Users Guide

Incoming packet capture enabled for BGP neighbor 172.30.1.250
Available buffer size 29165743, 192991 packet(s) captured using 11794257 bytes
[. . .]
Dell(conf-router_bgp)#do sho ip bg s
BGP router identifier 172.30.1.56, local AS number 65056
BGP table version is 313511, main routing table version 313511
207896 network entrie(s) and 207896 paths using 42364576 bytes of memory
59913 BGP path attribute entrie(s) using 2875872 bytes of memory
59910 BGP AS-PATH entrie(s) using 2679698 bytes of memory
3 BGP community entrie(s) using 81 bytes of memory
Neighbor AS MsgRcvd MsgSent TblVer InQ OutQ Up/Down State/Pfx
1.1.1.2 2 17 18966 0 0 0 00:08:19 Active
172.30.1.250 18508 243295 25 313511 0 0 00:12:46 207896
PDU Counters
Dell Networking OS supports additional counters for various types of PDUs sent and received from neighbors.
These are seen in the output of the show ip bgp neighbor command.
Sample Configurations
The following example configurations show how to enable BGP and set up some peer groups. These examples are not comprehensive
directions. They are intended to give you some guidance with typical configurations.
To support your own IP addresses, interfaces, names, and so on, you can copy and paste from these examples to your CLI. Be sure that
you make the necessary changes.
The following illustration shows the configurations described on the following examples. These configurations show how to create BGP
areas using physical and virtual links. They include setting up the interfaces and peers groups with each other.
Border Gateway Protocol IPv4 (BGPv4)
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