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What does “Allow AS in” do in BGP?
The Next CEO of Stack OverflowInbound BGP load-balancing from same ISP routerVPLS Multihoming on Junos - FEC confusionWhat happens when a BGP link is lost and then came back up?BGP - how does IGP know the right route?Network redundancy design question with BGPBGP community blackholeBGP Dual link with single ISP two different routerAutomating BGP neighborship formationBYO thoughts on BGP routingIn one organization having two ISP which configured on fortigate firewall ? How can we do the failover for internet?
When configure BGP in a SDN product, i saw there is an option to enable "Allow as in", could anyone know what is it!
bgp
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When configure BGP in a SDN product, i saw there is an option to enable "Allow as in", could anyone know what is it!
bgp
add a comment |
When configure BGP in a SDN product, i saw there is an option to enable "Allow as in", could anyone know what is it!
bgp
When configure BGP in a SDN product, i saw there is an option to enable "Allow as in", could anyone know what is it!
bgp
bgp
edited Mar 28 at 9:00
Mike Pennington
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26.6k1166137
asked Mar 28 at 8:32
skysky
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746
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This is to accept the routes which contains your own AS number. By default such routes are filtered.
If you have a single site and different providers you do not want such routes, because, among other reasons, it could cause a routing loop, or cause your traffic to go through the Internet rather than through your internal network.
But if you announce different networks on different sites then in order to receive routes for your other sites, you need to accept those routes, and so to configure allow AS in
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1 Answer
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This is to accept the routes which contains your own AS number. By default such routes are filtered.
If you have a single site and different providers you do not want such routes, because, among other reasons, it could cause a routing loop, or cause your traffic to go through the Internet rather than through your internal network.
But if you announce different networks on different sites then in order to receive routes for your other sites, you need to accept those routes, and so to configure allow AS in
add a comment |
This is to accept the routes which contains your own AS number. By default such routes are filtered.
If you have a single site and different providers you do not want such routes, because, among other reasons, it could cause a routing loop, or cause your traffic to go through the Internet rather than through your internal network.
But if you announce different networks on different sites then in order to receive routes for your other sites, you need to accept those routes, and so to configure allow AS in
add a comment |
This is to accept the routes which contains your own AS number. By default such routes are filtered.
If you have a single site and different providers you do not want such routes, because, among other reasons, it could cause a routing loop, or cause your traffic to go through the Internet rather than through your internal network.
But if you announce different networks on different sites then in order to receive routes for your other sites, you need to accept those routes, and so to configure allow AS in
This is to accept the routes which contains your own AS number. By default such routes are filtered.
If you have a single site and different providers you do not want such routes, because, among other reasons, it could cause a routing loop, or cause your traffic to go through the Internet rather than through your internal network.
But if you announce different networks on different sites then in order to receive routes for your other sites, you need to accept those routes, and so to configure allow AS in
edited Mar 28 at 14:01
answered Mar 28 at 8:42
JFLJFL
11.9k11339
11.9k11339
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