Service Manual

Table Of Contents
Configuring a password for a neighbor causes an existing session to be torn down and
a new one established.
If you specify a BGP peer group by using the peer-group-name parameter, all the
members of the peer group inherit the characteristic configured with this command.
If you configure a password on one neighbor, but you have not configured a password
for the neighboring router, the following message appears on the console while the
routers attempt to establish a BGP session between them:
%RPM0-P:RP1 %KERN-6-INT: No BGP MD5 from [peer's IP address]
:179 to [local router's IP address]:65524
Also, if you configure different passwords on the two routers, the following message
appears on the console:
%RPM0-P:RP1 %KERN-6-INT: BGP MD5 password mismatch from
[peer's IP address] : 11502 to [local router's IP address] :179
neighbor peer-group (assigning peers)
Allows you to assign one peer to an existing peer group.
Syntax
neighbor {ip-address | peer-group peer-group-name} dmzlink-bw
To delete a peer from a peer group, use the no neighbor {ip-address | peer-
group peer-group-name} command.
To disable dmzlink-dw for the peer group, use the no neighbor ip-address
dmzlink-dw command.
Parameters
ip-address Enter the IP address of the router to be included in the peer
group.
peer-group-name Enter the name of a configured peer group.
dmzlink-bw Enter the keyword dmzlink-bw to attach a link bandwidth to
received routes.
NOTE: If dmzlink-bw is configured for a peer, in order
for the BGP peer to advertise the prefixes with dmzlink-
bw attached to it, you must reset the the peer or peer-
group using the clear ip bgp session command.
Defaults Not configured.
Command Modes ROUTER BGP
Command History
This guide is platform-specific. For command information about other platforms, see
the relevant Dell Networking OS Command Line Reference Guide.
Border Gateway Protocol 494