System information

BSR 64000 Configuration and Management Guide
12-10
Restoring Route Reflection from a Route Reflection Client
Configuring Route-flap Dampening
Shutting Down a Neighbor or Peer Group
Enabling MD5 Authentication Between Peers
Setting the Minimum Interval for Sending BGP Routing Updates to Neighbors or
Peer Groups
Enabling EBGP Multihop for Neighbor and Peer Groups
Controlling the Number of Prefixes Received from a Neighbor
Configuring Next Hop Processing
Configuring BGP Peer Groups
Routing policies are usually defined by route maps, filter lists, and distribution lists.
You can define a BGP peer group that assigns the same set of routing policies to a
group of BGP peers (or neighbors). You can also use peer groups to override
configuration options for incoming updates.
Figure 12-4 shows two peer groups. The first peer group contains the routers in AS
100. The second peer group contains Routers Philadelphia, Trenton, and Boston.