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This is quagga.info, produced by makeinfo version 4.8 from quagga.texi.
Copyright (C) 1999-2005 Kunihiro Ishiguro, et al.
Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of
this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission
notice are preserved on all copies.
Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of
this manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided
that the entire resulting derived work is distributed under the
terms of a permission notice identical to this one.
Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this
manual into another language, under the above conditions for
modified versions, except that this permission notice may be
stated in a translation approved by Kunihiro Ishiguro.
INFO-DIR-SECTION Routing Software:
START-INFO-DIR-ENTRY
* Quagga: (quagga). The Quagga Software Routing Suite
END-INFO-DIR-ENTRY
This file documents the Quagga Software Routing Suite which manages
common TCP/IP routing protocols.
This is Edition 0.99.4, last updated 10 September 2005 of `The
Quagga Manual', for Quagga Version 0.99.4.
Copyright (C) 1999-2005 Kunihiro Ishiguro, et al.
Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of
this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission
notice are preserved on all copies.
Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of
this manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided
that the entire resulting derived work is distributed under the
terms of a permission notice identical to this one.
Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this
manual into another language, under the above conditions for
modified versions, except that this permission notice may be
stated in a translation approved by Kunihiro Ishiguro.

File: quagga.info, Node: Top, Next: Overview, Up: (dir)
Quagga
******
Quagga is an advanced routing software package that provides a suite of
TCP/IP based routing protocols. This is the Manual for Quagga 0.99.4.
Quagga is a fork of GNU Zebra.
Copyright (C) 1999-2005 Kunihiro Ishiguro, et al.
Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of
this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission
notice are preserved on all copies.
Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of
this manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided
that the entire resulting derived work is distributed under the
terms of a permission notice identical to this one.
Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this
manual into another language, under the above conditions for
modified versions, except that this permission notice may be
stated in a translation approved by Kunihiro Ishiguro.
* Menu:
* Overview::
* Installation::
* Basic commands::
* Zebra::
* RIP::
* RIPng::
* OSPFv2::
* OSPFv3::
* BGP::
* Configuring Quagga as a Route Server::
* VTY shell::
* Filtering::
* Route Map::
* IPv6 Support::
* Kernel Interface::
* SNMP Support::
* Zebra Protocol::
* Packet Binary Dump Format::
* Command Index::
* VTY Key Index::

File: quagga.info, Node: Overview, Next: Installation, Prev: Top, Up: Top
1 Overview
**********
Quagga is a routing software package that provides TCP/IP based routing
services with routing protocols support such as RIPv1, RIPv2, RIPng,
OSPFv2, OSPFv3, BGP-4, and BGP-4+ (*note Supported RFC::). Quagga also
supports special BGP Route Reflector and Route Server behavior. In
addition to traditional IPv4 routing protocols, Quagga also supports
IPv6 routing protocols. With SNMP daemon which supports SMUX protocol,
Quagga provides routing protocol MIBs (*note SNMP Support::).
Quagga uses an advanced software architecture to provide you with a
high quality, multi server routing engine. Quagga has an interactive
user interface for each routing protocol and supports common client
commands. Due to this design, you can add new protocol daemons to
Quagga easily. You can use Quagga library as your program's client
user interface.
Quagga is distributed under the GNU General Public License.
* Menu:
* About Quagga:: Basic information about Quagga
* System Architecture:: The Quagga system architecture
* Supported Platforms:: Supported platforms and future plans
* Supported RFC:: Supported RFCs
* How to get Quagga::
* Mailing List:: Mailing list information
* Bug Reports:: Mail address for bug data

