On Mon, 2 Sep 2002 bdragon@gweep.net wrote:
Has anybody mentioned the benefits of ISIS as an IGP to them.
Link-state protocols are evil, and when they break, they *really* break. I still do not see a compeling argument for not using BGP as your IGP.
Convergence time?
Alex
iBGP is only one half of an IGP. It is the "where to go" half. You still need some other igp (isis, ospf, rip, static routes, etc) for the "how to get there" half.
Most large providers carry next-hops (loopbacks, border /30 (or /31), etc) around in either isis or ospf, and carry the remainder in iBGP.
The reason?
With link-state, one interface flap can mean doing SPF on every route. If "every route" is only a couple hundred, rather than 100K, you fare
As you say disable synchronization and try and control the physical reach of your igp by some mechanism.. areas, summaries, ASes etc Steve
better when circuits are flapping. At that point, comparing the precomputed metric amongst 100k routes is (imho) rather trivial, especially when "igp metric" is a few steps down the decision tree.
In all practicality, you need to haul, at least, eBGP routes around in iBGP, you need some kind of other igp to jumpstart iBGP, and is advised that this other igp have some concept of metric or cost to be able to give BGP some hints. Whether you choose to make your non-BGP igp lean and mean (disabling synchronization, with the attendant caveats) or fat and happy (and suffer the consequences during repeated link state changes), is up to the reader, but you still really need two igps.