581 modifying the `net.core.optmem_max` sysctl to a larger value to
1582 avoid out of memory errors from the linux kernel.
1583
1584 .. clicmd:: neighbor PEER send-community
1585
1586 .. clicmd:: neighbor PEER weight WEIGHT
1587
1588 This command specifies a default `weight` value for the neighbor's routes.
1589
1590 .. clicmd:: neighbor PEER maximum-prefix NUMBER [force]
1591
1592 Sets a maximum number of prefixes we can receive from a given peer. If this
1593 number is exceeded, the BGP session will be destroyed.
1594
1595 In practice, it is generally preferable to use a prefix-list to limit what
1596 prefixes are received from the peer instead of using this knob. Tearing down
1597 the BGP session when a limit is exceeded is far more destructive than merely
1598 rejecting undesired prefixes. The prefix-list method is also much more
1599 granular and offers much smarter matching criterion than number of received
1600 prefixes, making it more suited to implementing policy.
1601
1602 If ``force`` is set, then ALL prefixes are counted for maximum instead of
1603 accepted only. This is useful for cases where an inbound filter is applied,
1604 but you want maximum-prefix to act on ALL (including filtered) prefixes. This
1605 option requires `soft-reconfiguration inbound` to be enabled for the peer.
1606
1607 .. clicmd:: neighbor PEER maximum-prefix-out NUMBER
1608
1609 Sets a maximum number of prefixes we can send to a given peer.
1610
1611 Since sent prefix count is managed by update-groups, this option
1612 creates a separate update-group for outgoing updates.
1613
1614 .. clicmd:: neighbor PEER local-as AS-NUMBER [no-prepend] [replace-as]
1615
1616 Specify an alternate AS for this BGP process when interacting with the
1617 specified peer. With no modifiers, the specified local-as is prepended to
1618 the received AS_PATH when receiving routing updates from the peer, and
1619 prepended to the outgoing AS_PATH (after the process local AS) when
1620 transmitting local routes to the peer.
1621
1622 If the no-prepend attribute is specified, then the supplied local-as is not
1623 prepended to the received AS_PATH.
1624
1625 If the replace-as attribute is specified, then only the supplied local-as is
1626 prepended to the AS_PATH when transmitting local-route updates to this peer.
1627
1628 Note that replace-as can only be specified if no-prepend is.
1629
1630 This command is only allowed for eBGP peers.
1631
1632 .. clicmd:: neighbor <A.B.C.D|X:X::X:X|WORD> as-override
1633
1634 Override AS number of the originating router with the local AS number.
1635
1636 Usually this configuration is used in PEs (Provider Edge) to replace
1637 the incoming customer AS number so the connected CE (Customer Edge)
1638 can use the same AS number as the other customer sites. This allows
1639 customers of the provider network to use the same AS number across
1640 their sites.
1641
1642 This command is only allowed for eBGP peers.
1643
1644 .. clicmd:: neighbor <A.B.C.D|X:X::X:X|WORD> allowas-in [<(1-10)|origin>]
1645
1646 Accept incoming routes with AS path containing AS number with the same value
1647 as the current system AS.
1648
1649 This is used when you want to use the same AS number in your sites, but you
1650 can't connect them directly. This is an alternative to
1651 `neighbor WORD as-override`.
1652
1653 The parameter `(1-10)` configures the amount of accepted occurrences of the
1654 system AS number in AS path.
1655
1656 The parameter `origin` configures BGP to only accept routes originated with
1657 the same AS number as the system.
1658
1659 This command is only allowed for eBGP peers.
1660
1661 .. clicmd:: neighbor <A.B.C.D|X:X::X:X|WORD> addpath-tx-all-paths
1662
1663 Configure BGP to send all known paths to neighbor in order to preserve multi
1664 path capabilities inside a network.
1665
1666 .. clicmd:: neighbor <A.B.C.D|X:X::X:X|WORD> addpath-tx-bestpath-per-AS
1667
1668 Configure BGP to send best known paths to neighbor in order to preserve multi
1669 path capabilities inside a network.
1670
1671 .. clicmd:: neighbor <A.B.C.D|X:X::X:X|WORD> disable-addpath-rx
1672
1673 Do not accept additional paths from this neighbor.
1674
1675 .. clicmd:: neighbor PEER ttl-security hops NUMBER
1676
1677 This command enforces Generalized TTL Security Mechanism (GTSM), as
1678 specified in RFC 5082. With this command, only neighbors that are the
1679 specified number of hops away will be allowed to become neighbors. This
1680 command is mutually exclusive with *ebgp-multihop*.
1681
1682 .. clicmd:: neighbor PEER capability extended-nexthop
1683
1684 Allow bgp to negotiate the extended-nexthop capability with it's peer.
1685 If you are peering over a v6 LL address then this capability is turned
1686 on automatically. If you are peering over a v6 Global Address then
1687 turning on this command will allow BGP to install v4 routes with
1688 v6 nexthops if you do not have v4 configured on interfaces.
1689
1690 .. clicmd:: neighbor <A.B.C.D|X:X::X:X|WORD> accept-own
1691
1692 Enable handling of self-originated VPN routes containing ``accept-own`` community.
1693
1694 This feature allows you to handle self-originated VPN routes, which a BGP speaker
1695 receives from a route-reflector. A 'self-originated' route is one that was
1696 originally advertised by the speaker itself. As per :rfc:`4271`, a BGP speaker rejects
1697 advertisements that originated the speaker itself. However, the BGP ACCEPT_OWN
1698 mechanism enables a router to accept the prefixes it has advertised, when reflected
1699 from a route-reflector that modifies certain attributes of the prefix.
1700
1701 A special community called ``accept-own`` is attached to the prefix by the
1702 route-reflector, which is a signal to the receiving router to bypass the ORIGINATOR_ID
1703 and NEXTHOP/MP_REACH_NLRI check.
1704
1705 Default: disabled.
1706
1707 .. clicmd:: neighbor <A.B.C.D|X:X::X:X|WORD> path-attribute discard (1-255)...
1708
1709 Drops specified path attributes from BGP UPDATE messages from the specified neighbor.
1710
1711 If you do not want specific attributes, you can drop them using this command, and
1712 let the BGP proceed by ignoring those attributes.
1713
1714 .. clicmd:: neighbor <A.B.C.D|X:X::X:X|WORD> path-attribute treat-as-withdraw (1-255)...
1715
1716 Received BGP UPDATES that contain specified path attributes are treat-as-withdraw. If
1717 there is an existing prefix in the BGP routing table, it will be removed.
1718
1719 .. clicmd:: neighbor <A.B.C.D|X:X::X:X|WORD> graceful-shutdown
1720
1721 Mark all routes from this neighbor as less preferred by setting ``graceful-shutdown``
1722 community, and local-preference to 0.
1723
1724 .. clicmd:: bgp fast-external-failover
1725
1726 This command causes bgp to take down ebgp peers immediately
1727 when a link flaps. `bgp fast-external-failover` is the default
1728 and will not be displayed as part of a `show run`. The no form
1729 of the command turns off this ability.
1730
1731 .. clicmd:: bgp default ipv4-unicast
1732
1733 This command allows the user to specify that the IPv4 Unicast address
1734 family is turned on by default or not. This command defaults to on
1735 and is not displayed.
1736 The `no bgp default ipv4-unicast` form of the command is displayed.
1737
1738 .. clicmd:: bgp default ipv4-multicast
1739
1740 This command allows the user to specify that the IPv4 Multicast address
1741 family is turned on by default or not. This command defaults to off
1742 and is not displayed.
1743 The `bgp default ipv4-multicast` form of the command is displayed.
1744
1745 .. clicmd:: bgp default ipv4-vpn
1746
1747 This command allows the user to specify that the IPv4 MPLS VPN address
1748 family is turned on by default or not. This command defaults to off
1749 and is not displayed.
1750 The `bgp default ipv4-vpn` form of the command is displayed.
1751
1752 .. clicmd:: bgp default ipv4-flowspec
1753
1754 This command allows the user to specify that the IPv4 Flowspec address
1755 family is turned on by default or not. This command defaults to off
1756 and is not displayed.
1757 The `bgp default ipv4-flowspec` form of the command is displayed.
1758
1759 .. clicmd:: bgp default ipv6-unicast
1760
1761 This command allows the user to specify that the IPv6 Unicast address
1762 family is turned on by default or not. This command defaults to off
1763 and is not displayed.
1764 The `bgp default ipv6-unicast` form of the command is displayed.
1765
1766 .. clicmd:: bgp default ipv6-multicast
1767
1768 This command allows the user to specify that the IPv6 Multicast address
1769 family is turned on by default or not. This command defaults to off
1770 and is not displayed.
1771 The `bgp default ipv6-multicast` form of the command is displayed.
1772
1773 .. clicmd:: bgp default ipv6-vpn
1774
1775 This command allows the user to specify that the IPv6 MPLS VPN address
1776 family is turned on by default or not. This command defaults to off
1777 and is not displayed.
1778 The `bgp default ipv6-vpn` form of the command is displayed.
1779
1780 .. clicmd:: bgp default ipv6-flowspec
1781
1782 This command allows the user to specify that the IPv6 Flowspec address
1783 family is turned on by default or not. This command defaults to off
1784 and is not displayed.
1785 The `bgp default ipv6-flowspec` form of the command is displayed.
1786
1787 .. clicmd:: bgp default l2vpn-evpn
1788
1789 This command allows the user to specify that the L2VPN EVPN address
1790 family is turned on by default or not. This command defaults to off
1791 and is not displayed.
1792 The `bgp default l2vpn-evpn` form of the command is displayed.
1793
1794 .. clicmd:: bgp default show-hostname
1795
1796 This command shows the hostname of the peer in certain BGP commands
1797 outputs. It's easier to troubleshoot if you have a number of BGP peers.
1798
1799 .. clicmd:: bgp default show-nexthop-hostname
1800
1801 This command shows the hostname of the next-hop in certain BGP commands
1802 outputs. It's easier to troubleshoot if you have a number of BGP peers
1803 and a number of routes to check.
1804
1805 .. clicmd:: neighbor PEER advertisement-interval (0-600)
1806
1807 Setup the minimum route advertisement interval(mrai) for the
1808 peer in question. This number is between 0 and 600 seconds,
1809 with the default advertisement interval being 0.
1810
1811 .. clicmd:: neighbor PEER timers (0-65535) (0-65535)
1812
1813 Set keepalive and hold timers for a neighbor. The first value is keepalive
1814 and the second is hold time.
1815
1816 .. clicmd:: neighbor PEER timers connect (1-65535)
1817
1818 Set connect timer for a neighbor. The connect timer controls how long BGP
1819 waits between connection attempts to a neighbor.
1820
1821 .. clicmd:: neighbor PEER timers delayopen (1-240)
1822
1823 This command allows the user enable the
1824 `RFC 4271 <https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4271/>` DelayOpenTimer with the
1825 specified interval or disable it with the negating command for the peer. By
1826 default, the DelayOpenTimer is disabled. The timer interval may be set to a
1827 duration of 1 to 240 seconds.
1828
1829 .. clicmd:: bgp minimum-holdtime (1-65535)
1830
1831 This command allows user to prevent session establishment with BGP peers
1832 with lower holdtime less than configured minimum holdtime.
1833 When this command is not set, minimum holdtime does not work.
1834
1835 .. clicmd:: bgp tcp-keepalive (1-65535) (1-65535) (1-30)
1836
1837 This command allows user to configure TCP keepalive with new BGP peers.
1838 Each parameter respectively stands for TCP keepalive idle timer (seconds),
1839 interval (seconds), and maximum probes. By default, TCP keepalive is
1840 disabled.
1841
1842 Displaying Information about Peers
1843 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1844
1845 .. clicmd:: show bgp <afi> <safi> neighbors WORD bestpath-routes [detail] [json] [wide]
1846
1847 For the given neighbor, WORD, that is specified list the routes selected
1848 by BGP as having the best path.
1849
1850 If ``detail`` option is specified, the detailed version of all routes
1851 will be displayed. The same format as ``show [ip] bgp [afi] [safi] PREFIX``
1852 will be used, but for the whole table of received, advertised or filtered
1853 prefixes.
1854
1855 If ``json`` option is specified, output is displayed in JSON format.
1856
1857 If ``wide`` option is specified, then the prefix table's width is increased
1858 to fully display the prefix and the nexthop.
1859
1860 .. _bgp-peer-filtering:
1861
1862 Peer Filtering
1863 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1864
1865 .. clicmd:: neighbor PEER distribute-list NAME [in|out]
1866
1867 This command specifies a distribute-list for the peer. `direct` is
1868 ``in`` or ``out``.
1869
1870 .. clicmd:: neighbor PEER prefix-list NAME [in|out]
1871
1872 .. clicmd:: neighbor PEER filter-list NAME [in|out]
1873
1874 .. clicmd:: neighbor PEER route-map NAME [in|out]
1875
1876 Apply a route-map on the neighbor. `direct` must be `in` or `out`.
1877
1878 .. clicmd:: bgp route-reflector allow-outbound-policy
1879
1880 By default, attribute modification via route-map policy out is not reflected
1881 on reflected routes. This option allows the modifications to be reflected as
1882 well. Once enabled, it affects all reflected routes.
1883
1884 .. clicmd:: neighbor PEER sender-as-path-loop-detection
1885
1886 Enable the detection of sender side AS path loops and filter the
1887 bad routes before they are sent.
1888
1889 This setting is disabled by default.
1890
1891 .. _bgp-peer-group:
1892
1893 Peer Groups
1894 ^^^^^^^^^^^
1895
1896 Peer groups are used to help improve scaling by generating the same
1897 update information to all members of a peer group. Note that this means
1898 that the routes generated by a member of a peer group will be sent back
1899 to that originating peer with the originator identifier attribute set to
1900 indicated the originating peer. All peers not associated with a
1901 specific peer group are treated as belonging to a default peer group,
1902 and will share updates.
1903
1904 .. clicmd:: neighbor WORD peer-group
1905
1906 This command defines a new peer group.
1907
1908 .. clicmd:: neighbor PEER peer-group PGNAME
1909
1910 This command bind specific peer to peer group WORD.
1911
1912 .. clicmd:: neighbor PEER solo
1913
1914 This command is used to indicate that routes advertised by the peer
1915 should not be reflected back to the peer. This command only is only
1916 meaningful when there is a single peer defined in the peer-group.
1917
1918 .. clicmd:: show [ip] bgp peer-group [json]
1919
1920 This command displays configured BGP peer-groups.
1921
1922 .. code-block:: frr
1923
1924 exit1-debian-9# show bgp peer-group
1925
1926 BGP peer-group test1, remote AS 65001
1927 Peer-group type is external
1928 Configured address-families: IPv4 Unicast; IPv6 Unicast;
1929 1 IPv4 listen range(s)
1930 192.168.100.0/24
1931 2 IPv6 listen range(s)
1932 2001:db8:1::/64
1933 2001:db8:2::/64
1934 Peer-group members:
1935 192.168.200.1 Active
1936 2001:db8::1 Active
1937
1938 BGP peer-group test2
1939 Peer-group type is external
1940 Configured address-families: IPv4 Unicast;
1941
1942 Optional ``json`` parameter is used to display JSON output.
1943
1944 .. code-block:: frr
1945
1946 {
1947 "test1":{
1948 "remoteAs":65001,
1949 "type":"external",
1950 "addressFamiliesConfigured":[
1951 "IPv4 Unicast",
1952 "IPv6 Unicast"
1953 ],
1954 "dynamicRanges":{
1955 "IPv4":{
1956 "count":1,
1957 "ranges":[
1958 "192.168.100.0\/24"
1959 ]
1960 },
1961 "IPv6":{
1962 "count":2,
1963 "ranges":[
1964 "2001:db8:1::\/64",
1965 "2001:db8:2::\/64"
1966 ]
1967 }
1968 },
1969 "members":{
1970 "192.168.200.1":{
1971 "status":"Active"
1972 },
1973 "2001:db8::1":{
1974 "status":"Active"
1975 }
1976 }
1977 },
1978 "test2":{
1979 "type":"external",
1980 "addressFamiliesConfigured":[
1981 "IPv4 Unicast"
1982 ]
1983 }
1984 }
1985
1986 Capability Negotiation
1987 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1988
1989 .. clicmd:: neighbor PEER strict-capability-match
1990
1991
1992 Strictly compares remote capabilities and local capabilities. If
1993 capabilities are different, send Unsupported Capability error then reset
1994 connection.
1995
1996 You may want to disable sending Capability Negotiation OPEN message optional
1997 parameter to the peer when remote peer does not implement Capability
1998 Negotiation. Please use *dont-capability-negotiate* command to disable the
1999 feature.
2000
2001 .. clicmd:: neighbor PEER dont-capability-negotiate
2002
2003 Suppress sending Capability Negotiation as OPEN message optional parameter
2004 to the peer. This command only affects the peer is configured other than
2005 IPv4 unicast configuration.
2006
2007 When remote peer does not have capability negotiation feature, remote peer
2008 will not send any capabilities at all. In that case, bgp configures the peer
2009 with configured capabilities.
2010
2011 You may prefer locally configured capabilities more than the negotiated
2012 capabilities even though remote peer sends capabilities. If the peer is
2013 configured by *override-capability*, *bgpd* ignores received capabilities
2014 then override negotiated capabilities with configured values.
2015
2016 Additionally the operator should be reminded that this feature fundamentally
2017 disables the ability to use widely deployed BGP features. BGP unnumbered,
2018 hostname support, AS4, Addpath, Route Refresh, ORF, Dynamic Capabilities,
2019 and graceful restart.
