Setup Guide

Table Of Contents
Only after the peer group responds to an OPEN message sent on the subnet does its BGP state change to ESTABLISHED. After
the peer group is ESTABLISHED, the peer group is the same as any other peer group.
For more information about peer groups, refer to Configure Peer Groups.
Enabling Graceful Restart
Use this feature to lessen the negative effects of a BGP restart.
Dell EMC Networking OS advertises support for this feature to BGP neighbors through a capability advertisement. You can
enable graceful restart by router and/or by peer or peer group.
NOTE: By default, BGP graceful restart is disabled.
The default role for BGP is as a receiving or restarting peer. If you enable BGP, when a peer that supports graceful restart
resumes operating, Dell EMC Networking OS performs the following tasks:
Continues saving routes received from the peer if the peer advertised it had graceful restart capability. Continues forwarding
traffic to the peer.
Flags routes from the peer as Stale and sets a timer to delete them if the peer does not perform a graceful restart.
Deletes all routes from the peer if forwarding state information is not saved.
Speeds convergence by advertising a special update packet known as an end-of-RIB marker. This marker indicates the peer
has been updated with all routes in the local RIB.
If you configure your system to do so, Dell EMC Networking OS can perform the following actions during a hot failover:
Save all forwarding information base (FIB) and content addressable memory (CAM) entries on the line card and continue
forwarding traffic while the secondary route processor module (RPM) is coming online.
Advertise to all BGP neighbors and peer-groups that the forwarding state of all routes has been saved. This prompts all
peers to continue saving the routes they receive and to continue forwarding traffic.
Bring the secondary RPM online as the primary and re-open sessions with all peers operating in No Shutdown mode.
Defer best path selection for a certain amount of time. This helps optimize path selection and results in fewer updates being
sent out.
To enable graceful restart, use the configure router bgp graceful-restart command.
Enable graceful restart for the BGP node.
CONFIG-ROUTER-BGP mode
bgp graceful-restart
Set maximum restart time for all peers.
CONFIG-ROUTER-BGP mode
bgp graceful-restart [restart-time time-in-seconds]
The default is 120 seconds.
Set maximum time to retain the restarting peers stale paths.
CONFIG-ROUTER-BGP mode
bgp graceful-restart [stale-path-time time-in-seconds]
The default is 360 seconds.
Local router supports graceful restart as a receiver only.
CONFIG-ROUTER-BGP mode
bgp graceful-restart [role receiver-only]
Redistributing Routes
In addition to filtering routes, you can add routes from other routing instances or protocols to the BGP process. With the
redistribute command, you can include ISIS, OSPF, static, or directly connected routes in the BGP process.
To add routes from other routing instances or protocols, use any of the following commands in ROUTER BGP mode.
Include, directly connected or user-configured (static) routes in BGP.
ROUTER BGP or CONF-ROUTER_BGPv6_ AF mode
redistribute {connected | static} [route-map map-name]
Configure the map-name parameter to specify the name of a configured route map.
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Border Gateway Protocol (BGP)