File: quagga.info, Node: About Quagga, Next: System Architecture, Up: Overview
1.1 About Quagga
================
Today, TCP/IP networks are covering all of the world. The Internet has
been deployed in many countries, companies, and to the home. When you
connect to the Internet your packet will pass many routers which have
TCP/IP routing functionality.
A system with Quagga installed acts as a dedicated router. With
Quagga, your machine exchanges routing information with other routers
using routing protocols. Quagga uses this information to update the
kernel routing table so that the right data goes to the right place.
You can dynamically change the configuration and you may view routing
table information from the Quagga terminal interface.
Adding to routing protocol support, Quagga can setup interface's
flags, interface's address, static routes and so on. If you have a
small network, or a stub network, or xDSL connection, configuring the
Quagga routing software is very easy. The only thing you have to do is
to set up the interfaces and put a few commands about static routes
and/or default routes. If the network is rather large, or if the
network structure changes frequently, you will want to take advantage
of Quagga's dynamic routing protocol support for protocols such as RIP,
OSPF or BGP.
Traditionally, UNIX based router configuration is done by `ifconfig'
and `route' commands. Status of routing table is displayed by
`netstat' utility. Almost of these commands work only if the user has
root privileges. Quagga has a different system administration method.
There are two user modes in Quagga. One is normal mode, the other is
enable mode. Normal mode user can only view system status, enable mode
user can change system configuration. This UNIX account independent
feature will be great help to the router administrator.
Currently, Quagga supports common unicast routing protocols.
Multicast routing protocols such as BGMP, PIM-SM, PIM-DM may be
supported in Quagga 2.0. MPLS support is going on. In the future,
TCP/IP filtering control, QoS control, diffserv configuration will be
added to Quagga. Quagga project's final goal is making a productive,
quality, free TCP/IP routing software.

File: quagga.info, Node: System Architecture, Next: Supported Platforms, Prev: About Quagga, Up: Overview
1.2 System Architecture
=======================
Traditional routing software is made as a one process program which
provides all of the routing protocol functionalities. Quagga takes a
different approach. It is made from a collection of several daemons
that work together to build the routing table. There may be several
protocol-specific routing daemons and zebra the kernel routing manager.
The `ripd' daemon handles the RIP protocol, while `ospfd' is a
daemon which supports OSPF version 2. `bgpd' supports the BGP-4
protocol. For changing the kernel routing table and for redistribution
of routes between different routing protocols, there is a kernel
routing table manager `zebra' daemon. It is easy to add a new routing
protocol daemons to the entire routing system without affecting any
other software. You need to run only the protocol daemon associated
with routing protocols in use. Thus, user may run a specific daemon
and send routing reports to a central routing console.
There is no need for these daemons to be running on the same
machine. You can even run several same protocol daemons on the same
machine. This architecture creates new possibilities for the routing
system.
+----+ +----+ +-----+ +-----+
|bgpd| |ripd| |ospfd| |zebra|
+----+ +----+ +-----+ +-----+
|
+---------------------------|--+
| v |
| UNIX Kernel routing table |
| |
+------------------------------+
Quagga System Architecture
Multi-process architecture brings extensibility, modularity and
maintainability. At the same time it also brings many configuration
files and terminal interfaces. Each daemon has it's own configuration
file and terminal interface. When you configure a static route, it
must be done in `zebra' configuration file. When you configure BGP
network it must be done in `bgpd' configuration file. This can be a
very annoying thing. To resolve the problem, Quagga provides
integrated user interface shell called `vtysh'. `vtysh' connects to
each daemon with UNIX domain socket and then works as a proxy for user
input.
Quagga was planned to use multi-threaded mechanism when it runs with
a kernel that supports multi-threads. But at the moment, the thread
library which comes with GNU/Linux or FreeBSD has some problems with
running reliable services such as routing software, so we don't use
threads at all. Instead we use the `select(2)' system call for
multiplexing the events.

