From: Robert Massiache (robert2140@hotmail.com)
Date: Tue Nov 19 2002 - 02:16:59 GMT-3
Hi,
You need to be careful at the labs since they wordings are like all the
routers inside an AS is bgp enabled. This prompts you to sync-off. In
reality you might got somemore non-bgp Routers that makes the NLRI
reachability. They want you to ignore this reality. Just thing you got an AS
with all 3 BGP Routers.
In this situation, you will have to do a redistribution with IGP if you want
to have the bgp peers pinging using the bgp routes. Previously it was
through an IGP route such as OSPF.
Some might think it as illogical as 'no sync' --> no redistribution but in
reality you have to consider this.
There could be many solutions to this...is there anyone to join this topic.
thanks
>From: "Brown, Patrick (NSOC-OCF}" <PBrown4@chartercom.com>
>Reply-To: "Brown, Patrick (NSOC-OCF}" <PBrown4@chartercom.com>
>To: ccielab@groupstudy.com
>Subject: BGP distance /sync
>Date: Mon, 18 Nov 2002 21:58:52 -0600
>
>If synchronization is disabled, do you ever want to prefer your EBGP over
>your IBGP?
>So would is be safe on the lab exam to do a " distance 200 200 200 "
>command
>on all your bgp configs if sync is to be off. Or does this sound like a bad
>assumption?
>no transit no sync. sync with 80,000 routes... yeah right!
>
>
>Thanks,
>
>
>Patrick Brown
>Integration Engineer
>Charter Communications
>
>
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