Administrator Guide
29577 BGP AS-PATH entrie(s) using 1384403 bytes of memory
184 BGP community entrie(s) using 7616 bytes of memory
Dampening enabled. 0 history paths, 0 dampened paths, 0 penalized paths
Neighbor AS MsgRcvd MsgSent TblVer InQ OutQ Up/Down State/PfxRcd
10.114.8.34 18508 82883 79977 780266 0 2 00:38:51 118904
10.114.8.33 18508 117265 25069 780266 0 20 00:38:50 102759
Dell>
To view which routes are dampened (non-active), use the show ip bgp dampened-routes command in
EXEC Privilege mode.
Changing BGP Timers
To configure BGP timers, use either or both of the following commands.
Timer values configured with the neighbor timers command override the timer values configured with the
timers bgp command.
When two neighbors, configured with different keepalive and holdtime values, negotiate for new values,
the resulting values are as follows:
• the lower of the holdtime values is the new holdtime value, and
• whichever is the lower value; one-third of the new holdtime value, or the configured keepalive value
is the new keepalive value.
• Configure timer values for a BGP neighbor or peer group.
CONFIG-ROUTER-BGP mode
neighbors {ip-address | peer-group-name} timers keepalive holdtime
• keepalive: the range is from 1 to 65535. Time interval, in seconds, between keepalive messages
sent to the neighbor routers. The default is
60 seconds.
• holdtime: the range is from 3 to 65536. Time interval, in seconds, between the last keepalive
message and declaring the router dead. The default is 180 seconds.
• Configure timer values for all neighbors.
CONFIG-ROUTER-BGP mode
timers bgp keepalive holdtime
• keepalive: the range is from 1 to 65535. Time interval, in seconds, between keepalive messages
sent to the neighbor routers. The default is
60 seconds.
• holdtime: the range is from 3 to 65536. Time interval, in seconds, between the last keepalive
message and declaring the router dead. The default is 180 seconds.
To view non-default values, use the show config command in CONFIGURATION ROUTER BGP mode or
the
show running-config bgp command in EXEC Privilege mode.
Enabling BGP Neighbor Soft-Reconfiguration
BGP soft-reconfiguration allows for faster and easier route changing.
Changing routing policies typically requires a reset of BGP sessions (the TCP connection) for the policies to
take effect. Such resets cause undue interruption to traffic due to hard reset of the BGP cache and the time it
takes to re-establish the session. BGP soft reconfig allows for policies to be applied to a session without
clearing the BGP Session. Soft-reconfig can be done on a per-neighbor basis and can either be inbound or
outbound.
Border Gateway Protocol IPv4 (BGPv4) 246