File: quagga.info, Node: Supported Platforms, Next: Supported RFC, Prev: System Architecture, Up: Overview
1.3 Supported Platforms
=======================
Currently Quagga supports GNU/Linux, BSD and Solaris. Porting Quagga to
other platforms is not too difficult as platform dependent code should
most be limited to the `zebra' daemon. Protocol daemons are mostly
platform independent. Please let us know when you find out Quagga runs
on a platform which is not listed below.
The list of officially supported platforms are listed below. Note
that Quagga may run correctly on other platforms, and may run with
partial functionality on further platforms.
* GNU/Linux 2.2.x and higher
* FreeBSD 4.x and higher
* NetBSD 1.6 and higher
* OpenBSD 2.5 and higher
* Solaris 2.6 and higher (IPv6 support requires a patch at moment)
Some IPv6 stacks are in development. Quagga supports following IPv6
stacks. For BSD, we recommend KAME IPv6 stack. Solaris IPv6 stack is
not yet supported.
* Linux IPv6 stack for GNU/Linux 2.2.x and higher.
* KAME IPv6 stack for BSD.
* INRIA IPv6 stack for BSD.

File: quagga.info, Node: Supported RFC, Next: How to get Quagga, Prev: Supported Platforms, Up: Overview
1.4 Supported RFC
=================
Below is the list of currently supported RFC's.
RFC1058
`Routing Information Protocol. C.L. Hedrick. Jun-01-1988.'
RF2082
`RIP-2 MD5 Authentication. F. Baker, R. Atkinson. January 1997.'
RFC2453
`RIP Version 2. G. Malkin. November 1998.'
RFC2080
`RIPng for IPv6. G. Malkin, R. Minnear. January 1997.'
RFC2328
`OSPF Version 2. J. Moy. April 1998.'
RFC2370
`The OSPF Opaque LSA Option R. Coltun. July 1998.'
RFC3101
`The OSPF Not-So-Stubby Area (NSSA) Option P. Murphy. January
2003.'
RFC2740
`OSPF for IPv6. R. Coltun, D. Ferguson, J. Moy. December 1999.'
RFC1771
`A Border Gateway Protocol 4 (BGP-4). Y. Rekhter & T. Li. March
1995.'
RFC1965
`Autonomous System Confederations for BGP. P. Traina. June 1996.'
RFC1997
`BGP Communities Attribute. R. Chandra, P. Traina & T. Li. August
1996.'
RFC2545
`Use of BGP-4 Multiprotocol Extensions for IPv6 Inter-Domain
Routing. P. Marques, F. Dupont. March 1999.'
RFC2796
`BGP Route Reflection An alternative to full mesh IBGP. T. Bates &
R. Chandrasekeran. June 1996.'
RFC2858
`Multiprotocol Extensions for BGP-4. T. Bates, Y. Rekhter, R.
Chandra, D. Katz. June 2000.'
RFC2842
`Capabilities Advertisement with BGP-4. R. Chandra, J. Scudder.
May 2000.'
RFC3137
`OSPF Stub Router Advertisement, A. Retana, L. Nguyen, R. White,
A. Zinin, D. McPherson. June 2001'
When SNMP support is enabled, below RFC is also supported.
RFC1227
`SNMP MUX protocol and MIB. M.T. Rose. May-01-1991.'
RFC1657
`Definitions of Managed Objects for the Fourth Version of the
Border Gateway Protocol (BGP-4) using SMIv2. S. Willis, J. Burruss,
J. Chu, Editor. July 1994.'
RFC1724
`RIP Version 2 MIB Extension. G. Malkin & F. Baker. November 1994.'
RFC1850
`OSPF Version 2 Management Information Base. F. Baker, R. Coltun.
November 1995.'

File: quagga.info, Node: How to get Quagga, Next: Mailing List, Prev: Supported RFC, Up: Overview
1.5 How to get Quagga
=====================
Quagga is still beta software and there is no officially released
version.
Zebra's official web page is located at:
`http://www.gnu.org/software/zebra/zebra.html'.
The original Zebra web site is located at:
`http://www.zebra.org/'.
As of this writing, development by zebra.org on Zebra has slowed
down. Some work is being done by third-parties to try maintain
bug-fixes and enhancements to the current Zebra code-base, which has
resulted in a fork of Zebra called Quagga, see:
`http://www.quagga.net/'
for further information, as well as links to additional zebra
resources.

