This is how you can do it with Quagga: http://wiki.nil.com/Use_Quagga_to_generate_BGP_routes You could write a Perl (or whatever your favorite scripting language is) script to get Quagga/IOS configuration from live BGP data, but it would be non-trivial and the resulting configuration would be enormous. I know there was a similar discussion months ago on the NANOG mailing list; browse the archives. Ivan Pepelnjak blog.ioshints.info / www.ioshints.info
-----Original Message----- From: Ben Jencks [mailto:ben@bjencks.net] Sent: Tuesday, January 12, 2010 9:28 PM To: nanog@nanog.org Subject: BGP testbed tools
This is obviously a rookie question, but I haven't found anything by searching. I'm looking to set up a small testbed to simulate our internal network topology, and I want to have a realistic BGP table from the fake "upstream" routers. Ideally what I'd like to do is dump the BGP table from our production routers, strip the immediate neighbor AS, and load the table into Quagga or OpenBGPD to advertise. I'm running into two problems: how do you dump BGP tables in a machine-parseable format from IOS, and how do you make the route server advertise the routes as they were in the original table, including the full AS-path, communities, etc? If Quagga/OpenBGPD aren't the right tools, I'm happy to use something else.
This seems like it would be a pretty standard thing to do, but none of the tools I've found seem aimed at this sort of testbed.
Thanks!
-Ben Jencks