2020
2021 .. clicmd:: neighbor PEER override-capability
2022
2023 Override the result of Capability Negotiation with local configuration.
2024 Ignore remote peer's capability value.
2025
2026 .. clicmd:: neighbor PEER capability software-version
2027
2028 Send the software version in the BGP OPEN message to the neighbor. This is
2029 very useful in environments with a large amount of peers with different
2030 versions of FRR or any other vendor.
2031
2032 Disabled by default.
2033
2034 .. _bgp-as-path-access-lists:
2035
2036 AS Path Access Lists
2037 --------------------
2038
2039 AS path access list is user defined AS path.
2040
2041 .. clicmd:: bgp as-path access-list WORD [seq (0-4294967295)] permit|deny LINE
2042
2043 This command defines a new AS path access list.
2044
2045 .. clicmd:: show bgp as-path-access-list [json]
2046
2047 Display all BGP AS Path access lists.
2048
2049 If the ``json`` option is specified, output is displayed in JSON format.
2050
2051 .. clicmd:: show bgp as-path-access-list WORD [json]
2052
2053 Display the specified BGP AS Path access list.
2054
2055 If the ``json`` option is specified, output is displayed in JSON format.
2056
2057 .. _bgp-bogon-filter-example:
2058
2059 Bogon ASN filter policy configuration example
2060 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2061
2062 .. code-block:: frr
2063
2064 bgp as-path access-list 99 permit _0_
2065 bgp as-path access-list 99 permit _23456_
2066 bgp as-path access-list 99 permit _1310[0-6][0-9]_|_13107[0-1]_
2067 bgp as-path access-list 99 seq 20 permit ^65
2068
2069 .. _bgp-using-as-path-in-route-map:
2070
2071 Using AS Path in Route Map
2072 --------------------------
2073
2074 .. clicmd:: match as-path WORD
2075
2076 For a given as-path, WORD, match it on the BGP as-path given for the prefix
2077 and if it matches do normal route-map actions. The no form of the command
2078 removes this match from the route-map.
2079
2080 .. clicmd:: set as-path prepend AS-PATH
2081
2082 Prepend the given string of AS numbers to the AS_PATH of the BGP path's NLRI.
2083 The no form of this command removes this set operation from the route-map.
2084
2085 .. clicmd:: set as-path prepend last-as NUM
2086
2087 Prepend the existing last AS number (the leftmost ASN) to the AS_PATH.
2088 The no form of this command removes this set operation from the route-map.
2089
2090 .. clicmd:: set as-path replace <any|ASN>
2091
2092 Replace a specific AS number to local AS number. ``any`` replaces each
2093 AS number in the AS-PATH with the local AS number.
2094
2095 .. _bgp-communities-attribute:
2096
2097 Communities Attribute
2098 ---------------------
2099
2100 The BGP communities attribute is widely used for implementing policy routing.
2101 Network operators can manipulate BGP communities attribute based on their
2102 network policy. BGP communities attribute is defined in :rfc:`1997` and
2103 :rfc:`1998`. It is an optional transitive attribute, therefore local policy can
2104 travel through different autonomous system.
2105
2106 The communities attribute is a set of communities values. Each community value
2107 is 4 octet long. The following format is used to define the community value.
2108
2109 ``AS:VAL``
2110 This format represents 4 octet communities value. ``AS`` is high order 2
2111 octet in digit format. ``VAL`` is low order 2 octet in digit format. This
2112 format is useful to define AS oriented policy value. For example,
2113 ``7675:80`` can be used when AS 7675 wants to pass local policy value 80 to
2114 neighboring peer.
2115
2116 ``internet``
2117 ``internet`` represents well-known communities value 0.
2118
2119 ``graceful-shutdown``
2120 ``graceful-shutdown`` represents well-known communities value
2121 ``GRACEFUL_SHUTDOWN`` ``0xFFFF0000`` ``65535:0``. :rfc:`8326` implements
2122 the purpose Graceful BGP Session Shutdown to reduce the amount of
2123 lost traffic when taking BGP sessions down for maintenance. The use
2124 of the community needs to be supported from your peers side to
2125 actually have any effect.
2126
2127 ``accept-own``
2128 ``accept-own`` represents well-known communities value ``ACCEPT_OWN``
2129 ``0xFFFF0001`` ``65535:1``. :rfc:`7611` implements a way to signal
2130 to a router to accept routes with a local nexthop address. This
2131 can be the case when doing policing and having traffic having a
2132 nexthop located in another VRF but still local interface to the
2133 router. It is recommended to read the RFC for full details.
2134
2135 ``route-filter-translated-v4``
2136 ``route-filter-translated-v4`` represents well-known communities value
2137 ``ROUTE_FILTER_TRANSLATED_v4`` ``0xFFFF0002`` ``65535:2``.
2138
2139 ``route-filter-v4``
2140 ``route-filter-v4`` represents well-known communities value
2141 ``ROUTE_FILTER_v4`` ``0xFFFF0003`` ``65535:3``.
2142
2143 ``route-filter-translated-v6``
2144 ``route-filter-translated-v6`` represents well-known communities value
2145 ``ROUTE_FILTER_TRANSLATED_v6`` ``0xFFFF0004`` ``65535:4``.
2146
2147 ``route-filter-v6``
2148 ``route-filter-v6`` represents well-known communities value
2149 ``ROUTE_FILTER_v6`` ``0xFFFF0005`` ``65535:5``.
2150
2151 ``llgr-stale``
2152 ``llgr-stale`` represents well-known communities value ``LLGR_STALE``
2153 ``0xFFFF0006`` ``65535:6``.
2154 Assigned and intended only for use with routers supporting the
2155 Long-lived Graceful Restart Capability as described in
2156 [Draft-IETF-uttaro-idr-bgp-persistence]_.
2157 Routers receiving routes with this community may (depending on
2158 implementation) choose allow to reject or modify routes on the
2159 presence or absence of this community.
2160
2161 ``no-llgr``
2162 ``no-llgr`` represents well-known communities value ``NO_LLGR``
2163 ``0xFFFF0007`` ``65535:7``.
2164 Assigned and intended only for use with routers supporting the
2165 Long-lived Graceful Restart Capability as described in
2166 [Draft-IETF-uttaro-idr-bgp-persistence]_.
2167 Routers receiving routes with this community may (depending on
2168 implementation) choose allow to reject or modify routes on the
2169 presence or absence of this community.
2170
2171 ``accept-own-nexthop``
2172 ``accept-own-nexthop`` represents well-known communities value
2173 ``accept-own-nexthop`` ``0xFFFF0008`` ``65535:8``.
2174 [Draft-IETF-agrewal-idr-accept-own-nexthop]_ describes
2175 how to tag and label VPN routes to be able to send traffic between VRFs
2176 via an internal layer 2 domain on the same PE device. Refer to
2177 [Draft-IETF-agrewal-idr-accept-own-nexthop]_ for full details.
2178
2179 ``blackhole``
2180 ``blackhole`` represents well-known communities value ``BLACKHOLE``
2181 ``0xFFFF029A`` ``65535:666``. :rfc:`7999` documents sending prefixes to
2182 EBGP peers and upstream for the purpose of blackholing traffic.
2183 Prefixes tagged with the this community should normally not be
2184 re-advertised from neighbors of the originating network. Upon receiving
2185 ``BLACKHOLE`` community from a BGP speaker, ``NO_ADVERTISE`` community
2186 is added automatically.
2187
2188 ``no-export``
2189 ``no-export`` represents well-known communities value ``NO_EXPORT``
2190 ``0xFFFFFF01``. All routes carry this value must not be advertised to
2191 outside a BGP confederation boundary. If neighboring BGP peer is part of BGP
2192 confederation, the peer is considered as inside a BGP confederation
2193 boundary, so the route will be announced to the peer.
2194
2195 ``no-advertise``
2196 ``no-advertise`` represents well-known communities value ``NO_ADVERTISE``
2197 ``0xFFFFFF02``. All routes carry this value must not be advertise to other
2198 BGP peers.
2199
2200 ``local-AS``
2201 ``local-AS`` represents well-known communities value ``NO_EXPORT_SUBCONFED``
2202 ``0xFFFFFF03``. All routes carry this value must not be advertised to
2203 external BGP peers. Even if the neighboring router is part of confederation,
2204 it is considered as external BGP peer, so the route will not be announced to
2205 the peer.
2206
2207 ``no-peer``
2208 ``no-peer`` represents well-known communities value ``NOPEER``
2209 ``0xFFFFFF04`` ``65535:65284``. :rfc:`3765` is used to communicate to
2210 another network how the originating network want the prefix propagated.
2211
2212 When the communities attribute is received duplicate community values in the
2213 attribute are ignored and value is sorted in numerical order.
2214
2215 .. [Draft-IETF-uttaro-idr-bgp-persistence] <https://tools.ietf.org/id/draft-uttaro-idr-bgp-persistence-04.txt>
2216 .. [Draft-IETF-agrewal-idr-accept-own-nexthop] <https://tools.ietf.org/id/draft-agrewal-idr-accept-own-nexthop-00.txt>
2217
2218 .. _bgp-community-lists:
2219
2220 Community Lists
2221 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2222 Community lists are user defined lists of community attribute values. These
2223 lists can be used for matching or manipulating the communities attribute in
2224 UPDATE messages.
2225
2226 There are two types of community list:
2227
2228 standard
2229 This type accepts an explicit value for the attribute.
2230
2231 expanded
2232 This type accepts a regular expression. Because the regex must be
2233 interpreted on each use expanded community lists are slower than standard
2234 lists.
2235
2236 .. clicmd:: bgp community-list standard NAME permit|deny COMMUNITY
2237
2238 This command defines a new standard community list. ``COMMUNITY`` is
2239 communities value. The ``COMMUNITY`` is compiled into community structure.
2240 We can define multiple community list under same name. In that case match
2241 will happen user defined order. Once the community list matches to
2242 communities attribute in BGP updates it return permit or deny by the
2243 community list definition. When there is no matched entry, deny will be
2244 returned. When ``COMMUNITY`` is empty it matches to any routes.
2245
2246 .. clicmd:: bgp community-list expanded NAME permit|deny COMMUNITY
2247
2248 This command defines a new expanded community list. ``COMMUNITY`` is a
2249 string expression of communities attribute. ``COMMUNITY`` can be a regular
2250 expression (:ref:`bgp-regular-expressions`) to match the communities
2251 attribute in BGP updates. The expanded community is only used to filter,
2252 not `set` actions.
2253
2254 .. deprecated:: 5.0
2255 It is recommended to use the more explicit versions of this command.
2256
2257 .. clicmd:: bgp community-list NAME permit|deny COMMUNITY
2258
2259 When the community list type is not specified, the community list type is
2260 automatically detected. If ``COMMUNITY`` can be compiled into communities
2261 attribute, the community list is defined as a standard community list.
2262 Otherwise it is defined as an expanded community list. This feature is left
2263 for backward compatibility. Use of this feature is not recommended.
2264
2265 Note that all community lists share the same namespace, so it's not
2266 necessary to specify ``standard`` or ``expanded``; these modifiers are
2267 purely aesthetic.
2268
2269 .. clicmd:: show bgp community-list [NAME detail]
2270
2271 Displays community list information. When ``NAME`` is specified the
2272 specified community list's information is shown.
2273
2274 ::
2275
2276 # show bgp community-list
2277 Named Community standard list CLIST
2278 permit 7675:80 7675:100 no-export
2279 deny internet
2280 Named Community expanded list EXPAND
2281 permit :
2282
2283 # show bgp community-list CLIST detail
2284 Named Community standard list CLIST
2285 permit 7675:80 7675:100 no-export
2286 deny internet
2287
2288
2289 .. _bgp-numbered-community-lists:
2290
2291 Numbered Community Lists
2292 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2293
2294 When number is used for BGP community list name, the number has
2295 special meanings. Community list number in the range from 1 and 99 is
2296 standard community list. Community list number in the range from 100
2297 to 500 is expanded community list. These community lists are called
2298 as numbered community lists. On the other hand normal community lists
2299 is called as named community lists.
2300
2301 .. clicmd:: bgp community-list (1-99) permit|deny COMMUNITY
2302
2303 This command defines a new community list. The argument to (1-99) defines
2304 the list identifier.
2305
2306 .. clicmd:: bgp community-list (100-500) permit|deny COMMUNITY
2307
2308 This command defines a new expanded community list. The argument to
2309 (100-500) defines the list identifier.
2310
2311 .. _bgp-community-alias:
2312
2313 Community alias
2314 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2315
2316 BGP community aliases are useful to quickly identify what communities are set
2317 for a specific prefix in a human-readable format. Especially handy for a huge
2318 amount of communities. Accurately defined aliases can help you faster spot
2319 things on the wire.
2320
2321 .. clicmd:: bgp community alias NAME ALIAS
2322
2323 This command creates an alias name for a community that will be used
2324 later in various CLI outputs in a human-readable format.
2325
2326 .. code-block:: frr
2327
2328 ~# vtysh -c 'show run' | grep 'bgp community alias'
2329 bgp community alias 65001:14 community-1
2330 bgp community alias 65001:123:1 lcommunity-1
2331
2332 ~# vtysh -c 'show ip bgp 172.16.16.1/32'
2333 BGP routing table entry for 172.16.16.1/32, version 21
2334 Paths: (2 available, best #2, table default)
2335 Advertised to non peer-group peers:
2336 65030
2337 192.168.0.2 from 192.168.0.2 (172.16.16.1)
2338 Origin incomplete, metric 0, valid, external, best (Neighbor IP)
2339 Community: 65001:12 65001:13 community-1 65001:65534
2340 Large Community: lcommunity-1 65001:123:2
2341 Last update: Fri Apr 16 12:51:27 2021
2342
2343 .. clicmd:: show bgp [afi] [safi] [all] alias WORD [wide|json]
2344
2345 Display prefixes with matching BGP community alias.
2346
2347 .. _bgp-using-communities-in-route-map:
2348
2349 Using Communities in Route Maps
2350 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2351
2352 In :ref:`route-map` we can match on or set the BGP communities attribute. Using
2353 this feature network operator can implement their network policy based on BGP
2354 communities attribute.
2355
2356 The following commands can be used in route maps:
2357
2358 .. clicmd:: match alias WORD
2359
2360 This command performs match to BGP updates using community alias WORD. When
2361 the one of BGP communities value match to the one of community alias value in
2362 community alias, it is match.
2363
2364 .. clicmd:: match community WORD exact-match [exact-match]
2365
2366 This command perform match to BGP updates using community list WORD. When
2367 the one of BGP communities value match to the one of communities value in
2368 community list, it is match. When `exact-match` keyword is specified, match
2369 happen only when BGP updates have completely same communities value
2370 specified in the community list.
2371
2372 .. clicmd:: set community <none|COMMUNITY> additive
2373
2374 This command sets the community value in BGP updates. If the attribute is
2375 already configured, the newly provided value replaces the old one unless the
2376 ``additive`` keyword is specified, in which case the new value is appended
2377 to the existing value.
2378
2379 If ``none`` is specified as the community value, the communities attribute
2380 is not sent.
2381
2382 It is not possible to set an expanded community list.
2383
2384 .. clicmd:: set comm-list WORD delete
2385
2386 This command remove communities value from BGP communities attribute. The
2387 ``word`` is community list name. When BGP route's communities value matches
2388 to the community list ``word``, the communities value is removed. When all
2389 of communities value is removed eventually, the BGP update's communities
2390 attribute is completely removed.
2391
2392 .. _bgp-communities-example:
2393
2394 Example Configuration
2395 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2396
2397 The following configuration is exemplary of the most typical usage of BGP
2398 communities attribute. In the example, AS 7675 provides an upstream Internet
2399 connection to AS 100. When the following configuration exists in AS 7675, the
2400 network operator of AS 100 can set local preference in AS 7675 network by
2401 setting BGP communities attribute to the updates.
2402
2403 .. code-block:: frr
2404
2405 router bgp 7675
2406 neighbor 192.168.0.1 remote-as 100
2407 address-family ipv4 unicast
2408 neighbor 192.168.0.1 route-map RMAP in
2409 exit-address-family
2410 !
2411 bgp community-list 70 permit 7675:70
2412 bgp community-list 80 permit 7675:80
2413 bgp community-list 90 permit 7675:90
2414 !
2415 route-map RMAP permit 10
2416 match community 70
2417 set local-preference 70
2418 !
2419 route-map RMAP permit 20
2420 match community 80
2421 set local-preference 80
2422 !
2423 route-map RMAP permit 30
2424 match community 90
2425 set local-preference 90
2426
2427
2428 The following configuration announces ``10.0.0.0/8`` from AS 100 to AS 7675.
2429 The route has communities value ``7675:80`` so when above configuration exists
2430 in AS 7675, the announced routes' local preference value will be set to 80.
2431
2432 .. code-block:: frr
2433
2434 router bgp 100
2435 network 10.0.0.0/8
2436 neighbor 192.168.0.2 remote-as 7675
2437 address-family ipv4 unicast
2438 neighbor 192.168.0.2 route-map RMAP out
2439 exit-address-family
2440 !
2441 ip prefix-list PLIST permit 10.0.0.0/8
2442 !
2443 route-map RMAP permit 10
2444 match ip address prefix-list PLIST
2445 set community 7675:80
2446
2447
2448 The following configuration is an example of BGP route filtering using
2449 communities attribute. This configuration only permit BGP routes which has BGP
2450 communities value (``0:80`` and ``0:90``) or ``0:100``. The network operator can
2451 set special internal communities value at BGP border router, then limit the
2452 BGP route announcements into the internal network.
2453
2454 .. code-block:: frr
2455
2456 router bgp 7675
2457 neighbor 192.168.0.1 remote-as 100
2458 address-family ipv4 unicast
2459 neighbor 192.168.0.1 route-map RMAP in
2460 exit-address-family
2461 !
