Administrator Guide

Prerequisites
Before configuring BFD for BGP, you must first configure the following settings:
1 Configure BGP on the routers that you want to interconnect, as described in Border Gateway Protocol IPv4 (BGPv4).
2 Enable fast fall-over for BGP neighbors to reduce convergence time (the neighbor fall-over command), as described in BGP
Fast Fall-Over.
Establishing Sessions with BGP Neighbors
Before configuring BFD for BGP, you must first configure BGP on the routers that you want to interconnect.
For more information, refer to Border Gateway Protocol IPv4 (BGPv4).
For example, the following illustration shows a sample BFD configuration on Router 1 and Router 2 that use eBGP in a transit network to
interconnect AS1 and AS2. The eBGP routers exchange information with each other as well as with iBGP routers to maintain connectivity
and accessibility within each autonomous system.
Figure 15. Establishing Sessions with BGP Neighbors
The sample configuration shows alternative ways to establish a BFD session with a BGP neighbor:
By establishing BFD sessions with all neighbors discovered by BGP (the bfd all-neighbors command).
By establishing a BFD session with a specified BGP neighbor (the neighbor {ip-address | peer-group-name} bfd
command)
BFD packets originating from a router are assigned to the highest priority egress queue to minimize transmission delays. Incoming BFD
control packets received from the BGP neighbor are assigned to the highest priority queue within the control plane policing (COPP)
framework to avoid BFD packets drops due to queue congestion.
Bidirectional Forwarding Detection (BFD)
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