R3721-F3210-F3171-HP High-End Firewalls Network Management Configuration Guide-6PW101

Table Of Contents
431
Task Remarks
Tuning and optimizing
BGP networks
Configuring the BGP keepalive interval and holdtime
Optional.
Configuring the interval for sending the same update
Optional.
Configuring BGP soft-reset Optional.
Enabling the BGP ORF capability Optional.
Enabling 4-byte AS number suppression Optional.
Enabling quick EBGP session reestablishment Optional.
Enabling MD5 authentication for TCP connections Optional.
Configuring BGP load balancing Optional.
Forbidding session establishment with a peer or peer
group
Optional.
Configuring a large
scale BGP network
Configuring BGP peer groups Optional.
Configuring BGP community Optional.
Configuring a BGP route reflector Optional.
Configuring a BGP confederation Optional.
Enabling Trap Optional.
Enabling logging of peer state changes Optional.
Configuring BFD for BGP Optional.
Configuring BGP basic functions
NOTE:
This section does not differentiate between BGP and MP-BGP.
Configuration prerequisites
The neighboring nodes are accessible to each other at the network layer.
Creating a BGP connection
A router ID is the unique identifier of a BGP router in an AS.
To ensure the uniqueness of a router ID and enhance network reliability, you can specify in BGP
view the IP address of a local loopback interface as the router ID.
If no router ID is specified in BGP view, the global router ID is used.
If the global router ID is used and then it is removed, the system will select a new router ID.
If the router ID is specified in BGP view, using the undo router-id command can make the system
select a new router ID.
To create a BGP connection:
Ste
p
Command
Remarks
1. Enter system view.
system-view N/A