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.