RE: BGP question

From: Jason Sinclair (sinclairj@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx)
Date: Fri Apr 12 2002 - 02:39:23 GMT-3


   
Sanjay,

The options you have are redistribution or policy routing.

Cheers,

Jason Sinclair CCIE #9100
Manager, Network Support Group
POWERTEL
Ground Level, 55 Clarence Street,
SYDNEY NSW 2000
AUSTRALIA
office: + 61 2 8264 3820
mobile: + 61 416 105 858
* sinclairj@powertel.com.au

                -----Original Message-----
                From: sanjay [mailto:ccienxtyear@hotmail.com]
                Sent: Friday, 12 April 2002 14:01
                To: ccielab@groupstudy.com
                Subject: BGP question

                Folks,

                I have 3 routers across frame. R1 is the HUB with
subinterfaces. R2 and R3 are
                spokes. Theres OSPF running between all these routers and
every interface from
                every router can ping each other.
                On R2, I have an EBGP session to an ISP router. R2 also has
an IBGP session to
                R3. The ISP is sending some routes and I can see those
routes on R2 and R3. I
                have fixed the next hop self, so to get to the ISP, R3 will
use R2 as next
                hop.

                The problem is when I ping, the ping gets to the
subinterface of the HUB
                router and dies. Doing a trace also shows this. Since the
HUB is not running
                BGP, so is not aware of the BGP route. When I put a default
route on the HUB
                router pointing to R2, I can then successfully ping the ISP
network. Is there
                anyways to ping the ISP nets, without the use of a default
route ? since using
                static or default routes are a TABOO.

                thanks,
                Jay
        



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