I see what you are saying, and I understand that the default route would be originated per neighbor, or per peer group for all neighbors within that peer group. My biggest concern is that if the aggregation router with this configuration was to lose connectivity back to the routers which provide it with external routing information, it would still announce the default to that neighbor. Do you feel that this is an acceptable risk, taking into consideration that the aggregation router has redundant connectivity to those routers that provide it with it's external routing information and it is highly unlikely that the router would lose it's view of the world? -----Original Message----- From: Mike Leber [mailto:mleber@he.net] Sent: Saturday, September 14, 2002 4:19 PM To: Lupi, Guy Cc: 'nanog@merit.edu' Subject: Re: BGP Default Route On Sat, 14 Sep 2002, Lupi, Guy wrote:
I was wondering how people tend to generate default routes to customers running bgp.
Typically you would only originate default via BGP to a customer that isn't taking a full view. neighbor 10.10.10.2 default-originate neighbor 10.10.10.2 filter-list 9 out ip as-path access-list 9 deny ^.*$
Is it from the aggregation router that customers are directly connected to, or from one or more core/border routers?
In the example above the default originate is done via a specific BGP session, so it isn't router wide on either core or border routers.
If one is using a default route to null 0...
I'll leave the rest of this for somebody else to answer. Mike. +----------------- H U R R I C A N E - E L E C T R I C -----------------+ | Mike Leber Direct Internet Connections Voice 510 580 4100 | | Hurricane Electric Web Hosting Colocation Fax 510 580 4151 | | mleber@he.net http://www.he.net | +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+