2462 bgp community-list 1 permit 0:80 0:90
2463 bgp community-list 1 permit 0:100
2464 !
2465 route-map RMAP permit in
2466 match community 1
2467
2468
2469 The following example filters BGP routes which have a community value of
2470 ``1:1``. When there is no match community-list returns ``deny``. To avoid
2471 filtering all routes, a ``permit`` line is set at the end of the
2472 community-list.
2473
2474 .. code-block:: frr
2475
2476 router bgp 7675
2477 neighbor 192.168.0.1 remote-as 100
2478 address-family ipv4 unicast
2479 neighbor 192.168.0.1 route-map RMAP in
2480 exit-address-family
2481 !
2482 bgp community-list standard FILTER deny 1:1
2483 bgp community-list standard FILTER permit
2484 !
2485 route-map RMAP permit 10
2486 match community FILTER
2487
2488
2489 The communities value keyword ``internet`` has special meanings in standard
2490 community lists. In the below example ``internet`` matches all BGP routes even
2491 if the route does not have communities attribute at all. So community list
2492 ``INTERNET`` is the same as ``FILTER`` in the previous example.
2493
2494 .. code-block:: frr
2495
2496 bgp community-list standard INTERNET deny 1:1
2497 bgp community-list standard INTERNET permit internet
2498
2499
2500 The following configuration is an example of communities value deletion. With
2501 this configuration the community values ``100:1`` and ``100:2`` are removed
2502 from BGP updates. For communities value deletion, only ``permit``
2503 community-list is used. ``deny`` community-list is ignored.
2504
2505 .. code-block:: frr
2506
2507 router bgp 7675
2508 neighbor 192.168.0.1 remote-as 100
2509 address-family ipv4 unicast
2510 neighbor 192.168.0.1 route-map RMAP in
2511 exit-address-family
2512 !
2513 bgp community-list standard DEL permit 100:1 100:2
2514 !
2515 route-map RMAP permit 10
2516 set comm-list DEL delete
2517
2518
2519 .. _bgp-extended-communities-attribute:
2520
2521 Extended Communities Attribute
2522 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2523
2524 BGP extended communities attribute is introduced with MPLS VPN/BGP technology.
2525 MPLS VPN/BGP expands capability of network infrastructure to provide VPN
2526 functionality. At the same time it requires a new framework for policy routing.
2527 With BGP Extended Communities Attribute we can use Route Target or Site of
2528 Origin for implementing network policy for MPLS VPN/BGP.
2529
2530 BGP Extended Communities Attribute is similar to BGP Communities Attribute. It
2531 is an optional transitive attribute. BGP Extended Communities Attribute can
2532 carry multiple Extended Community value. Each Extended Community value is
2533 eight octet length.
2534
2535 BGP Extended Communities Attribute provides an extended range compared with BGP
2536 Communities Attribute. Adding to that there is a type field in each value to
2537 provides community space structure.
2538
2539 There are two format to define Extended Community value. One is AS based format
2540 the other is IP address based format.
2541
2542 ``AS:VAL``
2543 This is a format to define AS based Extended Community value. ``AS`` part
2544 is 2 octets Global Administrator subfield in Extended Community value.
2545 ``VAL`` part is 4 octets Local Administrator subfield. ``7675:100``
2546 represents AS 7675 policy value 100.
2547
2548 ``IP-Address:VAL``
2549 This is a format to define IP address based Extended Community value.
2550 ``IP-Address`` part is 4 octets Global Administrator subfield. ``VAL`` part
2551 is 2 octets Local Administrator subfield.
2552
2553 .. _bgp-extended-community-lists:
2554
2555 Extended Community Lists
2556 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2557
2558 .. clicmd:: bgp extcommunity-list standard NAME permit|deny EXTCOMMUNITY
2559
2560 This command defines a new standard extcommunity-list. `extcommunity` is
2561 extended communities value. The `extcommunity` is compiled into extended
2562 community structure. We can define multiple extcommunity-list under same
2563 name. In that case match will happen user defined order. Once the
2564 extcommunity-list matches to extended communities attribute in BGP updates
2565 it return permit or deny based upon the extcommunity-list definition. When
2566 there is no matched entry, deny will be returned. When `extcommunity` is
2567 empty it matches to any routes.
2568
2569 A special handling for ``internet`` community is applied. It matches
2570 any community.
2571
2572 .. clicmd:: bgp extcommunity-list expanded NAME permit|deny LINE
2573
2574 This command defines a new expanded extcommunity-list. `line` is a string
2575 expression of extended communities attribute. `line` can be a regular
2576 expression (:ref:`bgp-regular-expressions`) to match an extended communities
2577 attribute in BGP updates.
2578
2579 Note that all extended community lists shares a single name space, so it's
2580 not necessary to specify their type when creating or destroying them.
2581
2582 .. clicmd:: show bgp extcommunity-list [NAME detail]
2583
2584 This command displays current extcommunity-list information. When `name` is
2585 specified the community list's information is shown.
2586
2587
2588 .. _bgp-extended-communities-in-route-map:
2589
2590 BGP Extended Communities in Route Map
2591 """""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
2592
2593 .. clicmd:: match extcommunity WORD
2594
2595 .. clicmd:: set extcommunity none
2596
2597 This command resets the extended community value in BGP updates. If the attribute is
2598 already configured or received from the peer, the attribute is discarded and set to
2599 none. This is useful if you need to strip incoming extended communities.
2600
2601 .. clicmd:: set extcommunity rt EXTCOMMUNITY
2602
2603 This command set Route Target value.
2604
2605 .. clicmd:: set extcommunity soo EXTCOMMUNITY
2606
2607 This command set Site of Origin value.
2608
2609 .. clicmd:: set extcommunity bandwidth <(1-25600) | cumulative | num-multipaths> [non-transitive]
2610
2611 This command sets the BGP link-bandwidth extended community for the prefix
2612 (best path) for which it is applied. The link-bandwidth can be specified as
2613 an ``explicit value`` (specified in Mbps), or the router can be told to use
2614 the ``cumulative bandwidth`` of all multipaths for the prefix or to compute
2615 it based on the ``number of multipaths``. The link bandwidth extended
2616 community is encoded as ``transitive`` unless the set command explicitly
2617 configures it as ``non-transitive``.
2618
2619 .. seealso:: :ref:`wecmp_linkbw`
2620
2621 Note that the extended expanded community is only used for `match` rule, not for
2622 `set` actions.
2623
2624 .. _bgp-large-communities-attribute:
2625
2626 Large Communities Attribute
2627 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2628
2629 The BGP Large Communities attribute was introduced in Feb 2017 with
2630 :rfc:`8092`.
2631
2632 The BGP Large Communities Attribute is similar to the BGP Communities Attribute
2633 except that it has 3 components instead of two and each of which are 4 octets
2634 in length. Large Communities bring additional functionality and convenience
2635 over traditional communities, specifically the fact that the ``GLOBAL`` part
2636 below is now 4 octets wide allowing seamless use in networks using 4-byte ASNs.
2637
2638 ``GLOBAL:LOCAL1:LOCAL2``
2639 This is the format to define Large Community values. Referencing :rfc:`8195`
2640 the values are commonly referred to as follows:
2641
2642 - The ``GLOBAL`` part is a 4 octet Global Administrator field, commonly used
2643 as the operators AS number.
2644 - The ``LOCAL1`` part is a 4 octet Local Data Part 1 subfield referred to as
2645 a function.
2646 - The ``LOCAL2`` part is a 4 octet Local Data Part 2 field and referred to
2647 as the parameter subfield.
2648
2649 As an example, ``65551:1:10`` represents AS 65551 function 1 and parameter
2650 10. The referenced RFC above gives some guidelines on recommended usage.
2651
2652 .. _bgp-large-community-lists:
2653
2654 Large Community Lists
2655 """""""""""""""""""""
2656
2657 Two types of large community lists are supported, namely `standard` and
2658 `expanded`.
2659
2660 .. clicmd:: bgp large-community-list standard NAME permit|deny LARGE-COMMUNITY
2661
2662 This command defines a new standard large-community-list. `large-community`
2663 is the Large Community value. We can add multiple large communities under
2664 same name. In that case the match will happen in the user defined order.
2665 Once the large-community-list matches the Large Communities attribute in BGP
2666 updates it will return permit or deny based upon the large-community-list
2667 definition. When there is no matched entry, a deny will be returned. When
2668 `large-community` is empty it matches any routes.
2669
2670 .. clicmd:: bgp large-community-list expanded NAME permit|deny LINE
2671
2672 This command defines a new expanded large-community-list. Where `line` is a
2673 string matching expression, it will be compared to the entire Large
2674 Communities attribute as a string, with each large-community in order from
2675 lowest to highest. `line` can also be a regular expression which matches
2676 this Large Community attribute.
2677
2678 Note that all community lists share the same namespace, so it's not
2679 necessary to specify ``standard`` or ``expanded``; these modifiers are
2680 purely aesthetic.
2681
2682 .. clicmd:: show bgp large-community-list
2683
2684 .. clicmd:: show bgp large-community-list NAME detail
2685
2686 This command display current large-community-list information. When
2687 `name` is specified the community list information is shown.
2688
2689 .. clicmd:: show ip bgp large-community-info
2690
2691 This command displays the current large communities in use.
2692
2693 .. _bgp-large-communities-in-route-map:
2694
2695 Large Communities in Route Map
2696 """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""
2697
2698 .. clicmd:: match large-community LINE [exact-match]
2699
2700 Where `line` can be a simple string to match, or a regular expression. It
2701 is very important to note that this match occurs on the entire
2702 large-community string as a whole, where each large-community is ordered
2703 from lowest to highest. When `exact-match` keyword is specified, match
2704 happen only when BGP updates have completely same large communities value
2705 specified in the large community list.
2706
2707 .. clicmd:: set large-community LARGE-COMMUNITY
2708
2709 .. clicmd:: set large-community LARGE-COMMUNITY LARGE-COMMUNITY
2710
2711 .. clicmd:: set large-community LARGE-COMMUNITY additive
2712
2713 These commands are used for setting large-community values. The first
2714 command will overwrite any large-communities currently present.
2715 The second specifies two large-communities, which overwrites the current
2716 large-community list. The third will add a large-community value without
2717 overwriting other values. Multiple large-community values can be specified.
2718
2719 Note that the large expanded community is only used for `match` rule, not for
2720 `set` actions.
2721
2722 .. _bgp-roles-and-only-to-customers:
2723
2724 BGP Roles and Only to Customers
2725 -------------------------------
2726
2727 BGP roles are defined in :rfc:`9234` and provide an easy way to route leaks
2728 prevention, detection and mitigation.
2729
2730 To enable its mechanics, you must set your local role to reflect your type of
2731 peering relationship with your neighbor. Possible values of ``LOCAL-ROLE`` are:
2732
2733 - provider
2734 - rs-server
2735 - rs-client
2736 - customer
2737 - peer
2738
2739 The local Role value is negotiated with the new BGP Role capability with a
2740 built-in check of the corresponding value. In case of mismatch the new OPEN
2741 Roles Mismatch Notification <2, 11> would be sent.
2742
2743 The correct Role pairs are:
2744
2745 * Provider - Customer
2746 * Peer - Peer
2747 * RS-Server - RS-Client
2748
2749 .. code-block:: shell
2750
2751 ~# vtysh -c 'show bgp neighbor' | grep 'Role'
2752 Local Role: customer
2753 Neighbor Role: provider
2754 Role: advertised and received
2755
2756 If strict-mode is set BGP session won't become established until BGP neighbor
2757 set local Role on its side. This configuration parameter is defined in
2758 :rfc:`9234` and used to enforce corresponding configuration at your
2759 counter-part side. Default value - disabled.
2760
2761 Routes that sent from provider, rs-server, or peer local-role (or if received
2762 by customer, rs-clinet, or peer local-role) will be marked with a new
2763 Only to Customer (OTC) attribute.
2764
2765 Routes with this attribute can only be sent to your neighbor if your
2766 local-role is provider or rs-server. Routes with this attribute can be
2767 received only if your local-role is customer or rs-client.
2768
2769 In case of peer-peer relationship routes can be received only if
2770 OTC value is equal to your neighbor AS number.
2771
2772 All these rules with OTC help to detect and mitigate route leaks and
2773 happened automatically if local-role is set.
2774
2775 .. clicmd:: neighbor PEER local-role LOCAL-ROLE [strict-mode]
2776
2777 This command set your local-role to ``LOCAL-ROLE``:
2778 <provider|rs-server|rs-client|customer|peer>.
2779
2780 This role helps to detect and prevent route leaks.
2781
2782 If ``strict-mode`` is set, your neighbor must send you Capability with the
2783 value of his role (by setting local-role on his side). Otherwise, a Role
2784 Mismatch Notification will be sent.
2785
2786 .. _bgp-l3vpn-vrfs:
2787
2788 L3VPN VRFs
2789 ----------
2790
2791 *bgpd* supports :abbr:`L3VPN (Layer 3 Virtual Private Networks)` :abbr:`VRFs
2792 (Virtual Routing and Forwarding)` for IPv4 :rfc:`4364` and IPv6 :rfc:`4659`.
2793 L3VPN routes, and their associated VRF MPLS labels, can be distributed to VPN
2794 SAFI neighbors in the *default*, i.e., non VRF, BGP instance. VRF MPLS labels
2795 are reached using *core* MPLS labels which are distributed using LDP or BGP
2796 labeled unicast. *bgpd* also supports inter-VRF route leaking.
2797
2798
2799 L3VPN over GRE interfaces
2800 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2801
2802 In MPLS-VPN or SRv6-VPN, an L3VPN next-hop entry requires that the path
2803 chosen respectively contains a labelled path or a valid SID IPv6 address.
2804 Otherwise the L3VPN entry will not be installed. It is possible to ignore
2805 that check when the path chosen by the next-hop uses a GRE interface, and
2806 there is a route-map configured at inbound side of ipv4-vpn or ipv6-vpn
2807 address family with following syntax:
2808
2809 .. clicmd:: set l3vpn next-hop encapsulation gre
2810
2811 The incoming BGP L3VPN entry is accepted, provided that the next hop of the
2812 L3VPN entry uses a path that takes the GRE tunnel as outgoing interface. The
2813 remote endpoint should be configured just behind the GRE tunnel; remote
2814 device configuration may vary depending whether it acts at edge endpoint or
2815 not: in any case, the expectation is that incoming MPLS traffic received at
2816 this endpoint should be considered as a valid path for L3VPN.
2817
2818 .. _bgp-vrf-route-leaking:
2819
2820 VRF Route Leaking
2821 -----------------
2822
2823 BGP routes may be leaked (i.e. copied) between a unicast VRF RIB and the VPN
2824 SAFI RIB of the default VRF for use in MPLS-based L3VPNs. Unicast routes may
2825 also be leaked between any VRFs (including the unicast RIB of the default BGP
2826 instanced). A shortcut syntax is also available for specifying leaking from one
2827 VRF to another VRF using the default instance's VPN RIB as the intermediary. A
2828 common application of the VRF-VRF feature is to connect a customer's private
2829 routing domain to a provider's VPN service. Leaking is configured from the
2830 point of view of an individual VRF: ``import`` refers to routes leaked from VPN
2831 to a unicast VRF, whereas ``export`` refers to routes leaked from a unicast VRF
2832 to VPN.
2833
2834 Required parameters
2835 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2836
2837 Routes exported from a unicast VRF to the VPN RIB must be augmented by two
2838 parameters:
2839
2840 - an :abbr:`RD (Route Distinguisher)`
2841 - an :abbr:`RTLIST (Route-target List)`
2842
2843 Configuration for these exported routes must, at a minimum, specify these two
2844 parameters.
2845
2846 Routes imported from the VPN RIB to a unicast VRF are selected according to
2847 their RTLISTs. Routes whose RTLIST contains at least one route-target in
2848 common with the configured import RTLIST are leaked. Configuration for these
2849 imported routes must specify an RTLIST to be matched.
2850
2851 The RD, which carries no semantic value, is intended to make the route unique
2852 in the VPN RIB among all routes of its prefix that originate from all the
2853 customers and sites that are attached to the provider's VPN service.
2854 Accordingly, each site of each customer is typically assigned an RD that is
2855 unique across the entire provider network.
2856
2857 The RTLIST is a set of route-target extended community values whose purpose is
2858 to specify route-leaking policy. Typically, a customer is assigned a single
2859 route-target value for import and export to be used at all customer sites. This
2860 configuration specifies a simple topology wherein a customer has a single
2861 routing domain which is shared across all its sites. More complex routing
2862 topologies are possible through use of additional route-targets to augment the
2863 leaking of sets of routes in various ways.
2864
2865 When using the shortcut syntax for vrf-to-vrf leaking, the RD and RT are
2866 auto-derived.
2867
2868 General configuration
2869 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2870
2871 Configuration of route leaking between a unicast VRF RIB and the VPN SAFI RIB
2872 of the default VRF is accomplished via commands in the context of a VRF
2873 address-family:
2874
2875 .. clicmd:: rd vpn export AS:NN|IP:nn
2876
2877 Specifies the route distinguisher to be added to a route exported from the
2878 current unicast VRF to VPN.
2879
2880 .. clicmd:: rt vpn import|export|both RTLIST...
2881
2882 Specifies the route-target list to be attached to a route (export) or the
2883 route-target list to match against (import) when exporting/importing between
2884 the current unicast VRF and VPN.