File: quagga.info, Node: Mailing List, Next: Bug Reports, Prev: How to get Quagga, Up: Overview
1.6 Mailing List
================
There is a mailing list for discussions about Quagga. If you have any
comments or suggestions to Quagga, please subscribe to:
`http://lists.quagga.net/mailman/listinfo/quagga-users'.
The Quagga site has further information on the available mailing
lists, see:
`http://www.quagga.net/lists.php'

File: quagga.info, Node: Bug Reports, Prev: Mailing List, Up: Overview
1.7 Bug Reports
===============
If you think you have found a bug, please send a bug report to:
`http://bugzilla.quagga.net'
When you send a bug report, please be careful about the points below.
* Please note what kind of OS you are using. If you use the IPv6
stack please note that as well.
* Please show us the results of `netstat -rn' and `ifconfig -a'.
Information from zebra's VTY command `show ip route' will also be
helpful.
* Please send your configuration file with the report. If you
specify arguments to the configure script please note that too.
Bug reports are very important for us to improve the quality of
Quagga. Quagga is still in the development stage, but please don't
hesitate to send a bug report to `http://bugzilla.quagga.net'.

File: quagga.info, Node: Installation, Next: Basic commands, Prev: Overview, Up: Top
2 Installation
**************
There are three steps for installing the software: configuration,
compilation, and installation.
* Menu:
* Configure the Software::
* Build the Software::
* Install the Software::
The easiest way to get Quagga running is to issue the following
commands:
% configure
% make
% make install

File: quagga.info, Node: Configure the Software, Next: Build the Software, Up: Installation
2.1 Configure the Software
==========================
* Menu:
* The Configure script and its options::
* Least-Privilege support::
* Linux notes::

File: quagga.info, Node: The Configure script and its options, Next: Least-Privilege support, Up: Configure the Software
2.1.1 The Configure script and its options
------------------------------------------
Quagga has an excellent configure script which automatically detects
most host configurations. There are several additional configure
options you can use to turn off IPv6 support, to disable the
compilation of specific daemons, and to enable SNMP support.
`--enable-guile'
Turn on compilation of the zebra-guile interpreter. You will need
the guile library to make this. zebra-guile implementation is not
yet finished. So this option is only useful for zebra-guile
developers.
`--disable-ipv6'
Turn off IPv6 related features and daemons. Quagga configure
script automatically detects IPv6 stack. But sometimes you might
want to disable IPv6 support of Quagga.
`--disable-zebra'
Do not build zebra daemon.
`--disable-ripd'
Do not build ripd.
`--disable-ripngd'
Do not build ripngd.
`--disable-ospfd'
Do not build ospfd.
`--disable-ospf6d'
Do not build ospf6d.
`--disable-bgpd'
Do not build bgpd.
`--disable-bgp-announce'
Make `bgpd' which does not make bgp announcements at all. This
feature is good for using `bgpd' as a BGP announcement listener.
`--enable-netlink'
Force to enable GNU/Linux netlink interface. Quagga configure
script detects netlink interface by checking a header file. When
the header file does not match to the current running kernel,
configure script will not turn on netlink support.
`--enable-snmp'
Enable SNMP support. By default, SNMP support is disabled.
`--enable-opaque-lsa'
Enable support for Opaque LSAs (RFC2370) in ospfd.
`--disable-ospfapi'
Disable support for OSPF-API, an API to interface directly with
ospfd. OSPF-API is enabled if -enable-opaque-lsa is set.
`--disable-ospfclient'
Disable building of the example OSPF-API client.
`--enable-ospf-te'
Enable support for OSPF Traffic Engineering Extension
(internet-draft) this requires support for Opaque LSAs.
`--enable-multipath=ARG'
Enable support for Equal Cost Multipath. ARG is the maximum number
of ECMP paths to allow, set to 0 to allow unlimited number of
paths.
`--enable-rtadv'
Enable support IPV6 router advertisement in zebra.
You may specify any combination of the above options to the configure
script. By default, the executables are placed in `/usr/local/sbin'
and the configuration files in `/usr/local/etc'. The `/usr/local/'
installation prefix and other directories may be changed using the
following options to the configuration script.
`--prefix=PREFIX'
Install architecture-independent files in PREFIX [/usr/local].
`--sysconfdir=DIR'
Look for configuration files in DIR [PREFIX/etc]. Note that sample
configuration files will be installed here.
`--localstatedir=DIR'
Configure zebra to use DIR for local state files, such as pid
files and unix sockets.
% ./configure --disable-ipv6
This command will configure zebra and the routing daemons.

