HP VPN Firewall Appliances Network Management Configuration Guide

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Figure 294 Route selection based on MED
As shown in Figure 294, Router D learns network 10.0.0.0 from both Router A and Router B.
Because Router B has a smaller router ID, the route learned from it is optimal.
Network NextHop MED LocPrf PrefVal Path/Ogn
*>i 10.0.0.0 2.2.2.2 50 0 300e
* i 3.3.3.3 50 0 200e
When Router D learns network 10.0.0.0 from Router C, it compares the route with the optimal
route in its routing table. Because Router C and Router B reside in different ASs, BGP will not
compare the MEDs of the two routes. Router C has a smaller router ID than Router B, the route from
Router C becomes optimal.
Network NextHop MED LocPrf PrefVal Path/Ogn
*>i 10.0.0.0 1.1.1.1 60 0 200e
* i 10.0.0.0 2.2.2.2 50 0 300e
* i 3.3.3.3 50 0 200e
However, Router C and Router A reside in the same AS, and Router C has a greater MED, so
network 10.0.0.0 learned from Router C is not optimal.
To resolve this issue, configure the bestroute compare-med command on Router D. After that,
Router D puts routes received from the same AS into a group. Router D then selects the route with
the lowest MED from the same group, and compares routes from different groups.
The following output is the BGP routing table on Router D after the comparison of MED of routes
from each AS is enabled. Network 10.0.0.0 learned from Router B is the optimal route.
Network NextHop MED LocPrf PrefVal Path/Ogn
*>i 10.0.0.0 2.2.2.2 50 0 300e
* i 3.3.3.3 50 0 200e
* i 1.1.1.1 60 0 200e
BGP load balancing cannot be implemented because load balanced routes must have the same
AS_PATH attribute.
To enable the comparison of MED of routes from each AS: