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BGP confusion
AS 65000 -> ISP -> AS65000
In the above diagram, the customers are using AS 65000 on both sides. The ISP is using the as_override command. In this case, is the customer running IBGP or EBGP? I am confused.
In the above diagram, the customers are using AS 65000 on both sides. The ISP is using the as_override command. In this case, is the customer running IBGP or EBGP? I am confused.
Comments
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OptionsNode Man Member Posts: 668 ■■■□□□□□□□I'll take a stab at this. BGP neighbors do not need to be adjacent. IBGP and EBGP just depends on same AS or not. The entire internet can be between two IBGP routers.
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OptionsNode Man Member Posts: 668 ■■■□□□□□□□The customer could be a layer 2 tunnel across the ISP.
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Optionsd4nz1g Member Posts: 464since there is no mention related to the peering scheme, we could assume that the customer peers with the ISP (eBGP or iBGP - since there is no AS for the ISP as well), or the customer is using the ISP as a transit to reach the other site (l2vpn and a /30 point to point link, or a multihop peering - iBGP)
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Optionsdaveyb Member Posts: 28 ■□□□□□□□□□eBGP. As override is used to advertise routes back to a peer with the same origin AS number. Without this, the device on the left would not learn the routes from the device on the right. Usually this is not required as a default route would usually suffice.
As override doesn't apply to an iBGP neighbour as far as I can remember. The rules for redistribution are different.