File: quagga.info, Node: Least-Privilege support, Next: Linux notes, Prev: The Configure script and its options, Up: Configure the Software
2.1.2 Least-Privilege support
-----------------------------
Additionally, you may configure zebra to drop its elevated privileges
shortly after startup and switch to another user. The configure script
will automatically try to configure this support. There are three
configure options to control the behaviour of Quagga daemons.
`--enable-user=USER'
Switch to user ARG shortly after startup, and run as user ARG in
normal operation.
`--enable-group=GROUP'
Switch real and effective group to GROUP shortly after startup.
`--enable-vty-group=GROUP'
Create Unix Vty sockets (for use with vtysh) with group owndership
set to GROUP. This allows one to create a seperate group which is
restricted to accessing only the Vty sockets, hence allowing one to
delegate this group to individual users, or to run vtysh setgid to
this group.
The default user and group which will be configured is 'quagga' if
no user or group is specified. Note that this user or group requires
write access to the local state directory (see -localstatedir) and
requires at least read access, and write access if you wish to allow
daemons to write out their configuration, to the configuration
directory (see -sysconfdir).
On systems which have the 'libcap' capabilities manipulation library
(currently only linux), the quagga system will retain only minimal
capabilities required, further it will only raise these capabilities for
brief periods. On systems without libcap, quagga will run as the user
specified and only raise its uid back to uid 0 for brief periods.

File: quagga.info, Node: Linux notes, Prev: Least-Privilege support, Up: Configure the Software
2.1.3 Linux Notes
-----------------
There are several options available only to GNU/Linux systems: (1). If
you use GNU/Linux, make sure that the current kernel configuration is
what you want. Quagga will run with any kernel configuration but some
recommendations do exist.
CONFIG_NETLINK
Kernel/User netlink socket. This is a brand new feature which
enables an advanced interface between the Linux kernel and zebra
(*note Kernel Interface::).
CONFIG_RTNETLINK
Routing messages. This makes it possible to receive netlink
routing messages. If you specify this option, `zebra' can detect
routing information updates directly from the kernel (*note Kernel
Interface::).
CONFIG_IP_MULTICAST
IP: multicasting. This option should be specified when you use
`ripd' (*note RIP::) or `ospfd' (*note OSPFv2::) because these
protocols use multicast.
IPv6 support has been added in GNU/Linux kernel version 2.2. If you
try to use the Quagga IPv6 feature on a GNU/Linux kernel, please make
sure the following libraries have been installed. Please note that
these libraries will not be needed when you uses GNU C library 2.1 or
upper.
`inet6-apps'
The `inet6-apps' package includes basic IPv6 related libraries such
as `inet_ntop' and `inet_pton'. Some basic IPv6 programs such as
`ping', `ftp', and `inetd' are also included. The `inet-apps' can
be found at `ftp://ftp.inner.net/pub/ipv6/'.
`net-tools'
The `net-tools' package provides an IPv6 enabled interface and
routing utility. It contains `ifconfig', `route', `netstat', and
other tools. `net-tools' may be found at
`http://www.tazenda.demon.co.uk/phil/net-tools/'.
---------- Footnotes ----------
(1) GNU/Linux has very flexible kernel configuration features

