Configuring bgp neighbors and peer groups – Dell POWEREDGE M1000E User Manual

Page 952

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38-60

Cisco Catalyst Blade Switch 3130 and 3032 for Dell Software Configuration Guide

OL-13270-03

Chapter 38 Configuring IP Unicast Routing

Configuring BGP

Configuring BGP Neighbors and Peer Groups

Often many BGP neighbors are configured with the same update policies (that is, the same outbound
route maps, distribute lists, filter lists, update source, and so on). You can group neighbors with the same
update policies into peer groups to simplify configuration and to make updating more efficient. When
you have configured many peers, we recommend this approach.

To configure a BGP peer group, you create the peer group, assign options to the peer group, and add
neighbors as peer group members. You configure the peer group by using the neighbor router
configuration commands. By default, peer group members inherit all the configuration options of the
peer group, including the remote-as (if configured), version, update-source, out-route-map,
out-filter-list, out-dist-list, minimum-advertisement-interval, and next-hop-self. All peer group members
also inherit changes made to the peer group. You can also configure members to override the options that
do not affect outbound updates.

To assign configuration options to an individual neighbor, specify any of these router configuration
commands by using the neighbor IP address. To assign the options to a peer group, specify any of the
commands by using the peer-group name. You can disable a BGP peer or peer group without removing
all the configuration information by using the neighbor shutdown router configuration command.

Beginning in privileged EXEC mode, use these commands to configure BGP peers:

Step 9

show ip bgp community

Verify the configuration.

Step 10

copy running-config startup-config

(Optional) Save your entries in the configuration file.

Command

Purpose

Command

Purpose

Step 1

configure terminal

Enter global configuration mode.

Step 2

router bgp autonomous-system

Enter BGP router configuration mode.

Step 3

neighbor peer-group-name peer-group

Create a BGP peer group.

Step 4

neighbor ip-address peer-group
peer-group-name

Make a BGP neighbor a member of the peer group.

Step 5

neighbor {ip-address | peer-group-name}
remote-as number

Specify a BGP neighbor. If a peer group does not have a
remote-as number, use this command to create peer groups
containing EBGP neighbors. The range is 1 to 65535.

Step 6

neighbor {ip-address | peer-group-name}
description text

(Optional) Associate a description with a neighbor.

Step 7

neighbor {ip-address | peer-group-name}
default-originate [route-map map-name]

(Optional) Allow a BGP speaker (the local router) to send the
default route 0.0.0.0 to a neighbor for use as a default route.

Step 8

neighbor {ip-address | peer-group-name}
send-community

(Optional) Specify that the COMMUNITIES attribute is sent to
the neighbor at this IP address.

Step 9

neighbor {ip-address | peer-group-name}
update-source interface

(Optional) Allow internal BGP sessions to use any operational
interface for TCP connections.

Step 10

neighbor {ip-address | peer-group-name}
ebgp-multihop

(Optional) Allow BGP sessions, even when the neighbor is not
on a directly connected segment. The multihop session is not
established if the only route to the multihop-peer address is the
default route (0.0.0.0).

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