Users Guide

Router C without immediately updating Router C’s conguration. Local-AS allows this behavior to happen by allowing Router B to appear as
if it still belongs to Router B’s old network (AS 200) as far as communicating with Router C is concerned.
Figure 25. Before and After AS Number Migration with Local-AS Enabled
When you complete your migration, and you have recongured your network with the new information, disable this feature.
If you use the “no prepend” option, the Local-AS does not prepend to the updates received from the eBGP peer. If you do not select “no
prepend” (the default), the Local-AS is added to the rst AS segment in the AS-PATH. If an inbound route-map is used to prepend the as-
path to the update from the peer, the Local-AS is added rst. For example, consider the topology described in the previous illustration. If
Router B has an inbound route-map applied on Router C to prepend "65001 65002" to the as-path, the following events take place on
Router B:
1 Receive and validate the update.
2 Prepend local-as 200 to as-path.
3 Prepend "65001 65002" to as-path.
Local-AS is prepended before the route-map to give an impression that update passed through a router in AS 200 before it reached Router
B.
BGP4 Management Information Base (MIB)
The FORCE10-BGP4-V2-MIB enhances support for BGP management information base (MIB) with many new simple network
management protocol (SNMP) objects and notications (traps) dened in draft-ietf-idr-bgp4-mibv2-05. To see these enhancements,
download the MIB from the Dell website.
NOTE
: For the
Force10-BGP4-V2-MIB
and other MIB documentation, refer to the Dell iSupport web page.
Important Points to Remember
Because eBGP packets are not controlled by the ACL, packets from BGP neighbors cannot be blocked using the deny ip command.
Border Gateway Protocol (BGP)
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