Dell POWEREDGE M1000E User Manual

Page 951

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38-59

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

OL-13270-03

Chapter 38 Configuring IP Unicast Routing

Configuring BGP

A community is a group of destinations that share some common attribute. Each destination can belong
to multiple communities. Autonomous-system administrators can define to which communities a
destination belongs. By default, all destinations belong to the general Internet community. The
community is identified by the COMMUNITIES attribute, an optional, transitive, global attribute in the
numerical range from 1 to 4294967200. These are some predefined, well-known communities:

internet—Advertise this route to the Internet community. All routers belong to it.

no-export—Do not advertise this route to EBGP peers.

no-advertise—Do not advertise this route to any peer (internal or external).

local-as—Do not advertise this route to peers outside the local autonomous system.

Based on the community, you can control the routing information to accept, prefer, or distribute to other
neighbors. A BGP speaker can set, append, or modify the community of a route when learning,
advertising, or redistributing routes. When routes are aggregated, the resulting aggregate has a
COMMUNITIES attribute that contains all communities from all the initial routes.

You can use community lists to create groups of communities to use in a match clause of a route map.
As with an access list, a series of community lists can be created. Statements are evaluated until a match
is found. As soon as one statement is met, the test stops.

To set the COMMUNITIES attribute and match clauses based on communities, see the match
community-list
and set community route-map configuration commands in the

“Using Route Maps to

Redistribute Routing Information” section on page 38-95

.

By default, no COMMUNITIES attribute is sent to a neighbor. You can specify that the COMMUNITIES
attribute be sent to the neighbor at an IP address by using the neighbor send-community router
configuration command.

Beginning in privileged EXEC mode, follow these steps to create and to apply a community list:

Command

Purpose

Step 1

configure terminal

Enter global configuration mode.

Step 2

ip community-list community-list-number
{permit | deny} community-number

Create a community list, and assign it a number.

The community-list-number is an integer from 1 to 99 that
identifies one or more permit or deny groups of communities.

The community-number is the number configured by a set
community
route-map configuration command.

Step 3

router bgp autonomous-system

Enter BGP router configuration mode.

Step 4

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

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

Step 5

set comm-list list-num delete

(Optional) Remove communities from the community attribute of an
inbound or outbound update that match a standard or extended
community list specified by a route map.

Step 6

exit

Return to global configuration mode.

Step 7

ip bgp-community new-format

(Optional) Display and parse BGP communities in the format AA:NN.

A BGP community appears in a two-part format 2 bytes long. The
Cisco-default community format is NNAA. In the most recent RFC for
BGP, a community takes the form AA:NN, where the first part is the
autonomous-system number and the second part is a 2-byte number.

Step 8

end

Return to privileged EXEC mode.

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