Users Guide
If you identify a peer group by name, the peers in that peer group inherit the characteristics in the Route
map used in this command. If you identify a peer by IP address, the Route map overwrites either the
inbound or outbound policies on that peer.
neighbor route-reector-client
Congure a neighbor as a member of a route reector cluster.
Syntax
neighbor {ipv6-address | peer-group-name} route-reflector-client
To indicate that the neighbor is not a route reector client or to delete a route reector conguration, use
the no neighbor {ipv6-address | peer-group-name} route-reflector-client
command.
Parameters
ipv6-address Enter the IPv6 address in the x:x:x:x::x format.
NOTE: The :: notation species successive hexadecimal elds of zeros.
peer-group-name Enter the name of the peer group. All routers in the peer group receive routes from
a route reector.
Defaults Not congured.
Command Modes ROUTER BGPV6-ADDRESS FAMILY
Command History
This guide is platform-specic. For command information about other platforms, refer to the relevant Dell
Networking OS Command Line Reference Guide.
The following is a list of the Dell Networking OS version history for this command.
Version 8.3.19.0 Introduced on the S4820T.
Version 8.4.2.1 Introduced on the C-Series and S4810.
Version 7.4.1.0 Introduced on the E-Series TeraScale.
Usage Information
The rst time you enter this command it congures the neighbor as a route reector and members of the
route-reector cluster. Internal BGP (IBGP) speakers do not need to be fully meshed if you congure a route
reector.
When all clients of a route reector are disabled, the neighbor is no longer a route reector.
998
IPv6 Border Gateway Protocol (IPv6 BGP)










