From: Scott Morris (SMorris@xxxxxxxxxxxxx)
Date: Mon Nov 29 1999 - 10:09:41 GMT-3
You always need to have network statements within a routing protocol...
That shouldn't be odd.
Scott
-----Original Message-----
From: Stanislav Sinyagin [mailto:SSinyagin@mtu.ru]
Sent: Monday, November 29, 1999 3:36 AM
To: Scott Morris; 'Manjeet Chawla'
Cc: ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: Re: BGP Filter list
Guys, I'll tell you what I encountered on the lab (IOS 11.2) and repeated it
in my tesrtbed (IOS 12.0, the simptoms are the same).
R1 --- R2 --- R3
AS10 AS10 AS20
R1 and R2 run IBGP, R2 and R3 run EBGP. All routers belong to
Confederation 100. All routers know each other via OSPF.
R1 has loopback 192.192.2.2/32 and annpounces it via BGP.
R2 sees it OK, but R3 does not. All the routers were configured first
for OSPF, then for BGP. No filters. On R2, sh ... advertised-routes
shows that it doesn't advertise anything to R3.
The problem was solved by putting on R2 the line
network 192.192.2.2 mask 255.255.255.255
though by all rules this line is odd.
At home, I configured it, and the reaction was the same.
After I reloaded R2, all went good.
Stan
----- Original Message -----
From: Scott Morris <SMorris@tele-tech.com>
To: 'Manjeet Chawla' <mchawla@asanet.com>; Scott Morris
<SMorris@tele-tech.com>
Cc: <ccielab@groupstudy.com>
Sent: Monday, November 29, 1999 03:18
Subject: RE: BGP Filter list
> Hmm... Go figure. Well, on the other hand, sometimes reloading is the
> only solution. It solves some amazing problems "just because" (grin).
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