From: Tim Fletcher (tim@fletchmail.net)
Date: Thu Apr 17 2003 - 22:01:53 GMT-3
BGP peers each try to connect to one another. Once an adjacency is established, one of the connections is dropped. So if only 1 of the connections succeeds, you will still form an adjacency.
-Tim Fletcher #11406
At 01:06 AM 4/16/03 -0700, Jason Wydra wrote:
>The object with the list below is to block input telnet, http and bgp on the input of all interfaces that it's assigned to. My question is why doesn't BGP need to be blocked in both directions? I've seen this with other protocols too. Some have blocks in both directions and some don't. Probably an easy answer to this. Thanks,Jason Wydra access-list 115 permit tcp any any eq telnet
>access-list 115 permit tcp any eq telnet any
>access-list 115 permit tcp any any eq www
>access-list 115 permit tcp any eq www any
>access-list 115 permit tcp any any eq bgp
>
>
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