2885
2886 The RTLIST is a space-separated list of route-targets, which are BGP
2887 extended community values as described in
2888 :ref:`bgp-extended-communities-attribute`.
2889
2890 .. clicmd:: label vpn export (0..1048575)|auto
2891
2892 Enables an MPLS label to be attached to a route exported from the current
2893 unicast VRF to VPN. If the value specified is ``auto``, the label value is
2894 automatically assigned from a pool maintained by the Zebra daemon. If Zebra
2895 is not running, or if this command is not configured, automatic label
2896 assignment will not complete, which will block corresponding route export.
2897
2898 .. clicmd:: nexthop vpn export A.B.C.D|X:X::X:X
2899
2900 Specifies an optional nexthop value to be assigned to a route exported from
2901 the current unicast VRF to VPN. If left unspecified, the nexthop will be set
2902 to 0.0.0.0 or 0:0::0:0 (self).
2903
2904 .. clicmd:: route-map vpn import|export MAP
2905
2906 Specifies an optional route-map to be applied to routes imported or exported
2907 between the current unicast VRF and VPN.
2908
2909 .. clicmd:: import|export vpn
2910
2911 Enables import or export of routes between the current unicast VRF and VPN.
2912
2913 .. clicmd:: import vrf VRFNAME
2914
2915 Shortcut syntax for specifying automatic leaking from vrf VRFNAME to
2916 the current VRF using the VPN RIB as intermediary. The RD and RT
2917 are auto derived and should not be specified explicitly for either the
2918 source or destination VRF's.
2919
2920 This shortcut syntax mode is not compatible with the explicit
2921 `import vpn` and `export vpn` statements for the two VRF's involved.
2922 The CLI will disallow attempts to configure incompatible leaking
2923 modes.
2924
2925 .. clicmd:: bgp retain route-target all
2926
2927 It is possible to retain or not VPN prefixes that are not imported by local
2928 VRF configuration. This can be done via the following command in the context
2929 of the global VPNv4/VPNv6 family. This command defaults to on and is not
2930 displayed.
2931 The `no bgp retain route-target all` form of the command is displayed.
2932
2933 .. clicmd:: neighbor <A.B.C.D|X:X::X:X|WORD> soo EXTCOMMUNITY
2934
2935 Without this command, SoO extended community attribute is configured using
2936 an inbound route map that sets the SoO value during the update process.
2937 With the introduction of the new BGP per-neighbor Site-of-Origin (SoO) feature,
2938 two new commands configured in sub-modes under router configuration mode
2939 simplify the SoO value configuration.
2940
2941 If we configure SoO per neighbor at PEs, the SoO community is automatically
2942 added for all routes from the CPEs. Routes are validated and prevented from
2943 being sent back to the same CPE (e.g.: multi-site). This is especially needed
2944 when using ``as-override`` or ``allowas-in`` to prevent routing loops.
2945
2946 .. clicmd:: mpls bgp forwarding
2947
2948 It is possible to permit BGP install VPN prefixes without transport labels,
2949 by issuing the following command under the interface configuration context.
2950 This configuration will install VPN prefixes originated from an e-bgp session,
2951 and with the next-hop directly connected.
2952
2953 .. _bgp-l3vpn-srv6:
2954
2955 L3VPN SRv6
2956 ----------
2957
2958 .. clicmd:: segment-routing srv6
2959
2960 Use SRv6 backend with BGP L3VPN, and go to its configuration node.
2961
2962 .. clicmd:: locator NAME
2963
2964 Specify the SRv6 locator to be used for SRv6 L3VPN. The Locator name must
2965 be set in zebra, but user can set it in any order.
2966
2967 General configuration
2968 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2969
2970 Configuration of the SRv6 SID used to advertise a L3VPN for both IPv4 and IPv6
2971 is accomplished via the following command in the context of a VRF:
2972
2973 .. clicmd:: sid vpn per-vrf export (1..1048575)|auto
2974
2975 Enables a SRv6 SID to be attached to a route exported from the current
2976 unicast VRF to VPN. A single SID is used for both IPv4 and IPv6 address
2977 families. If you want to set a SID for only IPv4 address family or IPv6
2978 address family, you need to use the command ``sid vpn export (1..1048575)|auto``
2979 in the context of an address-family. If the value specified is ``auto``,
2980 the SID value is automatically assigned from a pool maintained by the Zebra
2981 daemon. If Zebra is not running, or if this command is not configured, automatic
2982 SID assignment will not complete, which will block corresponding route export.
2983
2984 .. _bgp-evpn:
2985
2986 Ethernet Virtual Network - EVPN
2987 -------------------------------
2988
2989 Note: When using EVPN features and if you have a large number of hosts, make
2990 sure to adjust the size of the arp neighbor cache to avoid neighbor table
2991 overflow and/or excessive garbage collection. On Linux, the size of the table
2992 and garbage collection frequency can be controlled via the following
2993 sysctl configurations:
2994
2995 .. code-block:: shell
2996
2997 net.ipv4.neigh.default.gc_thresh1
2998 net.ipv4.neigh.default.gc_thresh2
2999 net.ipv4.neigh.default.gc_thresh3
3000
3001 net.ipv6.neigh.default.gc_thresh1
3002 net.ipv6.neigh.default.gc_thresh2
3003 net.ipv6.neigh.default.gc_thresh3
3004
3005 For more information, see ``man 7 arp``.
3006
3007 .. _bgp-enabling-evpn:
3008
3009 Enabling EVPN
3010 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^
3011
3012 EVPN should be enabled on the BGP instance corresponding to the VRF acting as
3013 the underlay for the VXLAN tunneling. In most circumstances this will be the
3014 default VRF. The command to enable EVPN for a BGP instance is
3015 ``advertise-all-vni`` which lives under ``address-family l2vpn evpn``:
3016
3017 .. code-block:: frr
3018
3019 router bgp 65001
3020 !
3021 address-family l2vpn evpn
3022 advertise-all-vni
3023
3024 A more comprehensive configuration example can be found in the :ref:`evpn` page.
3025
3026 .. _bgp-evpn-l3-route-targets:
3027
3028 EVPN L3 Route-Targets
3029 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
3030
3031 .. clicmd:: route-target <import|export|both> <RTLIST|auto>
3032
3033 Modify the route-target set for EVPN advertised type-2/type-5 routes.
3034 RTLIST is a list of any of matching
3035 ``(A.B.C.D:MN|EF:OPQR|GHJK:MN|*:OPQR|*:MN)`` where ``*`` indicates wildcard
3036 matching for the AS number. It will be set to match any AS number. This is
3037 useful in datacenter deployments with Downstream VNI. ``auto`` is used to
3038 retain the autoconfigure that is default behavior for L3 RTs.
3039
3040 .. _bgp-evpn-advertise-pip:
3041
3042 EVPN advertise-PIP
3043 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
3044
3045 In a EVPN symmetric routing MLAG deployment, all EVPN routes advertised
3046 with anycast-IP as next-hop IP and anycast MAC as the Router MAC (RMAC - in
3047 BGP EVPN Extended-Community).
3048 EVPN picks up the next-hop IP from the VxLAN interface's local tunnel IP and
3049 the RMAC is obtained from the MAC of the L3VNI's SVI interface.
3050 Note: Next-hop IP is used for EVPN routes whether symmetric routing is
3051 deployed or not but the RMAC is only relevant for symmetric routing scenario.
3052
3053 Current behavior is not ideal for Prefix (type-5) and self (type-2)
3054 routes. This is because the traffic from remote VTEPs routed sub optimally
3055 if they land on the system where the route does not belong.
3056
3057 The advertise-pip feature advertises Prefix (type-5) and self (type-2)
3058 routes with system's individual (primary) IP as the next-hop and individual
3059 (system) MAC as Router-MAC (RMAC), while leaving the behavior unchanged for
3060 other EVPN routes.
3061
3062 To support this feature there needs to have ability to co-exist a
3063 (system-MAC, system-IP) pair with a (anycast-MAC, anycast-IP) pair with the
3064 ability to terminate VxLAN-encapsulated packets received for either pair on
3065 the same L3VNI (i.e associated VLAN). This capability is needed per tenant
3066 VRF instance.
3067
3068 To derive the system-MAC and the anycast MAC, there must be a
3069 separate/additional MAC-VLAN interface corresponding to L3VNI’s SVI.
3070 The SVI interface’s MAC address can be interpreted as system-MAC
3071 and MAC-VLAN interface's MAC as anycast MAC.
3072
3073 To derive system-IP and anycast-IP, the default BGP instance's router-id is used
3074 as system-IP and the VxLAN interface’s local tunnel IP as the anycast-IP.
3075
3076 User has an option to configure the system-IP and/or system-MAC value if the
3077 auto derived value is not preferred.
3078
3079 Note: By default, advertise-pip feature is enabled and user has an option to
3080 disable the feature via configuration CLI. Once the feature is disabled under
3081 bgp vrf instance or MAC-VLAN interface is not configured, all the routes follow
3082 the same behavior of using same next-hop and RMAC values.
3083
3084 .. clicmd:: advertise-pip [ip <addr> [mac <addr>]]
3085
3086 Enables or disables advertise-pip feature, specify system-IP and/or system-MAC
3087 parameters.
3088
3089 EVPN advertise-svi-ip
3090 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
3091 Typically, the SVI IP address is reused on VTEPs across multiple racks. However,
3092 if you have unique SVI IP addresses that you want to be reachable you can use the
3093 advertise-svi-ip option. This option advertises the SVI IP/MAC address as a type-2
3094 route and eliminates the need for any flooding over VXLAN to reach the IP from a
3095 remote VTEP.
3096
3097 .. clicmd:: advertise-svi-ip
3098
3099 Note that you should not enable both the advertise-svi-ip and the advertise-default-gw
3100 at the same time.
3101
3102 .. _bgp-evpn-overlay-index-gateway-ip:
3103
3104 EVPN Overlay Index Gateway IP
3105 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
3106 RFC https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc9136 explains the use of overlay
3107 indexes for recursive route resolution for EVPN type-5 route.
3108
3109 We support gateway IP overlay index.
3110 A gateway IP, advertised with EVPN prefix route, is used to find an EVPN MAC/IP
3111 route with its IP field same as the gateway IP. This MAC/IP entry provides the
3112 nexthop VTEP and the tunnel information required for the VxLAN encapsulation.
3113
3114 Functionality:
3115
3116 ::
3117
3118 . +--------+ BGP +--------+ BGP +--------+ +--------+
3119 SN1 | | IPv4 | | EVPN | | | |
3120 ======+ Host1 +------+ PE1 +------+ PE2 +------+ Host2 +
3121 | | | | | | | |
3122 +--------+ +--------+ +--------+ +--------+
3123
3124 Consider above topology where prefix SN1 is connected behind host1. Host1
3125 advertises SN1 to PE1 over BGP IPv4 session. PE1 advertises SN1 to PE2 using
3126 EVPN type-5 route with host1 IP as the gateway IP. PE1 also advertises
3127 Host1 MAC/IP as type-2 route which is used to resolve host1 gateway IP.
3128
3129 PE2 receives this type-5 route and imports it into the vrf based on route
3130 targets. BGP prefix imported into the vrf uses gateway IP as its BGP nexthop.
3131 This route is installed into zebra if following conditions are satisfied:
3132
3133 1. Gateway IP nexthop is L3 reachable.
3134 2. PE2 has received EVPN type-2 route with IP field set to gateway IP.
3135
3136 Topology requirements:
3137
3138 1. This feature is supported for asymmetric routing model only. While
3139 sending packets to SN1, ingress PE (PE2) performs routing and
3140 egress PE (PE1) performs only bridging.
3141 2. This feature supports only traditional(non vlan-aware) bridge model. Bridge
3142 interface associated with L2VNI is an L3 interface. i.e., this interface is
3143 configured with an address in the L2VNI subnet. Note that the gateway IP
3144 should also have an address in the same subnet.
3145 3. As this feature works in asymmetric routing model, all L2VNIs and corresponding
3146 VxLAN and bridge interfaces should be present at all the PEs.
3147 4. L3VNI configuration is required to generate and import EVPN type-5 routes.
3148 L3VNI VxLAN and bridge interfaces also should be present.
3149
3150 A PE can use one of the following two mechanisms to advertise an EVPN type-5
3151 route with gateway IP.
3152
3153 1. CLI to add gateway IP while generating EVPN type-5 route from a BGP IPv4/IPv6
3154 prefix:
3155
3156 .. clicmd:: advertise <ipv4|ipv6> unicast [gateway-ip]
3157
3158 When this CLI is configured for a BGP vrf under L2VPN EVPN address family, EVPN
3159 type-5 routes are generated for BGP prefixes in the vrf. Nexthop of the BGP
3160 prefix becomes the gateway IP of the corresponding type-5 route.
3161
3162 If the above command is configured without the "gateway-ip" keyword, type-5
3163 routes are generated without overlay index.
3164
3165 2. Add gateway IP to EVPN type-5 route using a route-map:
3166
3167 .. clicmd:: set evpn gateway-ip <ipv4|ipv6> <addr>
3168
3169 When route-map with above set clause is applied as outbound policy in BGP, it
3170 will set the gateway-ip in EVPN type-5 NLRI.
3171
3172 Example configuration:
3173
3174 .. code-block:: frr
3175
3176 router bgp 100
3177 neighbor 192.168.0.1 remote-as 101
3178 !
3179 address-family ipv4 l2vpn evpn
3180 neighbor 192.168.0.1 route-map RMAP out
3181 exit-address-family
3182 !
3183 route-map RMAP permit 10
3184 set evpn gateway-ip 10.0.0.1
3185 set evpn gateway-ip 10::1
3186
3187 A PE that receives a type-5 route with gateway IP overlay index should have
3188 "enable-resolve-overlay-index" configuration enabled to recursively resolve the
3189 overlay index nexthop and install the prefix into zebra.
3190
3191 .. clicmd:: enable-resolve-overlay-index
3192
3193 Example configuration:
3194
3195 .. code-block:: frr
3196
3197 router bgp 65001
3198 bgp router-id 192.168.100.1
3199 no bgp ebgp-requires-policy
3200 neighbor 10.0.1.2 remote-as 65002
3201 !
3202 address-family l2vpn evpn
3203 neighbor 10.0.1.2 activate
3204 advertise-all-vni
3205 enable-resolve-overlay-index
3206 exit-address-family
3207 !
3208
3209 .. _bgp-evpn-mh:
3210
3211 EVPN Multihoming
3212 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
3213
3214 All-Active Multihoming is used for redundancy and load sharing. Servers
3215 are attached to two or more PEs and the links are bonded (link-aggregation).
3216 This group of server links is referred to as an Ethernet Segment.
3217
3218 Ethernet Segments
3219 """""""""""""""""
3220 An Ethernet Segment can be configured by specifying a system-MAC and a
3221 local discriminator or a complete ESINAME against the bond interface on the
3222 PE (via zebra) -
3223
3224 .. clicmd:: evpn mh es-id <(1-16777215)|ESINAME>
3225
3226 .. clicmd:: evpn mh es-sys-mac X:X:X:X:X:X
3227
3228 The sys-mac and local discriminator are used for generating a 10-byte,
3229 Type-3 Ethernet Segment ID. ESINAME is a 10-byte, Type-0 Ethernet Segment ID -
3230 "00:AA:BB:CC:DD:EE:FF:GG:HH:II".
3231
3232 Type-1 (EAD-per-ES and EAD-per-EVI) routes are used to advertise the locally
3233 attached ESs and to learn off remote ESs in the network. Local Type-2/MAC-IP
3234 routes are also advertised with a destination ESI allowing for MAC-IP syncing
3235 between Ethernet Segment peers.
3236 Reference: RFC 7432, RFC 8365
3237
3238 EVPN-MH is intended as a replacement for MLAG or Anycast VTEPs. In
3239 multihoming each PE has an unique VTEP address which requires the introduction
3240 of a new dataplane construct, MAC-ECMP. Here a MAC/FDB entry can point to a
3241 list of remote PEs/VTEPs.
3242
3243 BUM handling
3244 """"""""""""
3245 Type-4 (ESR) routes are used for Designated Forwarder (DF) election. DFs
3246 forward BUM traffic received via the overlay network. This implementation
3247 uses a preference based DF election specified by draft-ietf-bess-evpn-pref-df.
3248 The DF preference is configurable per-ES (via zebra) -
3249
3250 .. clicmd:: evpn mh es-df-pref (1-16777215)
3251
3252 BUM traffic is rxed via the overlay by all PEs attached to a server but
3253 only the DF can forward the de-capsulated traffic to the access port. To
3254 accommodate that non-DF filters are installed in the dataplane to drop
3255 the traffic.
3256
3257 Similarly traffic received from ES peers via the overlay cannot be forwarded
3258 to the server. This is split-horizon-filtering with local bias.
3259
3260 Knobs for interop
3261 """""""""""""""""
3262 Some vendors do not send EAD-per-EVI routes. To interop with them we
3263 need to relax the dependency on EAD-per-EVI routes and activate a remote
3264 ES-PE based on just the EAD-per-ES route.
3265
3266 Note that by default we advertise and expect EAD-per-EVI routes.
3267
3268 .. clicmd:: disable-ead-evi-rx
3269
3270 .. clicmd:: disable-ead-evi-tx
3271
3272 Fast failover
3273 """""""""""""
3274 As the primary purpose of EVPN-MH is redundancy keeping the failover efficient
3275 is a recurring theme in the implementation. Following sub-features have
3276 been introduced for the express purpose of efficient ES failovers.
3277
3278 - Layer-2 Nexthop Groups and MAC-ECMP via L2NHG.
3279
3280 - Host routes (for symmetric IRB) via L3NHG.