File: quagga.info, Node: Build the Software, Next: Install the Software, Prev: Configure the Software, Up: Installation
2.2 Build the Software
======================
After configuring the software, you will need to compile it for your
system. Simply issue the command `make' in the root of the source
directory and the software will be compiled. If you have *any* problems
at this stage, be certain to send a bug report *Note Bug Reports::.
% ./configure
.
.
.
./configure output
.
.
.
% make

File: quagga.info, Node: Install the Software, Prev: Build the Software, Up: Installation
2.3 Install the Software
========================
Installing the software to your system consists of copying the compiled
programs and supporting files to a standard location. After the
installation process has completed, these files have been copied from
your work directory to `/usr/local/bin', and `/usr/local/etc'.
To install the Quagga suite, issue the following command at your
shell prompt: `make install'.
%
% make install
%
Quagga daemons have their own terminal interface or VTY. After
installation, you have to setup each beast's port number to connect to
them. Please add the following entries to `/etc/services'.
zebrasrv 2600/tcp # zebra service
zebra 2601/tcp # zebra vty
ripd 2602/tcp # RIPd vty
ripngd 2603/tcp # RIPngd vty
ospfd 2604/tcp # OSPFd vty
bgpd 2605/tcp # BGPd vty
ospf6d 2606/tcp # OSPF6d vty
ospfapi 2607/tcp # ospfapi
isisd 2608/tcp # ISISd vty
If you use a FreeBSD newer than 2.2.8, the above entries are already
added to `/etc/services' so there is no need to add it. If you specify
a port number when starting the daemon, these entries may not be needed.
You may need to make changes to the config files in
`/etc/quagga/*.conf'. *Note Config Commands::.

File: quagga.info, Node: Basic commands, Next: Zebra, Prev: Installation, Up: Top
3 Basic commands
****************
There are five routing daemons in use, and there is one manager daemon.
These daemons may be located on separate machines from the manager
daemon. Each of these daemons will listen on a particular port for
incoming VTY connections. The routing daemons are:
* `ripd', `ripngd', `ospfd', `ospf6d', `bgpd'
* `zebra'
The following sections discuss commands common to all the routing
daemons.
* Menu:
* Terminal Mode Commands:: Common commands used in a VTY
* Config Commands:: Commands used in config files
* Common Invocation Options:: Starting the daemons
* Virtual Terminal Interfaces:: Interacting with the daemons

File: quagga.info, Node: Config Commands, Next: Common Invocation Options, Prev: Terminal Mode Commands, Up: Basic commands
3.1 Config Commands
===================
* Menu:
* Basic Config Commands:: Some of the generic config commands
* Sample Config File:: An example config file
In a config file, you can write the debugging options, a vty's
password, routing daemon configurations, a log file name, and so forth.
This information forms the initial command set for a routing beast as
it is starting.
Config files are generally found in:
`/etc/quagga/*.conf'
Each of the daemons has its own config file. For example, zebra's
default config file name is:
`/etc/quagga/zebra.conf'
The daemon name plus `.conf' is the default config file name. You
can specify a config file using the `-f' or `--config-file' options
when starting the daemon.

