From: David Timmons (masterdt@yahoo.com)
Date: Fri Jul 14 2006 - 11:22:34 ART
Hi,
I think the message comes back is a hex representation
of the ISP's AS. Also, I wanted to test the use of the
BGP transaction debugs. I saw a sample output that
looked like it included the AS.
dt
--- Anderson Mota Alves <mota_anderson@hotmail.com>
wrote:
> Hi everyone, I'm having the following problem in my
> lab where I have R1
> connected to R4 via ethernet and my configurations
> in bgp seems to be
> fine except for the neighbor x.x.x.x remote-as that
> has been configured
> with a dummy AS number with the only purpose of
> checking the use of the
> commandneighbor x.x.x.x local-as XX no-prepend
> (where I can pretend to be
> another AS on R1 if for any reason the R4 has this
> configured with a
> wrong AS and I can't change that on R4) with the
> no-prepend to not
> prepend the AS number in the routes which is turned
> on by default. The
> question I've been asking myself is what happens if
> the R4 was a service
> provider's router and the service provider had
> configured your neighbor
> with your AS number with a wrong number, is there
> any way that I can get
> through debugs or commands on R1 to know what was
> the wrong AS put on R4
> by the service provider so I can configure the
> local-as feature of BGP on
> R1?? Any comments are really appreciated, Thanks,
> Andy
>
>
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.4 : Tue Aug 01 2006 - 07:13:47 ART