3281 On dataplanes that support layer3 nexthop groups the feature can be turned
3282 on via the following BGP config -
3283
3284 .. clicmd:: use-es-l3nhg
3285
3286 - Local ES (MAC/Neigh) failover via ES-redirect.
3287 On dataplanes that do not have support for ES-redirect the feature can be
3288 turned off via the following zebra config -
3289
3290 .. clicmd:: evpn mh redirect-off
3291
3292 Uplink/Core tracking
3293 """"""""""""""""""""
3294 When all the underlay links go down the PE no longer has access to the VxLAN
3295 +overlay. To prevent blackholing of traffic the server/ES links are
3296 protodowned on the PE. A link can be setup for uplink tracking via the
3297 following zebra configuration -
3298
3299 .. clicmd:: evpn mh uplink
3300
3301 Proxy advertisements
3302 """"""""""""""""""""
3303 To handle hitless upgrades support for proxy advertisement has been added
3304 as specified by draft-rbickhart-evpn-ip-mac-proxy-adv. This allows a PE
3305 (say PE1) to proxy advertise a MAC-IP rxed from an ES peer (say PE2). When
3306 the ES peer (PE2) goes down PE1 continues to advertise hosts learnt from PE2
3307 for a holdtime during which it attempts to establish local reachability of
3308 the host. This holdtime is configurable via the following zebra commands -
3309
3310 .. clicmd:: evpn mh neigh-holdtime (0-86400)
3311
3312 .. clicmd:: evpn mh mac-holdtime (0-86400)
3313
3314 Startup delay
3315 """""""""""""
3316 When a switch is rebooted we wait for a brief period to allow the underlay
3317 and EVPN network to converge before enabling the ESs. For this duration the
3318 ES bonds are held protodown. The startup delay is configurable via the
3319 following zebra command -
3320
3321 .. clicmd:: evpn mh startup-delay (0-3600)
3322
3323 EAD-per-ES fragmentation
3324 """"""""""""""""""""""""
3325 The EAD-per-ES route carries the EVI route targets for all the broadcast
3326 domains associated with the ES. Depending on the EVI scale the EAD-per-ES
3327 route maybe fragmented.
3328
3329 The number of EVIs per-EAD route can be configured via the following
3330 BGP command -
3331
3332 .. clicmd:: [no] ead-es-frag evi-limit (1-1000)
3333
3334 Sample Configuration
3335 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
3336 .. code-block:: frr
3337
3338 !
3339 router bgp 5556
3340 !
3341 address-family l2vpn evpn
3342 ead-es-frag evi-limit 200
3343 exit-address-family
3344 !
3345 !
3346
3347 EAD-per-ES route-target
3348 """""""""""""""""""""""
3349 The EAD-per-ES route by default carries all the EVI route targets. Depending
3350 on EVI scale that can result in route fragmentation. In some cases it maybe
3351 necessary to avoid this fragmentation and that can be done via the following
3352 workaround -
3353 1. Configure a single supplementary BD per-tenant VRF. This SBD needs to
3354 be provisioned on all EVPN PEs associated with the tenant-VRF.
3355 2. Config the SBD's RT as the EAD-per-ES route's export RT.
3356
3357 Sample Configuration
3358 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
3359 .. code-block:: frr
3360
3361 !
3362 router bgp 5556
3363 !
3364 address-family l2vpn evpn
3365 ead-es-route-target export 5556:1001
3366 ead-es-route-target export 5556:1004
3367 ead-es-route-target export 5556:1008
3368 exit-address-family
3369 !
3370
3371 Support with VRF network namespace backend
3372 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
3373 It is possible to separate overlay networks contained in VXLAN interfaces from
3374 underlay networks by using VRFs. VRF-lite and VRF-netns backends can be used for
3375 that. In the latter case, it is necessary to set both bridge and vxlan interface
3376 in the same network namespace, as below example illustrates:
3377
3378 .. code-block:: shell
3379
3380 # linux shell
3381 ip netns add vrf1
3382 ip link add name vxlan101 type vxlan id 101 dstport 4789 dev eth0 local 10.1.1.1
3383 ip link set dev vxlan101 netns vrf1
3384 ip netns exec vrf1 ip link set dev lo up
3385 ip netns exec vrf1 brctl addbr bridge101
3386 ip netns exec vrf1 brctl addif bridge101 vxlan101
3387
3388 This makes it possible to separate not only layer 3 networks like VRF-lite networks.
3389 Also, VRF netns based make possible to separate layer 2 networks on separate VRF
3390 instances.
3391
3392 .. _bgp-conditional-advertisement:
3393
3394 BGP Conditional Advertisement
3395 -----------------------------
3396 The BGP conditional advertisement feature uses the ``non-exist-map`` or the
3397 ``exist-map`` and the ``advertise-map`` keywords of the neighbor advertise-map
3398 command in order to track routes by the route prefix.
3399
3400 ``non-exist-map``
3401 1. If a route prefix is not present in the output of non-exist-map command,
3402 then advertise the route specified by the advertise-map command.
3403
3404 2. If a route prefix is present in the output of non-exist-map command,
3405 then do not advertise the route specified by the addvertise-map command.
3406
3407 ``exist-map``
3408 1. If a route prefix is present in the output of exist-map command,
3409 then advertise the route specified by the advertise-map command.
3410
3411 2. If a route prefix is not present in the output of exist-map command,
3412 then do not advertise the route specified by the advertise-map command.
3413
3414 This feature is useful when some prefixes are advertised to one of its peers
3415 only if the information from the other peer is not present (due to failure in
3416 peering session or partial reachability etc).
3417
3418 The conditional BGP announcements are sent in addition to the normal
3419 announcements that a BGP router sends to its peer.
3420
3421 The conditional advertisement process is triggered by the BGP scanner process,
3422 which runs every 60 by default. This means that the maximum time for the
3423 conditional advertisement to take effect is the value of the process timer.
3424
3425 As an optimization, while the process always runs on each timer expiry, it
3426 determines whether or not the conditional advertisement policy or the routing
3427 table has changed; if neither have changed, no processing is necessary and the
3428 scanner exits early.
3429
3430 .. clicmd:: neighbor A.B.C.D advertise-map NAME [exist-map|non-exist-map] NAME
3431
3432 This command enables BGP scanner process to monitor routes specified by
3433 exist-map or non-exist-map command in BGP table and conditionally advertises
3434 the routes specified by advertise-map command.
3435
3436 .. clicmd:: bgp conditional-advertisement timer (5-240)
3437
3438 Set the period to rerun the conditional advertisement scanner process. The
3439 default is 60 seconds.
3440
3441 Sample Configuration
3442 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
3443 .. code-block:: frr
3444
3445 interface enp0s9
3446 ip address 10.10.10.2/24
3447 !
3448 interface enp0s10
3449 ip address 10.10.20.2/24
3450 !
3451 interface lo
3452 ip address 203.0.113.1/32
3453 !
3454 router bgp 2
3455 bgp log-neighbor-changes
3456 no bgp ebgp-requires-policy
3457 neighbor 10.10.10.1 remote-as 1
3458 neighbor 10.10.20.3 remote-as 3
3459 !
3460 address-family ipv4 unicast
3461 neighbor 10.10.10.1 soft-reconfiguration inbound
3462 neighbor 10.10.20.3 soft-reconfiguration inbound
3463 neighbor 10.10.20.3 advertise-map ADV-MAP non-exist-map EXIST-MAP
3464 exit-address-family
3465 !
3466 ip prefix-list DEFAULT seq 5 permit 192.0.2.5/32
3467 ip prefix-list DEFAULT seq 10 permit 192.0.2.1/32
3468 ip prefix-list EXIST seq 5 permit 10.10.10.10/32
3469 ip prefix-list DEFAULT-ROUTE seq 5 permit 0.0.0.0/0
3470 ip prefix-list IP1 seq 5 permit 10.139.224.0/20
3471 !
3472 bgp community-list standard DC-ROUTES seq 5 permit 64952:3008
3473 bgp community-list standard DC-ROUTES seq 10 permit 64671:501
3474 bgp community-list standard DC-ROUTES seq 15 permit 64950:3009
3475 bgp community-list standard DEFAULT-ROUTE seq 5 permit 65013:200
3476 !
3477 route-map ADV-MAP permit 10
3478 match ip address prefix-list IP1
3479 !
3480 route-map ADV-MAP permit 20
3481 match community DC-ROUTES
3482 !
3483 route-map EXIST-MAP permit 10
3484 match community DEFAULT-ROUTE
3485 match ip address prefix-list DEFAULT-ROUTE
3486 !
3487
3488 Sample Output
3489 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^
3490
3491 When default route is present in R2'2 BGP table, 10.139.224.0/20 and 192.0.2.1/32 are not advertised to R3.
3492
3493 .. code-block:: frr
3494
3495 Router2# show ip bgp
3496 BGP table version is 20, local router ID is 203.0.113.1, vrf id 0
3497 Default local pref 100, local AS 2
3498 Status codes: s suppressed, d damped, h history, * valid, > best, = multipath,
3499 i internal, r RIB-failure, S Stale, R Removed
3500 Nexthop codes: @NNN nexthop's vrf id, < announce-nh-self
3501 Origin codes: i - IGP, e - EGP, ? - incomplete
3502 RPKI validation codes: V valid, I invalid, N Not found
3503
3504 Network Next Hop Metric LocPrf Weight Path
3505 *> 0.0.0.0/0 10.10.10.1 0 0 1 i
3506 *> 10.139.224.0/20 10.10.10.1 0 0 1 ?
3507 *> 192.0.2.1/32 10.10.10.1 0 0 1 i
3508 *> 192.0.2.5/32 10.10.10.1 0 0 1 i
3509
3510 Displayed 4 routes and 4 total paths
3511 Router2# show ip bgp neighbors 10.10.20.3
3512
3513 !--- Output suppressed.
3514
3515 For address family: IPv4 Unicast
3516 Update group 7, subgroup 7
3517 Packet Queue length 0
3518 Inbound soft reconfiguration allowed
3519 Community attribute sent to this neighbor(all)
3520 Condition NON_EXIST, Condition-map *EXIST-MAP, Advertise-map *ADV-MAP, status: Withdraw
3521 0 accepted prefixes
3522
3523 !--- Output suppressed.
3524
3525 Router2# show ip bgp neighbors 10.10.20.3 advertised-routes
3526 BGP table version is 20, local router ID is 203.0.113.1, vrf id 0
3527 Default local pref 100, local AS 2
3528 Status codes: s suppressed, d damped, h history, * valid, > best, = multipath,
3529 i internal, r RIB-failure, S Stale, R Removed
3530 Nexthop codes: @NNN nexthop's vrf id, < announce-nh-self
3531 Origin codes: i - IGP, e - EGP, ? - incomplete
3532 RPKI validation codes: V valid, I invalid, N Not found
3533
3534 Network Next Hop Metric LocPrf Weight Path
3535 *> 0.0.0.0/0 0.0.0.0 0 1 i
3536 *> 192.0.2.5/32 0.0.0.0 0 1 i
3537
3538 Total number of prefixes 2
3539
3540 When default route is not present in R2'2 BGP table, 10.139.224.0/20 and 192.0.2.1/32 are advertised to R3.
3541
3542 .. code-block:: frr
3543
3544 Router2# show ip bgp
3545 BGP table version is 21, local router ID is 203.0.113.1, vrf id 0
3546 Default local pref 100, local AS 2
3547 Status codes: s suppressed, d damped, h history, * valid, > best, = multipath,
3548 i internal, r RIB-failure, S Stale, R Removed
3549 Nexthop codes: @NNN nexthop's vrf id, < announce-nh-self
3550 Origin codes: i - IGP, e - EGP, ? - incomplete
3551 RPKI validation codes: V valid, I invalid, N Not found
3552
3553 Network Next Hop Metric LocPrf Weight Path
3554 *> 10.139.224.0/20 10.10.10.1 0 0 1 ?
3555 *> 192.0.2.1/32 10.10.10.1 0 0 1 i
3556 *> 192.0.2.5/32 10.10.10.1 0 0 1 i
3557
3558 Displayed 3 routes and 3 total paths
3559
3560 Router2# show ip bgp neighbors 10.10.20.3
3561
3562 !--- Output suppressed.
3563
3564 For address family: IPv4 Unicast
3565 Update group 7, subgroup 7
3566 Packet Queue length 0
3567 Inbound soft reconfiguration allowed
3568 Community attribute sent to this neighbor(all)
3569 Condition NON_EXIST, Condition-map *EXIST-MAP, Advertise-map *ADV-MAP, status: Advertise
3570 0 accepted prefixes
3571
3572 !--- Output suppressed.
3573
3574 Router2# show ip bgp neighbors 10.10.20.3 advertised-routes
3575 BGP table version is 21, local router ID is 203.0.113.1, vrf id 0
3576 Default local pref 100, local AS 2
3577 Status codes: s suppressed, d damped, h history, * valid, > best, = multipath,
3578 i internal, r RIB-failure, S Stale, R Removed
3579 Nexthop codes: @NNN nexthop's vrf id, < announce-nh-self
3580 Origin codes: i - IGP, e - EGP, ? - incomplete
3581 RPKI validation codes: V valid, I invalid, N Not found
3582
3583 Network Next Hop Metric LocPrf Weight Path
3584 *> 10.139.224.0/20 0.0.0.0 0 1 ?
3585 *> 192.0.2.1/32 0.0.0.0 0 1 i
3586 *> 192.0.2.5/32 0.0.0.0 0 1 i
3587
3588 Total number of prefixes 3
3589 Router2#
3590
3591 .. _bgp-debugging:
3592
3593 Debugging
3594 ---------
3595
3596 .. clicmd:: show debug
3597
3598 Show all enabled debugs.
3599
3600 .. clicmd:: show bgp listeners
3601
3602 Display Listen sockets and the vrf that created them. Useful for debugging of when
3603 listen is not working and this is considered a developer debug statement.
3604
3605 .. clicmd:: debug bgp allow-martian
3606
3607 Enable or disable BGP accepting martian nexthops from a peer. Please note
3608 this is not an actual debug command and this command is also being deprecated
3609 and will be removed soon. The new command is :clicmd:`bgp allow-martian-nexthop`
3610
3611 .. clicmd:: debug bgp bfd
3612
3613 Enable or disable debugging for BFD events. This will show BFD integration
3614 library messages and BGP BFD integration messages that are mostly state
3615 transitions and validation problems.
3616
3617 .. clicmd:: debug bgp conditional-advertisement
3618
3619 Enable or disable debugging of BGP conditional advertisement.
3620
3621 .. clicmd:: debug bgp neighbor-events
3622
3623 Enable or disable debugging for neighbor events. This provides general
3624 information on BGP events such as peer connection / disconnection, session
3625 establishment / teardown, and capability negotiation.
3626
3627 .. clicmd:: debug bgp updates
3628
3629 Enable or disable debugging for BGP updates. This provides information on
3630 BGP UPDATE messages transmitted and received between local and remote
3631 instances.
3632
3633 .. clicmd:: debug bgp keepalives
3634
3635 Enable or disable debugging for BGP keepalives. This provides information on
3636 BGP KEEPALIVE messages transmitted and received between local and remote
3637 instances.
3638
3639 .. clicmd:: debug bgp bestpath <A.B.C.D/M|X:X::X:X/M>
3640
3641 Enable or disable debugging for bestpath selection on the specified prefix.
3642
3643 .. clicmd:: debug bgp nht
3644
3645 Enable or disable debugging of BGP nexthop tracking.
3646
3647 .. clicmd:: debug bgp update-groups
3648
3649 Enable or disable debugging of dynamic update groups. This provides general
3650 information on group creation, deletion, join and prune events.
3651
3652 .. clicmd:: debug bgp zebra
3653
3654 Enable or disable debugging of communications between *bgpd* and *zebra*.
3655
3656 Dumping Messages and Routing Tables
3657 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
3658
3659 .. clicmd:: dump bgp all PATH [INTERVAL]
3660
3661 .. clicmd:: dump bgp all-et PATH [INTERVAL]
3662
3663
3664 Dump all BGP packet and events to `path` file.
3665 If `interval` is set, a new file will be created for echo `interval` of
3666 seconds. The path `path` can be set with date and time formatting
3667 (strftime). The type ‘all-et’ enables support for Extended Timestamp Header
3668 (:ref:`packet-binary-dump-format`).
3669
3670 .. clicmd:: dump bgp updates PATH [INTERVAL]
3671
3672 .. clicmd:: dump bgp updates-et PATH [INTERVAL]
3673
3674
3675 Dump only BGP updates messages to `path` file.
3676 If `interval` is set, a new file will be created for echo `interval` of
3677 seconds. The path `path` can be set with date and time formatting
3678 (strftime). The type ‘updates-et’ enables support for Extended Timestamp
3679 Header (:ref:`packet-binary-dump-format`).
3680
3681 .. clicmd:: dump bgp routes-mrt PATH
3682
3683 .. clicmd:: dump bgp routes-mrt PATH INTERVAL
3684
3685
3686 Dump whole BGP routing table to `path`. This is heavy process. The path
3687 `path` can be set with date and time formatting (strftime). If `interval` is
3688 set, a new file will be created for echo `interval` of seconds.
