Figure 7 1 BGP Is Used Between Autonomous
Figure 7 -1 BGP Is Used Between Autonomous Systems From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure 7 -2 BGP Uses Path Vector Routing From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure 7 -3 BGP Supports the Internet's Hop-by-Hop Routing Paradigm From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure 7 -4 BGP Is Carried Inside TCP Segments, Which Are Inside IP Packets From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure 7 -5 A Router Running BGP Keeps a BGP Table, Separate from the IP Routing Table From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure 7 -6 Routers That Have Formed a BGP Connection Are BGP Neighbors or Peers From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure 7 -7 e. BGP Neighbors Belong to Different Autonomous Systems From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure 7 -8 i. BGP Neighbors Are in the Same Autonomous System From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure 7 -9 BGP in a Transit Autonomous System From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure 7 -10 Partial-Mesh Versus Full-Mesh i. BGP From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure 7 -11 BGP Network with i. BGP and e. BGP Neighbor Relationships From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure 7 -12 Network for Basic BGP Configuration Example From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure 7 -13 Monitoring Soft Reconfiguration From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure 7 -14 Router R 3 Prepends Its Own Autonomous System Number as It Passes Routes from Router R 1 to Router R 2 From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure 7 -15 MED Attribute: Router R 2 Is the Best Next Hop to Get to Autonomous System 65500 From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure 7 -16 Weight Attribute: Router R 1 Uses Router R 2 as the Next Hop to Reach 209. 165. 201. 0 From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure 7 -17 Weight Attribute: Router R 1 Uses Router R 2 as the Next Hop to Reach 209. 165. 201. 0 From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure 7 -18 Network for BGP Path Selection Example From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure 7 -19 Filtering BGP with Prefix Lists Examples From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure 7 -20 Filtering BGP with AS-Path Access Lists Example From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure 7 -21 Filtering BGP with Route Maps Example From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure 7 -22 BGP Peer Group Example From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure 7 -23 BGP with IPv 4 as Both the Carrier and Passenger Protocol From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure 7 -24 BGP with IPv 4 as the Carrier Protocol and IPv 6 as the Passenger Protocol From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure 7 -25 BGP with IPv 6 as Both the Carrier and Passenger Protocol From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure 7 -26 Exchanging IPv 6 Routes over an IPv 4 BGP Session Example From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure 7 -27 Exchanging IPv 6 Routes over an IPv 6 BGP Session Example From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure 7 -28 Network Objectives for BGP for IPv 6 Example From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure 7 -29 Network and Addressing for BGP for IPv 6 Example From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure 7 -30 Network for IPv 6 Prefix List Example From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure 7 -31 Network for IPv 6 Local Preference Example From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure 8 -1 Management Passwords From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure 8 -2 RADIUS Message Exchange From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure 8 -3 TACACS+ Message Exchange From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure 8 -4 SSH Topology From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure 8 -5 Logging Mechanisms From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure 8 -6 NTP Design Hierarchy From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure 8 -7 Reference NTP Topology From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure 8 -8 SNMP Elements From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure 8 -9 Periodically Archiving the Configuration From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure 8 -10 Routing Update Using Plain-Text Authentication From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure 8 -11 Routing Update Using Hashing Authentication From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure 8 -12 EIGRP Routing Authentication Reference Topology From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure 8 -13 EIGRP for IPv 6 Routing Authentication Reference Topology From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure 8 -14 OSPF Routing Authentication Reference Topology From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure 8 -15 OSPFv 3 Routing Authentication Reference Topology From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure 8 -16 BGP Authentication Reference Topology From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure 8 -17 BGP for. IPv 6 Authentication Reference Topology From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure 8 -18 VRF-Lite Reference Topology From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure 8 -19 EVN Reduces the Network Infrastructure From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure B-1 IP Addresses and Subnetting Job Aid From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure B-2 Converting an Octet of an IP Address from Binary to Decimal From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure B-3 Converting IP Addresses Between Binary and Decimal From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure B-4 Determining an IP Address Class from the First Few Bits of an Address From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure B-5 A Subnet Mask Determines How an IP Address Is Interpreted From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure B-6 Network Used in the Subnet Mask Example From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure B-7 Calculating the Subnets for the Network in Figure B-6 From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure B-8 Access Lists Can Control Packet Movement Through a Network From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure B-9 Standard IP Access Lists Filter Based Only on the Source Address From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure B-10 Processing of an Inbound Standard IP Access List Used for Filtering From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure B-11 Processing of an Outbound Standard IP Access List Used for Filtering From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure B-12 Network Used for the Standard IP Access List Example From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure B-13 Location of the Standard IP Access List Example From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure B-14 Processing Flow of an Extended IP Access List Used for Filtering From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure B-15 Network Used for the Extended IP Access List Example From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure B-16 Extended IP Access List Example with Many Servers From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure B-17 A Router Has Five Virtual Terminal Lines (Virtual Ports) by Default From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure B-18 The Telephone Network Uses an Addressing Hierarchy From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure B-19 Scalable Addressing Allows Summarization From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure B-20 Nonscalable Addressing Results in Large Routing Tables From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure B-21 Network for the VLSM Example From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure B-22 Center Block Shows Range of Addresses for VLSM for Division X in Figure B-21 From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure B-23 Detailed IP Addressing of Division X in Figure B-21 From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure B-24 Calculating Subnet Addresses for the Remote Site LANs in Figure B-23 From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure B-25 Binary Representation of the Addresses Used in Figure B-23 From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure B-26 Further Subnetting a Subnetted Address From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure B-27 Routers Can Summarize to Reduce the Number of Routes From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure B-28 Summarizing Within an Octet, for Router D in Figure B-27 From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure B-29 VLSM Addresses Can Be Summarized From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure B-30 Routers Use the Longest Match When Selecting a Route From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure B-31 CIDR Allows a Router to Summarize Multiple Class C Addresses From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure C-1 Using CIDR with BGP From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure C-2 BGP Network for Summarization Examples From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure C-3 BGP Network for Summarization Examples From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure C-4 A Router Running BGP Keeps a BGP Table, Separate from the IP Routing Table From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure C-5 Network for BGP Communities Example From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure C-6 Network for BGP Communities Example Using Weight From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure C-7 Full-Mesh i. BGP Requires Many Sessions and, Therefore, Is Not Scalable From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure C-8 When Router A Is a Route Reflector, It Can Propagate Routes Learned via i. BGP from Router B to Router C From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure C-9 Example of a Route Reflector Design From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure C-10 Bad Route Reflector Design That Does Not Follow the Physical Topology From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure C-11 Good Route Reflector Design That Does Follow the Physical Topology From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure C-12 Router A Is a Route Reflector From Implementing Cisco IP Routing (ROUTE) Foundation Learning Guide by Diane Teare, Bob Vachon and Rick Graziani (1587204568) Copyright © 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
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