Users Guide

CONFIG-ROUTER-BGP mode
aggregate-address ip-address mask [advertise-map map-name] [as-set] [attribute-map map-name]
[summary-only] [suppress-map map-name]
In the show ip bgp command, aggregates contain an ‘a’ in the first column (shown in bold) and routes suppressed by the aggregate
contain an ‘s’ in the first column.
Dell#show ip bgp
BGP table version is 0, local router ID is 10.101.15.13
Status codes: s suppressed, d damped, h history, * valid, > best
Path source: I - internal, a - aggregate, c - confed-external, r - redistributed, n - network
Origin codes: i - IGP, e - EGP, ? - incomplete
Network Next Hop Metric LocPrf Weight Path
*> 7.0.0.0/29 10.114.8.33 0 0 18508 ?
*> 7.0.0.0/30 10.114.8.33 0 0 18508 ?
*>a 9.0.0.0/8 192.0.0.0 32768 18508 701 {7018 2686 3786} ?
*> 9.2.0.0/16 10.114.8.33 0 18508 701 i
*> 9.141.128.0/24 10.114.8.33 0 18508 701 7018 2686 ?
Dell#
Configuring BGP Confederations
Another way to organize routers within an AS and reduce the mesh for IBGP peers is to configure BGP confederations.
As with route reflectors, BGP confederations are recommended only for IBGP peering involving many IBGP peering sessions per router.
Basically, when you configure BGP confederations, you break the AS into smaller sub-AS, and to those outside your network, the
confederations appear as one AS. Within the confederation sub-AS, the IBGP neighbors are fully meshed and the MED, NEXT_HOP, and
LOCAL_PREF attributes are maintained between confederations.
To configure BGP confederations, use the following commands.
Specifies the confederation ID.
CONFIG-ROUTER-BGP mode
bgp confederation identifier as-number
as-number: from 0 to 65535 (2 Byte) or from 1 to 4294967295 (4 Byte).
Specifies which confederation sub-AS are peers.
CONFIG-ROUTER-BGP mode
bgp confederation peers as-number [... as-number]
as-number: from 0 to 65535 (2 Byte) or from 1 to 4294967295 (4 Byte).
All Confederation routers must be either 4 Byte or 2 Byte. You cannot have a mix of router ASN support.
To view the configuration, use the show config command in CONFIGURATION ROUTER BGP mode.
Enabling Route Flap Dampening
When EBGP routes become unavailable, they “flap” and the router issues both WITHDRAWN and UPDATE notices.
A flap is when a route:
is withdrawn
is readvertised after being withdrawn
has an attribute change
The constant router reaction to the WITHDRAWN and UPDATE notices causes instability in the BGP process. To minimize this instability,
you may configure penalties (a numeric value) for routes that flap. When that penalty value reaches a configured limit, the route is not
advertised, even if the route is up. In Dell Networking OS, that penalty value is 1024. As time passes and the route does not flap, the
penalty value decrements or is decayed. However, if the route flaps again, it is assigned another penalty.
The penalty value is cumulative and penalty is added under following cases:
Withdraw
Readvertise
182
Border Gateway Protocol IPv4 (BGPv4)