3689
3690 Note: the interval variable can also be set using hours and minutes: 04h20m00.
3691
3692
3693 .. _bgp-other-commands:
3694
3695 Other BGP Commands
3696 ------------------
3697
3698 The following are available in the top level *enable* mode:
3699
3700 .. clicmd:: clear bgp \*
3701
3702 Clear all peers.
3703
3704 .. clicmd:: clear bgp ipv4|ipv6 \*
3705
3706 Clear all peers with this address-family activated.
3707
3708 .. clicmd:: clear bgp ipv4|ipv6 unicast \*
3709
3710 Clear all peers with this address-family and sub-address-family activated.
3711
3712 .. clicmd:: clear bgp ipv4|ipv6 PEER
3713
3714 Clear peers with address of X.X.X.X and this address-family activated.
3715
3716 .. clicmd:: clear bgp ipv4|ipv6 unicast PEER
3717
3718 Clear peer with address of X.X.X.X and this address-family and sub-address-family activated.
3719
3720 .. clicmd:: clear bgp ipv4|ipv6 PEER soft|in|out
3721
3722 Clear peer using soft reconfiguration in this address-family.
3723
3724 .. clicmd:: clear bgp ipv4|ipv6 unicast PEER soft|in|out
3725
3726 Clear peer using soft reconfiguration in this address-family and sub-address-family.
3727
3728 .. clicmd:: clear bgp [ipv4|ipv6] [unicast] PEER|\* message-stats
3729
3730 Clear BGP message statistics for a specified peer or for all peers,
3731 optionally filtered by activated address-family and sub-address-family.
3732
3733 The following are available in the ``router bgp`` mode:
3734
3735 .. clicmd:: write-quanta (1-64)
3736
3737 BGP message Tx I/O is vectored. This means that multiple packets are written
3738 to the peer socket at the same time each I/O cycle, in order to minimize
3739 system call overhead. This value controls how many are written at a time.
3740 Under certain load conditions, reducing this value could make peer traffic
3741 less 'bursty'. In practice, leave this settings on the default (64) unless
3742 you truly know what you are doing.
3743
3744 .. clicmd:: read-quanta (1-10)
3745
3746 Unlike Tx, BGP Rx traffic is not vectored. Packets are read off the wire one
3747 at a time in a loop. This setting controls how many iterations the loop runs
3748 for. As with write-quanta, it is best to leave this setting on the default.
3749
3750 The following command is available in ``config`` mode as well as in the
3751 ``router bgp`` mode:
3752
3753 .. clicmd:: bgp graceful-shutdown
3754
3755 The purpose of this command is to initiate BGP Graceful Shutdown which
3756 is described in :rfc:`8326`. The use case for this is to minimize or
3757 eliminate the amount of traffic loss in a network when a planned
3758 maintenance activity such as software upgrade or hardware replacement
3759 is to be performed on a router. The feature works by re-announcing
3760 routes to eBGP peers with the GRACEFUL_SHUTDOWN community included.
3761 Peers are then expected to treat such paths with the lowest preference.
3762 This happens automatically on a receiver running FRR; with other
3763 routing protocol stacks, an inbound policy may have to be configured.
3764 In FRR, triggering graceful shutdown also results in announcing a
3765 LOCAL_PREF of 0 to iBGP peers.
3766
3767 Graceful shutdown can be configured per BGP instance or globally for
3768 all of BGP. These two options are mutually exclusive. The no form of
3769 the command causes graceful shutdown to be stopped, and routes will
3770 be re-announced without the GRACEFUL_SHUTDOWN community and/or with
3771 the usual LOCAL_PREF value. Note that if this option is saved to
3772 the startup configuration, graceful shutdown will remain in effect
3773 across restarts of *bgpd* and will need to be explicitly disabled.
3774
3775 .. clicmd:: bgp input-queue-limit (1-4294967295)
3776
3777 Set the BGP Input Queue limit for all peers when messaging parsing. Increase
3778 this only if you have the memory to handle large queues of messages at once.
3779
3780 .. clicmd:: bgp output-queue-limit (1-4294967295)
3781
3782 Set the BGP Output Queue limit for all peers when messaging parsing. Increase
3783 this only if you have the memory to handle large queues of messages at once.
3784
3785 .. _bgp-displaying-bgp-information:
3786
3787 Displaying BGP Information
3788 ==========================
3789
3790 The following four commands display the IPv6 and IPv4 routing tables, depending
3791 on whether or not the ``ip`` keyword is used.
3792 Actually, :clicmd:`show ip bgp` command was used on older `Quagga` routing
3793 daemon project, while :clicmd:`show bgp` command is the new format. The choice
3794 has been done to keep old format with IPv4 routing table, while new format
3795 displays IPv6 routing table.
3796
3797 .. clicmd:: show ip bgp [all] [wide|json [detail]]
3798
3799 .. clicmd:: show ip bgp A.B.C.D [json]
3800
3801 .. clicmd:: show bgp [all] [wide|json [detail]]
3802
3803 .. clicmd:: show bgp X:X::X:X [json]
3804
3805 These commands display BGP routes. When no route is specified, the default
3806 is to display all BGP routes.
3807
3808 ::
3809
3810 BGP table version is 0, local router ID is 10.1.1.1
3811 Status codes: s suppressed, d damped, h history, * valid, > best, i - internal
3812 Origin codes: i - IGP, e - EGP, ? - incomplete
3813
3814 Network Next Hop Metric LocPrf Weight Path
3815 \*> 1.1.1.1/32 0.0.0.0 0 32768 i
3816
3817 Total number of prefixes 1
3818
3819 If ``wide`` option is specified, then the prefix table's width is increased
3820 to fully display the prefix and the nexthop.
3821
3822 This is especially handy dealing with IPv6 prefixes and
3823 if :clicmd:`[no] bgp default show-nexthop-hostname` is enabled.
3824
3825 If ``all`` option is specified, ``ip`` keyword is ignored, show bgp all and
3826 show ip bgp all commands display routes for all AFIs and SAFIs.
3827
3828 If ``json`` option is specified, output is displayed in JSON format.
3829
3830 If ``detail`` option is specified after ``json``, more verbose JSON output
3831 will be displayed.
3832
3833 Some other commands provide additional options for filtering the output.
3834
3835 .. clicmd:: show [ip] bgp regexp LINE
3836
3837 This command displays BGP routes using AS path regular expression
3838 (:ref:`bgp-regular-expressions`).
3839
3840 .. clicmd:: show [ip] bgp [all] summary [wide] [json]
3841
3842 Show a bgp peer summary for the specified address family.
3843
3844 The old command structure :clicmd:`show ip bgp` may be removed in the future
3845 and should no longer be used. In order to reach the other BGP routing tables
3846 other than the IPv6 routing table given by :clicmd:`show bgp`, the new command
3847 structure is extended with :clicmd:`show bgp [afi] [safi]`.
3848
3849 ``wide`` option gives more output like ``LocalAS`` and extended ``Desc`` to
3850 64 characters.
3851
3852 .. code-block:: frr
3853
3854 exit1# show ip bgp summary wide
3855
3856 IPv4 Unicast Summary (VRF default):
3857 BGP router identifier 192.168.100.1, local AS number 65534 vrf-id 0
3858 BGP table version 3
3859 RIB entries 5, using 920 bytes of memory
3860 Peers 1, using 27 KiB of memory
3861
3862 Neighbor V AS LocalAS MsgRcvd MsgSent TblVer InQ OutQ Up/Down State/PfxRcd PfxSnt Desc
3863 192.168.0.2 4 65030 123 15 22 0 0 0 00:07:00 0 1 us-east1-rs1.frrouting.org
3864
3865 Total number of neighbors 1
3866 exit1#
3867
3868 .. clicmd:: show bgp [afi] [safi] [all] [wide|json]
3869
3870 .. clicmd:: show bgp vrfs [<VRFNAME$vrf_name>] [json]
3871
3872 The command displays all bgp vrf instances basic info like router-id,
3873 configured and established neighbors,
3874 evpn related basic info like l3vni, router-mac, vxlan-interface.
3875 User can get that information as JSON format when ``json`` keyword
3876 at the end of cli is presented.
3877
3878 .. code-block:: frr
3879
3880 torc-11# show bgp vrfs
3881 Type Id routerId #PeersCfg #PeersEstb Name
3882 L3-VNI RouterMAC Interface
3883 DFLT 0 17.0.0.6 3 3 default
3884 0 00:00:00:00:00:00 unknown
3885 VRF 21 17.0.0.6 0 0 sym_1
3886 8888 34:11:12:22:22:01 vlan4034_l3
3887 VRF 32 17.0.0.6 0 0 sym_2
3888 8889 34:11:12:22:22:01 vlan4035_l3
3889
3890 Total number of VRFs (including default): 3
3891
3892 .. clicmd:: show bgp [<ipv4|ipv6> <unicast|multicast|vpn|labeled-unicast|flowspec> | l2vpn evpn]
3893
3894 These commands display BGP routes for the specific routing table indicated by
3895 the selected afi and the selected safi. If no afi and no safi value is given,
3896 the command falls back to the default IPv6 routing table.
3897
3898 .. clicmd:: show bgp l2vpn evpn route [type <macip|2|multicast|3|es|4|prefix|5>]
3899
3900 EVPN prefixes can also be filtered by EVPN route type.
3901
3902 .. clicmd:: show bgp vni <all|VNI> [vtep VTEP] [type <ead|1|macip|2|multicast|3>] [<detail|json>]
3903
3904 Display per-VNI EVPN routing table in bgp. Filter route-type, vtep, or VNI.
3905
3906 .. clicmd:: show bgp [afi] [safi] [all] summary [json]
3907
3908 Show a bgp peer summary for the specified address family, and subsequent
3909 address-family.
3910
3911 .. clicmd:: show bgp [afi] [safi] [all] summary failed [json]
3912
3913 Show a bgp peer summary for peers that are not successfully exchanging routes
3914 for the specified address family, and subsequent address-family.
3915
3916 .. clicmd:: show bgp [afi] [safi] [all] summary established [json]
3917
3918 Show a bgp peer summary for peers that are successfully exchanging routes
3919 for the specified address family, and subsequent address-family.
3920
3921 .. clicmd:: show bgp [afi] [safi] [all] summary neighbor [PEER] [json]
3922
3923 Show a bgp summary for the specified peer, address family, and
3924 subsequent address-family. The neighbor filter can be used in combination
3925 with the failed, established filters.
3926
3927 .. clicmd:: show bgp [afi] [safi] [all] summary remote-as <internal|external|ASN> [json]
3928
3929 Show a bgp peer summary for the specified remote-as ASN or type (``internal``
3930 for iBGP and ``external`` for eBGP sessions), address family, and subsequent
3931 address-family. The remote-as filter can be used in combination with the
3932 failed, established filters.
3933
3934 .. clicmd:: show bgp [afi] [safi] [all] summary terse [json]
3935
3936 Shorten the output. Do not show the following information about the BGP
3937 instances: the number of RIB entries, the table version and the used memory.
3938 The ``terse`` option can be used in combination with the remote-as, neighbor,
3939 failed and established filters, and with the ``wide`` option as well.
3940
3941 .. clicmd:: show bgp [afi] [safi] [neighbor [PEER] [routes|advertised-routes|received-routes] [<A.B.C.D/M|X:X::X:X/M> | detail] [json]
3942
3943 This command shows information on a specific BGP peer of the relevant
3944 afi and safi selected.
3945
3946 The ``routes`` keyword displays only routes in this address-family's BGP
3947 table that were received by this peer and accepted by inbound policy.
3948
3949 The ``advertised-routes`` keyword displays only the routes in this
3950 address-family's BGP table that were permitted by outbound policy and
3951 advertised to to this peer.
3952
3953 The ``received-routes`` keyword displays all routes belonging to this
3954 address-family (prior to inbound policy) that were received by this peer.
3955
3956 If a specific prefix is specified, the detailed version of that prefix will
3957 be displayed.
3958
3959 If ``detail`` option is specified, the detailed version of all routes
3960 will be displayed. The same format as ``show [ip] bgp [afi] [safi] PREFIX``
3961 will be used, but for the whole table of received, advertised or filtered
3962 prefixes.
3963
3964 If ``json`` option is specified, output is displayed in JSON format.
3965
3966 .. clicmd:: show bgp [<view|vrf> VIEWVRFNAME] [afi] [safi] neighbors PEER received prefix-filter [json]
3967
3968 Display Address Prefix ORFs received from this peer.
3969
3970 .. clicmd:: show bgp [afi] [safi] [all] dampening dampened-paths [wide|json]
3971
3972 Display paths suppressed due to dampening of the selected afi and safi
3973 selected.
3974
3975 .. clicmd:: show bgp [afi] [safi] [all] dampening flap-statistics [wide|json]
3976
3977 Display flap statistics of routes of the selected afi and safi selected.
3978
3979 .. clicmd:: show bgp [afi] [safi] [all] dampening parameters [json]
3980
3981 Display details of configured dampening parameters of the selected afi and
3982 safi.
3983
3984 If the ``json`` option is specified, output is displayed in JSON format.
3985
3986 .. clicmd:: show bgp [afi] [safi] [all] version (1-4294967295) [wide|json]
3987
3988 Display prefixes with matching version numbers. The version number and
3989 above having prefixes will be listed here.
3990
3991 It helps to identify which prefixes were installed at some point.
3992
3993 Here is an example of how to check what prefixes were installed starting
3994 with an arbitrary version:
3995
3996 .. code-block:: shell
3997
3998 # vtysh -c 'show bgp ipv4 unicast json' | jq '.tableVersion'
3999 9
4000 # vtysh -c 'show ip bgp version 9 json' | jq -r '.routes | keys[]'
4001 192.168.3.0/24
4002 # vtysh -c 'show ip bgp version 8 json' | jq -r '.routes | keys[]'
4003 192.168.2.0/24
4004 192.168.3.0/24
4005
4006 .. clicmd:: show bgp [afi] [safi] statistics
4007
4008 Display statistics of routes of the selected afi and safi.
4009
4010 .. clicmd:: show bgp statistics-all
4011
4012 Display statistics of routes of all the afi and safi.
4013
4014 .. clicmd:: show [ip] bgp [afi] [safi] [all] cidr-only [wide|json]
4015
4016 Display routes with non-natural netmasks.
4017
4018 .. clicmd:: show [ip] bgp [afi] [safi] [all] prefix-list WORD [wide|json]
4019
4020 Display routes that match the specified prefix-list.
4021
4022 If ``wide`` option is specified, then the prefix table's width is increased
4023 to fully display the prefix and the nexthop.
4024
4025 If the ``json`` option is specified, output is displayed in JSON format.
4026
4027 .. clicmd:: show [ip] bgp [afi] [safi] [all] access-list WORD [wide|json]
4028
4029 Display routes that match the specified access-list.
4030
4031 .. clicmd:: show [ip] bgp [afi] [safi] [all] filter-list WORD [wide|json]
4032
4033 Display routes that match the specified AS-Path filter-list.
4034
4035 If ``wide`` option is specified, then the prefix table's width is increased
4036 to fully display the prefix and the nexthop.
4037
4038 If the ``json`` option is specified, output is displayed in JSON format.
4039
4040 .. clicmd:: show [ip] bgp [afi] [safi] [all] route-map WORD [wide|json]
4041
4042 Display routes that match the specified route-map.
4043
4044 If ``wide`` option is specified, then the prefix table's width is increased
4045 to fully display the prefix and the nexthop.
4046
4047 If the ``json`` option is specified, output is displayed in JSON format.
4048
4049 .. clicmd:: show [ip] bgp [afi] [safi] [all] <A.B.C.D/M|X:X::X:X/M> longer-prefixes [wide|json]
4050
4051 Displays the specified route and all more specific routes.
4052
4053 If ``wide`` option is specified, then the prefix table's width is increased
4054 to fully display the prefix and the nexthop.
4055
4056 If the ``json`` option is specified, output is displayed in JSON format.
4057
4058 .. clicmd:: show [ip] bgp [afi] [safi] [all] neighbors A.B.C.D [advertised-routes|received-routes|filtered-routes] [<A.B.C.D/M|X:X::X:X/M> | detail] [json|wide]
4059
4060 Display the routes advertised to a BGP neighbor or received routes
4061 from neighbor or filtered routes received from neighbor based on the
4062 option specified.
4063
4064 If ``wide`` option is specified, then the prefix table's width is increased
4065 to fully display the prefix and the nexthop.
4066
4067 This is especially handy dealing with IPv6 prefixes and
4068 if :clicmd:`[no] bgp default show-nexthop-hostname` is enabled.
4069
4070 If ``all`` option is specified, ``ip`` keyword is ignored and,
4071 routes displayed for all AFIs and SAFIs.
4072 if afi is specified, with ``all`` option, routes will be displayed for
4073 each SAFI in the selcted AFI
4074
4075 If a specific prefix is specified, the detailed version of that prefix will
4076 be displayed.
4077
4078 If ``detail`` option is specified, the detailed version of all routes
4079 will be displayed. The same format as ``show [ip] bgp [afi] [safi] PREFIX``
4080 will be used, but for the whole table of received, advertised or filtered
4081 prefixes.
4082
4083 If ``json`` option is specified, output is displayed in JSON format.
4084
4085 .. clicmd:: show [ip] bgp [afi] [safi] [all] detail-routes
4086
4087 Display the detailed version of all routes. The same format as using
4088 ``show [ip] bgp [afi] [safi] PREFIX``, but for the whole BGP table.
4089
4090 If ``all`` option is specified, ``ip`` keyword is ignored and,
4091 routes displayed for all AFIs and SAFIs.
4092
4093 If ``afi`` is specified, with ``all`` option, routes will be displayed for
4094 each SAFI in the selected AFI.
4095
4096 .. _bgp-display-routes-by-community:
4097
4098 Displaying Routes by Community Attribute
4099 ----------------------------------------
4100
4101 The following commands allow displaying routes based on their community
4102 attribute.
4103
4104 .. clicmd:: show [ip] bgp <ipv4|ipv6> [all] community [wide|json]
4105
4106 .. clicmd:: show [ip] bgp <ipv4|ipv6> [all] community COMMUNITY [wide|json]
4107
4108 .. clicmd:: show [ip] bgp <ipv4|ipv6> [all] community COMMUNITY exact-match [wide|json]
4109
4110 These commands display BGP routes which have the community attribute.
4111 attribute. When ``COMMUNITY`` is specified, BGP routes that match that
4112 community are displayed. When `exact-match` is specified, it display only
4113 routes that have an exact match.
4114
4115 .. clicmd:: show [ip] bgp <ipv4|ipv6> community-list WORD [json]
4116
4117 .. clicmd:: show [ip] bgp <ipv4|ipv6> community-list WORD exact-match [json]
4118
4119 These commands display BGP routes for the address family specified that
4120 match the specified community list. When `exact-match` is specified, it
4121 displays only routes that have an exact match.
4122
4123 If ``wide`` option is specified, then the prefix table's width is increased
4124 to fully display the prefix and the nexthop.
4125
4126 This is especially handy dealing with IPv6 prefixes and
4127 if :clicmd:`[no] bgp default show-nexthop-hostname` is enabled.
4128
4129 If ``all`` option is specified, ``ip`` keyword is ignored and,
4130 routes displayed for all AFIs and SAFIs.
4131 if afi is specified, with ``all`` option, routes will be displayed for
4132 each SAFI in the selcted AFI
4133
4134 If ``json`` option is specified, output is displayed in JSON format.
4135
4136 .. clicmd:: show bgp labelpool <chunks|inuse|ledger|requests|summary> [json]
4137
4138 These commands display information about the BGP labelpool used for
4139 the association of MPLS labels with routes for L3VPN and Labeled Unicast
4140
4141 If ``chunks`` option is specified, output shows the current list of label
4142 chunks granted to BGP by Zebra, indicating the start and end label in
4143 each chunk
4144
4145 If ``inuse`` option is specified, output shows the current inuse list of
4146 label to prefix mappings
4147
4148 If ``ledger`` option is specified, output shows ledger list of all
4149 label requests made per prefix
4150
4151 If ``requests`` option is specified, output shows current list of label
4152 requests which have not yet been fulfilled by the labelpool
4153
4154 If ``summary`` option is specified, output is a summary of the counts for
4155 the chunks, inuse, ledger and requests list along with the count of
4156 outstanding chunk requests to Zebra and the number of zebra reconnects
4157 that have happened
4158
4159 If ``json`` option is specified, output is displayed in JSON format.
4160
4161 .. _bgp-display-routes-by-lcommunity:
4162
4163 Displaying Routes by Large Community Attribute
4164 ----------------------------------------------
4165
4166 The following commands allow displaying routes based on their
4167 large community attribute.
4168
4169 .. clicmd:: show [ip] bgp <ipv4|ipv6> large-community
4170
4171 .. clicmd:: show [ip] bgp <ipv4|ipv6> large-community LARGE-COMMUNITY
4172
4173 .. clicmd:: show [ip] bgp <ipv4|ipv6> large-community LARGE-COMMUNITY exact-match
4174
4175 .. clicmd:: show [ip] bgp <ipv4|ipv6> large-community LARGE-COMMUNITY json
4176
4177 These commands display BGP routes which have the large community attribute.
4178 attribute. When ``LARGE-COMMUNITY`` is specified, BGP routes that match that
4179 large community are displayed. When `exact-match` is specified, it display
4180 only routes that have an exact match. When `json` is specified, it display
4181 routes in json format.
4182
4183 .. clicmd:: show [ip] bgp <ipv4|ipv6> large-community-list WORD
4184
4185 .. clicmd:: show [ip] bgp <ipv4|ipv6> large-community-list WORD exact-match
4186
4187 .. clicmd:: show [ip] bgp <ipv4|ipv6> large-community-list WORD json
4188
4189 These commands display BGP routes for the address family specified that
4190 match the specified large community list. When `exact-match` is specified,
4191 it displays only routes that have an exact match. When `json` is specified,
4192 it display routes in json format.
4193
4194 .. _bgp-display-routes-by-as-path:
4195
4196
4197 Displaying Routes by AS Path
4198 ----------------------------
4199
4200 .. clicmd:: show bgp ipv4|ipv6 regexp LINE
4201
4202 This commands displays BGP routes that matches a regular
4203 expression `line` (:ref:`bgp-regular-expressions`).
4204
4205 .. clicmd:: show [ip] bgp ipv4 vpn
4206
4207 .. clicmd:: show [ip] bgp ipv6 vpn
4208
4209 Print active IPV4 or IPV6 routes advertised via the VPN SAFI.
4210
4211 .. clicmd:: show bgp ipv4 vpn summary
4212
4213 .. clicmd:: show bgp ipv6 vpn summary
4214
4215 Print a summary of neighbor connections for the specified AFI/SAFI combination.
4216
4217 Displaying Routes by Route Distinguisher
4218 ----------------------------------------
4219
4220 .. clicmd:: show bgp [<ipv4|ipv6> vpn | l2vpn evpn [route]] rd <all|RD>
4221
4222 For L3VPN and EVPN address-families, routes can be displayed on a per-RD
4223 (Route Distinguisher) basis or for all RD's.
4224
4225 .. clicmd:: show bgp l2vpn evpn rd <all|RD> [overlay | tags]
4226
4227 Use the ``overlay`` or ``tags`` keywords to display the overlay/tag
4228 information about the EVPN prefixes in the selected Route Distinguisher.
4229
4230 .. clicmd:: show bgp l2vpn evpn route rd <all|RD> mac <MAC> [ip <MAC>] [json]
4231
4232 For EVPN Type 2 (macip) routes, a MAC address (and optionally an IP address)
4233 can be supplied to the command to only display matching prefixes in the
4234 specified RD.
4235
4236 Displaying Update Group Information
4237 -----------------------------------
4238
4239 .. clicmd:: show bgp update-groups [advertise-queue|advertised-routes|packet-queue]
4240
4241 Display Information about each individual update-group being used.
4242 If SUBGROUP-ID is specified only display about that particular group. If
4243 advertise-queue is specified the list of routes that need to be sent
4244 to the peers in the update-group is displayed, advertised-routes means
4245 the list of routes we have sent to the peers in the update-group and
4246 packet-queue specifies the list of packets in the queue to be sent.
4247
4248 .. clicmd:: show bgp update-groups statistics
4249
4250 Display Information about update-group events in FRR.
4251
4252 Displaying Nexthop Information
4253 ------------------------------
4254 .. clicmd:: show [ip] bgp [<view|vrf> VIEWVRFNAME] nexthop ipv4 [A.B.C.D] [detail] [json]
4255
4256 .. clicmd:: show [ip] bgp [<view|vrf> VIEWVRFNAME] nexthop ipv6 [X:X::X:X] [detail] [json]
4257
4258 .. clicmd:: show [ip] bgp [<view|vrf> VIEWVRFNAME] nexthop [<A.B.C.D|X:X::X:X>] [detail] [json]
4259
4260 .. clicmd:: show [ip] bgp <view|vrf> all nexthop [json]
4261
4262 Display information about nexthops to bgp neighbors. If a certain nexthop is
4263 specified, also provides information about paths associated with the nexthop.
4264 With detail option provides information about gates of each nexthop.
4265
4266 .. clicmd:: show [ip] bgp [<view|vrf> VIEWVRFNAME] import-check-table [detail] [json]
4267
4268 Display information about nexthops from table that is used to check network's
4269 existence in the rib for network statements.
4270
4271 Segment-Routing IPv6
4272 --------------------
4273
4274 .. clicmd:: show bgp segment-routing srv6
4275
4276 This command displays information about SRv6 L3VPN in bgpd. Specifically,
4277 what kind of Locator is being used, and its Locator chunk information.
4278 And the SID of the SRv6 Function that is actually managed on bgpd.
4279 In the following example, bgpd is using a Locator named loc1, and two SRv6
4280 Functions are managed to perform VPNv6 VRF redirect for vrf10 and vrf20.
4281
4282 ::
4283
4284 router# show bgp segment-routing srv6
4285 locator_name: loc1
4286 locator_chunks:
4287 - 2001:db8:1:1::/64
4288 functions:
4289 - sid: 2001:db8:1:1::100
4290 locator: loc1
4291 - sid: 2001:db8:1:1::200
4292 locator: loc1
4293 bgps:
4294 - name: default
4295 vpn_policy[AFI_IP].tovpn_sid: none
4296 vpn_policy[AFI_IP6].tovpn_sid: none
4297 - name: vrf10
4298 vpn_policy[AFI_IP].tovpn_sid: none
4299 vpn_policy[AFI_IP6].tovpn_sid: 2001:db8:1:1::100
4300 - name: vrf20
4301 vpn_policy[AFI_IP].tovpn_sid: none
4302 vpn_policy[AFI_IP6].tovpn_sid: 2001:db8:1:1::200
4303
4304
4305 .. _bgp-route-reflector:
4306
4307 Route Reflector
4308 ===============
4309
4310 BGP routers connected inside the same AS through BGP belong to an internal
4311 BGP session, or IBGP. In order to prevent routing table loops, IBGP does not
4312 advertise IBGP-learned routes to other routers in the same session. As such,
4313 IBGP requires a full mesh of all peers. For large networks, this quickly becomes
4314 unscalable. Introducing route reflectors removes the need for the full-mesh.
4315
4316 When route reflectors are configured, these will reflect the routes announced
4317 by the peers configured as clients. A route reflector client is configured
4318 with:
4319
4320 .. clicmd:: neighbor PEER route-reflector-client
4321
4322
4323 To avoid single points of failure, multiple route reflectors can be configured.
4324
4325 A cluster is a collection of route reflectors and their clients, and is used
4326 by route reflectors to avoid looping.
4327
4328 .. clicmd:: bgp cluster-id A.B.C.D
4329
4330 .. clicmd:: bgp no-rib
4331
4332 To set and unset the BGP daemon ``-n`` / ``--no_kernel`` options during runtime
4333 to disable BGP route installation to the RIB (Zebra), the ``[no] bgp no-rib``
4334 commands can be used;
4335
4336 Please note that setting the option during runtime will withdraw all routes in
4337 the daemons RIB from Zebra and unsetting it will announce all routes in the
4338 daemons RIB to Zebra. If the option is passed as a command line argument when
4339 starting the daemon and the configuration gets saved, the option will persist
4340 unless removed from the configuration with the negating command prior to the
4341 configuration write operation. At this point in time non SAFI_UNICAST BGP
4342 data is not properly withdrawn from zebra when this command is issued.
4343
4344 .. clicmd:: bgp allow-martian-nexthop
4345
4346 When a peer receives a martian nexthop as part of the NLRI for a route
4347 permit the nexthop to be used as such, instead of rejecting and resetting
4348 the connection.
4349
4350 .. clicmd:: bgp send-extra-data zebra
4351
4352 This command turns on the ability of BGP to send extra data to zebra. Currently,
4353 it's the AS-Path, communities, and the path selection reason. The default
4354 behavior in BGP is not to send this data. If the routes were sent to zebra and
4355 the option is changed, bgpd doesn't reinstall the routes to comply with the new
4356 setting.
4357
4358 .. clicmd:: bgp session-dscp (0-63)
4359
4360 This command allows bgp to control, at a global level, the TCP dscp values
4361 in the TCP header.
4362
4363 .. _bgp-suppress-fib:
4364
4365 Suppressing routes not installed in FIB
4366 =======================================
4367
4368 The FRR implementation of BGP advertises prefixes learnt from a peer to other
4369 peers even if the routes do not get installed in the FIB. There can be
4370 scenarios where the hardware tables in some of the routers (along the path from
4371 the source to destination) is full which will result in all routes not getting
4372 installed in the FIB. If these routes are advertised to the downstream routers
4373 then traffic will start flowing and will be dropped at the intermediate router.
4374
4375 The solution is to provide a configurable option to check for the FIB install
4376 status of the prefixes and advertise to peers if the prefixes are successfully
4377 installed in the FIB. The advertisement of the prefixes are suppressed if it is
4378 not installed in FIB.
4379
4380 The following conditions apply will apply when checking for route installation
4381 status in FIB:
4382
4383 1. The advertisement or suppression of routes based on FIB install status
4384 applies only for newly learnt routes from peer (routes which are not in
4385 BGP local RIB).
4386 2. If the route received from peer already exists in BGP local RIB and route
4387 attributes have changed (best path changed), the old path is deleted and
4388 new path is installed in FIB. The FIB install status will not have any
4389 effect. Therefore only when the route is received first time the checks
4390 apply.
4391 3. The feature will not apply for routes learnt through other means like
4392 redistribution to bgp from other protocols. This is applicable only to
4393 peer learnt routes.
4394 4. If a route is installed in FIB and then gets deleted from the dataplane,
4395 then routes will not be withdrawn from peers. This will be considered as
4396 dataplane issue.
4397 5. The feature will slightly increase the time required to advertise the routes
4398 to peers since the route install status needs to be received from the FIB
4399 6. If routes are received by the peer before the configuration is applied, then
4400 the bgp sessions need to be reset for the configuration to take effect.
4401 7. If the route which is already installed in dataplane is removed for some
4402 reason, sending withdraw message to peers is not currently supported.
4403
4404 .. clicmd:: bgp suppress-fib-pending
4405
4406 This command is applicable at the global level and at an individual
4407 bgp level. If applied at the global level all bgp instances will
4408 wait for fib installation before announcing routes and there is no
4409 way to turn it off for a particular bgp vrf.
4410
4411 .. _routing-policy:
4412
4413 Routing Policy
4414 ==============
4415
4416 You can set different routing policy for a peer. For example, you can set
4417 different filter for a peer.
4418
4419 .. code-block:: frr
4420
4421 !
4422 router bgp 1 view 1
4423 neighbor 10.0.0.1 remote-as 2
4424 address-family ipv4 unicast
4425 neighbor 10.0.0.1 distribute-list 1 in
4426 exit-address-family
4427 !
4428 router bgp 1 view 2
4429 neighbor 10.0.0.1 remote-as 2
4430 address-family ipv4 unicast
4431 neighbor 10.0.0.1 distribute-list 2 in
4432 exit-address-family
4433
4434 This means BGP update from a peer 10.0.0.1 goes to both BGP view 1 and view 2.
4435 When the update is inserted into view 1, distribute-list 1 is applied. On the
4436 other hand, when the update is inserted into view 2, distribute-list 2 is
4437 applied.
4438
4439
4440 .. _bgp-regular-expressions:
4441
4442 BGP Regular Expressions
4443 =======================
4444
4445 BGP regular expressions are based on :t:`POSIX 1003.2` regular expressions. The
4446 following description is just a quick subset of the POSIX regular expressions.
4447
4448
4449 .\*
4450 Matches any single character.
4451
4452 \*
4453 Matches 0 or more occurrences of pattern.
4454
4455 \+
4456 Matches 1 or more occurrences of pattern.
4457
4458 ?
4459 Match 0 or 1 occurrences of pattern.
4460
4461 ^
4462 Matches the beginning of the line.
4463
4464 $
4465 Matches the end of the line.
4466
4467 _
4468 The ``_`` character has special meanings in BGP regular expressions. It
4469 matches to space and comma , and AS set delimiter ``{`` and ``}`` and AS
4470 confederation delimiter ``(`` and ``)``. And it also matches to the
4471 beginning of the line and the end of the line. So ``_`` can be used for AS
4472 value boundaries match. This character technically evaluates to
4473 ``(^|[,{}()]|$)``.
4474
4475
4476 .. _bgp-configuration-examples:
4477
4478 Miscellaneous Configuration Examples
4479 ====================================
4480
4481 Example of a session to an upstream, advertising only one prefix to it.
4482
4483 .. code-block:: frr
4484
4485 router bgp 64512
4486 bgp router-id 10.236.87.1
4487 neighbor upstream peer-group
4488 neighbor upstream remote-as 64515
4489 neighbor upstream capability dynamic
4490 neighbor 10.1.1.1 peer-group upstream
4491 neighbor 10.1.1.1 description ACME ISP
4492
4493 address-family ipv4 unicast
4494 network 10.236.87.0/24
4495 neighbor upstream prefix-list pl-allowed-adv out
4496 exit-address-family
4497 !
4498 ip prefix-list pl-allowed-adv seq 5 permit 82.195.133.0/25
4499 ip prefix-list pl-allowed-adv seq 10 deny any
4500
4501 A more complex example including upstream, peer and customer sessions
4502 advertising global prefixes and NO_EXPORT prefixes and providing actions for
4503 customer routes based on community values. Extensive use is made of route-maps
4504 and the 'call' feature to support selective advertising of prefixes. This
4505 example is intended as guidance only, it has NOT been tested and almost
4506 certainly contains silly mistakes, if not serious flaws.
4507
4508 .. code-block:: frr
4509
4510 router bgp 64512
4511 bgp router-id 10.236.87.1
4512 neighbor upstream capability dynamic
4513 neighbor cust capability dynamic
4514 neighbor peer capability dynamic
4515 neighbor 10.1.1.1 remote-as 64515
4516 neighbor 10.1.1.1 peer-group upstream
4517 neighbor 10.2.1.1 remote-as 64516
4518 neighbor 10.2.1.1 peer-group upstream
4519 neighbor 10.3.1.1 remote-as 64517
4520 neighbor 10.3.1.1 peer-group cust-default
4521 neighbor 10.3.1.1 description customer1
4522 neighbor 10.4.1.1 remote-as 64518
4523 neighbor 10.4.1.1 peer-group cust
4524 neighbor 10.4.1.1 description customer2
4525 neighbor 10.5.1.1 remote-as 64519
4526 neighbor 10.5.1.1 peer-group peer
4527 neighbor 10.5.1.1 description peer AS 1
4528 neighbor 10.6.1.1 remote-as 64520
4529 neighbor 10.6.1.1 peer-group peer
4530 neighbor 10.6.1.1 description peer AS 2
4531
4532 address-family ipv4 unicast
4533 network 10.123.456.0/24
4534 network 10.123.456.128/25 route-map rm-no-export
4535 neighbor upstream route-map rm-upstream-out out
4536 neighbor cust route-map rm-cust-in in
4537 neighbor cust route-map rm-cust-out out
4538 neighbor cust send-community both
4539 neighbor peer route-map rm-peer-in in
4540 neighbor peer route-map rm-peer-out out
4541 neighbor peer send-community both
4542 neighbor 10.3.1.1 prefix-list pl-cust1-network in
4543 neighbor 10.4.1.1 prefix-list pl-cust2-network in
4544 neighbor 10.5.1.1 prefix-list pl-peer1-network in
4545 neighbor 10.6.1.1 prefix-list pl-peer2-network in
4546 exit-address-family
4547 !
4548 ip prefix-list pl-default permit 0.0.0.0/0
4549 !
4550 ip prefix-list pl-upstream-peers permit 10.1.1.1/32
4551 ip prefix-list pl-upstream-peers permit 10.2.1.1/32
4552 !
4553 ip prefix-list pl-cust1-network permit 10.3.1.0/24
4554 ip prefix-list pl-cust1-network permit 10.3.2.0/24
4555 !
4556 ip prefix-list pl-cust2-network permit 10.4.1.0/24
4557 !
4558 ip prefix-list pl-peer1-network permit 10.5.1.0/24
4559 ip prefix-list pl-peer1-network permit 10.5.2.0/24
4560 ip prefix-list pl-peer1-network permit 192.168.0.0/24
4561 !
4562 ip prefix-list pl-peer2-network permit 10.6.1.0/24
4563 ip prefix-list pl-peer2-network permit 10.6.2.0/24
4564 ip prefix-list pl-peer2-network permit 192.168.1.0/24
4565 ip prefix-list pl-peer2-network permit 192.168.2.0/24
4566 ip prefix-list pl-peer2-network permit 172.16.1/24
4567 !
4568 bgp as-path access-list seq 5 asp-own-as permit ^$
4569 bgp as-path access-list seq 10 asp-own-as permit _64512_
4570 !
4571 ! #################################################################
4572 ! Match communities we provide actions for, on routes receives from
4573 ! customers. Communities values of <our-ASN>:X, with X, have actions:
4574 !
4575 ! 100 - blackhole the prefix
4576 ! 200 - set no_export
4577 ! 300 - advertise only to other customers
4578 ! 400 - advertise only to upstreams
4579 ! 500 - set no_export when advertising to upstreams
4580 ! 2X00 - set local_preference to X00
4581 !
4582 ! blackhole the prefix of the route
4583 bgp community-list standard cm-blackhole permit 64512:100
4584 !
4585 ! set no-export community before advertising
4586 bgp community-list standard cm-set-no-export permit 64512:200
4587 !
4588 ! advertise only to other customers
4589 bgp community-list standard cm-cust-only permit 64512:300
4590 !
4591 ! advertise only to upstreams
4592 bgp community-list standard cm-upstream-only permit 64512:400
4593 !
4594 ! advertise to upstreams with no-export
4595 bgp community-list standard cm-upstream-noexport permit 64512:500
4596 !
4597 ! set local-pref to least significant 3 digits of the community
4598 bgp community-list standard cm-prefmod-100 permit 64512:2100
4599 bgp community-list standard cm-prefmod-200 permit 64512:2200
4600 bgp community-list standard cm-prefmod-300 permit 64512:2300
4601 bgp community-list standard cm-prefmod-400 permit 64512:2400
4602 bgp community-list expanded cme-prefmod-range permit 64512:2...
4603 !
4604 ! Informational communities
4605 !
4606 ! 3000 - learned from upstream
4607 ! 3100 - learned from customer
4608 ! 3200 - learned from peer
4609 !
4610 bgp community-list standard cm-learnt-upstream permit 64512:3000
4611 bgp community-list standard cm-learnt-cust permit 64512:3100
4612 bgp community-list standard cm-learnt-peer permit 64512:3200
4613 !
4614 ! ###################################################################
4615 ! Utility route-maps
4616 !
4617 ! These utility route-maps generally should not used to permit/deny
4618 ! routes, i.e. they do not have meaning as filters, and hence probably
4619 ! should be used with 'on-match next'. These all finish with an empty
4620 ! permit entry so as not interfere with processing in the caller.
4621 !
4622 route-map rm-no-export permit 10
4623 set community additive no-export
4624 route-map rm-no-export permit 20
4625 !
4626 route-map rm-blackhole permit 10
4627 description blackhole, up-pref and ensure it cannot escape this AS
4628 set ip next-hop 127.0.0.1
4629 set local-preference 10
4630 set community additive no-export
4631 route-map rm-blackhole permit 20
4632 !
4633 ! Set local-pref as requested
4634 route-map rm-prefmod permit 10
4635 match community cm-prefmod-100
4636 set local-preference 100
4637 route-map rm-prefmod permit 20
4638 match community cm-prefmod-200
4639 set local-preference 200
4640 route-map rm-prefmod permit 30
4641 match community cm-prefmod-300
4642 set local-preference 300
4643 route-map rm-prefmod permit 40
4644 match community cm-prefmod-400
4645 set local-preference 400
4646 route-map rm-prefmod permit 50
4647 !
4648 ! Community actions to take on receipt of route.
4649 route-map rm-community-in permit 10
4650 description check for blackholing, no point continuing if it matches.
4651 match community cm-blackhole
4652 call rm-blackhole
4653 route-map rm-community-in permit 20
4654 match community cm-set-no-export
4655 call rm-no-export
4656 on-match next
4657 route-map rm-community-in permit 30
4658 match community cme-prefmod-range
4659 call rm-prefmod
4660 route-map rm-community-in permit 40
4661 !
4662 ! #####################################################################
4663 ! Community actions to take when advertising a route.
4664 ! These are filtering route-maps,
4665 !
4666 ! Deny customer routes to upstream with cust-only set.
4667 route-map rm-community-filt-to-upstream deny 10
4668 match community cm-learnt-cust
4669 match community cm-cust-only
4670 route-map rm-community-filt-to-upstream permit 20
4671 !
4672 ! Deny customer routes to other customers with upstream-only set.
4673 route-map rm-community-filt-to-cust deny 10
4674 match community cm-learnt-cust
4675 match community cm-upstream-only
4676 route-map rm-community-filt-to-cust permit 20
4677 !
4678 ! ###################################################################
4679 ! The top-level route-maps applied to sessions. Further entries could
4680 ! be added obviously..
4681 !
4682 ! Customers
4683 route-map rm-cust-in permit 10
4684 call rm-community-in
4685 on-match next
4686 route-map rm-cust-in permit 20
4687 set community additive 64512:3100
4688 route-map rm-cust-in permit 30
4689 !
4690 route-map rm-cust-out permit 10
4691 call rm-community-filt-to-cust
4692 on-match next
4693 route-map rm-cust-out permit 20
4694 !
4695 ! Upstream transit ASes
4696 route-map rm-upstream-out permit 10
4697 description filter customer prefixes which are marked cust-only
4698 call rm-community-filt-to-upstream
4699 on-match next
4700 route-map rm-upstream-out permit 20
4701 description only customer routes are provided to upstreams/peers
4702 match community cm-learnt-cust
4703 !
4704 ! Peer ASes
4705 ! outbound policy is same as for upstream
4706 route-map rm-peer-out permit 10
4707 call rm-upstream-out
4708 !
4709 route-map rm-peer-in permit 10
4710 set community additive 64512:3200
4711
4712
4713 Example of how to set up a 6-Bone connection.
4714
4715 .. code-block:: frr
4716
4717 ! bgpd configuration
4718 ! ==================
4719 !
4720 ! MP-BGP configuration
4721 !
4722 router bgp 7675
4723 bgp router-id 10.0.0.1
4724 neighbor 3ffe:1cfa:0:2:2a0:c9ff:fe9e:f56 remote-as `as-number`
4725 !
4726 address-family ipv6
4727 network 3ffe:506::/32
4728 neighbor 3ffe:1cfa:0:2:2a0:c9ff:fe9e:f56 activate
4729 neighbor 3ffe:1cfa:0:2:2a0:c9ff:fe9e:f56 route-map set-nexthop out
4730 neighbor 3ffe:1cfa:0:2:2c0:4fff:fe68:a231 remote-as `as-number`
4731 neighbor 3ffe:1cfa:0:2:2c0:4fff:fe68:a231 route-map set-nexthop out
4732 exit-address-family
4733 !
4734 ipv6 access-list all permit any
4735 !
4736 ! Set output nexthop address.
4737 !
4738 route-map set-nexthop permit 10
4739 match ipv6 address all
4740 set ipv6 nexthop global 3ffe:1cfa:0:2:2c0:4fff:fe68:a225
4741 set ipv6 nexthop local fe80::2c0:4fff:fe68:a225
4742 !
4743 log file bgpd.log
4744 !
4745
4746 .. _bgp-tcp-mss:
4747
4748 BGP tcp-mss support
4749 ===================
4750 TCP provides a mechanism for the user to specify the max segment size.
4751 setsockopt API is used to set the max segment size for TCP session. We
4752 can configure this as part of BGP neighbor configuration.
4753
4754 This document explains how to avoid ICMP vulnerability issues by limiting
4755 TCP max segment size when you are using MTU discovery. Using MTU discovery
4756 on TCP paths is one method of avoiding BGP packet fragmentation.
4757
4758 TCP negotiates a maximum segment size (MSS) value during session connection
4759 establishment between two peers. The MSS value negotiated is primarily based
4760 on the maximum transmission unit (MTU) of the interfaces to which the
4761 communicating peers are directly connected. However, due to variations in
4762 link MTU on the path taken by the TCP packets, some packets in the network
4763 that are well within the MSS value might be fragmented when the packet size
4764 exceeds the link's MTU.
4765
4766 This feature is supported with TCP over IPv4 and TCP over IPv6.
4767
4768 CLI Configuration:
4769 ------------------
4770 Below configuration can be done in router bgp mode and allows the user to
4771 configure the tcp-mss value per neighbor. The configuration gets applied
4772 only after hard reset is performed on that neighbor. If we configure tcp-mss
4773 on both the neighbors then both neighbors need to be reset.
4774
4775 The configuration takes effect based on below rules, so there is a configured
4776 tcp-mss and a synced tcp-mss value per TCP session.
4777
4778 By default if the configuration is not done then the TCP max segment size is
4779 set to the Maximum Transmission unit (MTU) – (IP/IP6 header size + TCP header
4780 size + ethernet header). For IPv4 its MTU – (20 bytes IP header + 20 bytes TCP
4781 header + 12 bytes ethernet header) and for IPv6 its MTU – (40 bytes IPv6 header
4782 + 20 bytes TCP header + 12 bytes ethernet header).
4783
4784 If the config is done then it reduces 12-14 bytes for the ether header and
4785 uses it after synchronizing in TCP handshake.
4786
4787 .. clicmd:: neighbor <A.B.C.D|X:X::X:X|WORD> tcp-mss (1-65535)
4788
4789 When tcp-mss is configured kernel reduces 12-14 bytes for ethernet header.
4790 E.g. if tcp-mss is configured as 150 the synced value will be 138.
4791
4792 Note: configured and synced value is different since TCP module will reduce
4793 12 bytes for ethernet header.
4794
4795 Running config:
4796 ---------------
4797
4798 .. code-block:: frr
4799
4800 frr# show running-config
4801 Building configuration...
4802
4803 Current configuration:
4804 !
4805 router bgp 100
4806 bgp router-id 192.0.2.1
4807 neighbor 198.51.100.2 remote-as 100
4808 neighbor 198.51.100.2 tcp-mss 150 => new entry
4809 neighbor 2001:DB8::2 remote-as 100
4810 neighbor 2001:DB8::2 tcp-mss 400 => new entry
4811
4812 Show command:
4813 -------------
4814
4815 .. code-block:: frr
4816
4817 frr# show bgp neighbors 198.51.100.2
4818 BGP neighbor is 198.51.100.2, remote AS 100, local AS 100, internal link
4819 Hostname: frr
4820 BGP version 4, remote router ID 192.0.2.2, local router ID 192.0.2.1
4821 BGP state = Established, up for 02:15:28
4822 Last read 00:00:28, Last write 00:00:28
4823 Hold time is 180, keepalive interval is 60 seconds
4824 Configured tcp-mss is 150, synced tcp-mss is 138 => new display
4825
4826 .. code-block:: frr
4827
4828 frr# show bgp neighbors 2001:DB8::2
4829 BGP neighbor is 2001:DB8::2, remote AS 100, local AS 100, internal link
4830 Hostname: frr
4831 BGP version 4, remote router ID 192.0.2.2, local router ID 192.0.2.1
4832 BGP state = Established, up for 02:16:34
4833 Last read 00:00:34, Last write 00:00:34
4834 Hold time is 180, keepalive interval is 60 seconds
4835 Configured tcp-mss is 400, synced tcp-mss is 388 => new display
4836
4837 Show command json output:
4838 -------------------------
4839
4840 .. code-block:: frr
4841
4842 frr# show bgp neighbors 2001:DB8::2 json
4843 {
4844 "2001:DB8::2":{
4845 "remoteAs":100,
4846 "localAs":100,
4847 "nbrInternalLink":true,
4848 "hostname":"frr",
4849 "bgpVersion":4,
4850 "remoteRouterId":"192.0.2.2",
4851 "localRouterId":"192.0.2.1",
4852 "bgpState":"Established",
4853 "bgpTimerUpMsec":8349000,
4854 "bgpTimerUpString":"02:19:09",
4855 "bgpTimerUpEstablishedEpoch":1613054251,
4856 "bgpTimerLastRead":9000,
4857 "bgpTimerLastWrite":9000,
4858 "bgpInUpdateElapsedTimeMsecs":8347000,
4859 "bgpTimerHoldTimeMsecs":180000,
4860 "bgpTimerKeepAliveIntervalMsecs":60000,
4861 "bgpTcpMssConfigured":400, => new entry
4862 "bgpTcpMssSynced":388, => new entry
4863
4864 .. code-block:: frr
4865
4866 frr# show bgp neighbors 198.51.100.2 json
4867 {
4868 "198.51.100.2":{
4869 "remoteAs":100,
4870 "localAs":100,
4871 "nbrInternalLink":true,
4872 "hostname":"frr",
4873 "bgpVersion":4,
4874 "remoteRouterId":"192.0.2.2",
4875 "localRouterId":"192.0.2.1",
4876 "bgpState":"Established",
4877 "bgpTimerUpMsec":8370000,
4878 "bgpTimerUpString":"02:19:30",
4879 "bgpTimerUpEstablishedEpoch":1613054251,
4880 "bgpTimerLastRead":30000,
4881 "bgpTimerLastWrite":30000,
4882 "bgpInUpdateElapsedTimeMsecs":8368000,
4883 "bgpTimerHoldTimeMsecs":180000,
4884 "bgpTimerKeepAliveIntervalMsecs":60000,
4885 "bgpTcpMssConfigured":150, => new entry
4886 "bgpTcpMssSynced":138, => new entry
4887
4888 .. include:: routeserver.rst
4889
4890 .. include:: rpki.rst
4891
4892 .. include:: wecmp_linkbw.rst
4893
4894 .. include:: flowspec.rst
4895
4896 .. [#med-transitivity-rant] For some set of objects to have an order, there *must* be some binary ordering relation that is defined for *every* combination of those objects, and that relation *must* be transitive. I.e.:, if the relation operator is <, and if a < b and b < c then that relation must carry over and it *must* be that a < c for the objects to have an order. The ordering relation may allow for equality, i.e. a < b and b < a may both be true and imply that a and b are equal in the order and not distinguished by it, in which case the set has a partial order. Otherwise, if there is an order, all the objects have a distinct place in the order and the set has a total order)
4897 .. [bgp-route-osci-cond] McPherson, D. and Gill, V. and Walton, D., "Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) Persistent Route Oscillation Condition", IETF RFC3345
4898 .. [stable-flexible-ibgp] Flavel, A. and M. Roughan, "Stable and flexible iBGP", ACM SIGCOMM 2009
4899 .. [ibgp-correctness] Griffin, T. and G. Wilfong, "On the correctness of IBGP configuration", ACM SIGCOMM 2002
4900
4901 .. _bgp-fast-convergence:
4902
4903 BGP fast-convergence support
4904 ============================
4905 Whenever BGP peer address becomes unreachable we must bring down the BGP
4906 session immediately. Currently only single-hop EBGP sessions are brought
4907 down immediately.IBGP and multi-hop EBGP sessions wait for hold-timer
4908 expiry to bring down the sessions.
4909
4910 This new configuration option helps user to teardown BGP sessions immediately
4911 whenever peer becomes unreachable.
4912
4913 .. clicmd:: bgp fast-convergence
4914
4915 This configuration is available at the bgp level. When enabled, configuration
4916 is applied to all the neighbors configured in that bgp instance.
4917
4918 .. code-block:: frr
4919
4920 router bgp 64496
4921 neighbor 10.0.0.2 remote-as 64496
4922 neighbor fd00::2 remote-as 64496
4923 bgp fast-convergence
4924 !
4925 address-family ipv4 unicast
4926 redistribute static
4927 exit-address-family
4928 !
4929 address-family ipv6 unicast
4930 neighbor fd00::2 activate
4931 exit-address-family