File: quagga.info, Node: Basic Config Commands, Next: Sample Config File, Up: Config Commands
3.1.1 Basic Config Commands
---------------------------
-- Command: hostname HOSTNAME
Set hostname of the router.
-- Command: password PASSWORD
Set password for vty interface. If there is no password, a vty
won't accept connections.
-- Command: enable password PASSWORD
Set enable password.
-- Command: log trap LEVEL
-- Command: no log trap
These commands are deprecated and are present only for historical
compatibility. The log trap command sets the current logging
level for all enabled logging destinations, and it sets the
default for all future logging commands that do not specify a
level. The normal default logging level is debugging. The `no'
form of the command resets the default level for future logging
commands to debugging, but it does not change the logging level of
existing logging destinations.
-- Command: log stdout
-- Command: log stdout LEVEL
-- Command: no log stdout
Enable logging output to stdout. If the optional second argument
specifying the logging level is not present, the default logging
level (typically debugging, but can be changed using the
deprecated `log trap' command) will be used. The `no' form of the
command disables logging to stdout. The `level' argument must
have one of these values: emergencies, alerts, critical, errors,
warnings, notifications, informational, or debugging. Note that
the existing code logs its most important messages with severity
`errors'.
-- Command: log file FILENAME
-- Command: log file FILENAME LEVEL
-- Command: no log file
If you want to log into a file, please specify `filename' as in
this example:
log file /var/log/quagga/bgpd.log informational
If the optional second argument specifying the logging level is
not present, the default logging level (typically debugging, but
can be changed using the deprecated `log trap' command) will be
used. The `no' form of the command disables logging to a file.
Note: if you do not configure any file logging, and a daemon
crashes due to a signal or an assertion failure, it will attempt
to save the crash information in a file named
/var/tmp/quagga.<daemon name>.crashlog. For security reasons,
this will not happen if the file exists already, so it is
important to delete the file after reporting the crash information.
-- Command: log syslog
-- Command: log syslog LEVEL
-- Command: no log syslog
Enable logging output to syslog. If the optional second argument
specifying the logging level is not present, the default logging
level (typically debugging, but can be changed using the
deprecated `log trap' command) will be used. The `no' form of the
command disables logging to syslog.
-- Command: log monitor
-- Command: log monitor LEVEL
-- Command: no log monitor
Enable logging output to vty terminals that have enabled logging
using the `terminal monitor' command. By default, monitor logging
is enabled at the debugging level, but this command (or the
deprecated `log trap' command) can be used to change the monitor
logging level. If the optional second argument specifying the
logging level is not present, the default logging level (typically
debugging, but can be changed using the deprecated `log trap'
command) will be used. The `no' form of the command disables
logging to terminal monitors.
-- Command: log facility FACILITY
-- Command: no log facility
This command changes the facility used in syslog messages. The
default facility is `daemon'. The `no' form of the command resets
the facility to the default `daemon' facility.
-- Command: log record-priority
-- Command: no log record-priority
To include the severity in all messages logged to a file, to
stdout, or to a terminal monitor (i.e. anything except syslog),
use the `log record-priority' global configuration command. To
disable this option, use the `no' form of the command. By default,
the severity level is not included in logged messages. Note: some
versions of syslogd (including Solaris) can be configured to
include the facility and level in the messages emitted.
-- Command: service password-encryption
Encrypt password.
-- Command: service advanced-vty
Enable advanced mode VTY.
-- Command: service terminal-length <0-512>
Set system wide line configuration. This configuration command
applies to all VTY interfaces.
-- Command: line vty
Enter vty configuration mode.
-- Command: banner motd default
Set default motd string.
-- Command: no banner motd
No motd banner string will be printed.
-- Line Command: exec-timeout MINUTE
-- Line Command: exec-timeout MINUTE SECOND
Set VTY connection timeout value. When only one argument is
specified it is used for timeout value in minutes. Optional
second argument is used for timeout value in seconds. Default
timeout value is 10 minutes. When timeout value is zero, it means
no timeout.
-- Line Command: no exec-timeout
Do not perform timeout at all. This command is as same as
`exec-timeout 0 0'.
-- Line Command: access-class ACCESS-LIST
Restrict vty connections with an access list.

File: quagga.info, Node: Sample Config File, Prev: Basic Config Commands, Up: Config Commands
3.1.2 Sample Config File
------------------------
Below is a sample configuration file for the zebra daemon.
!
! Zebra configuration file
!
hostname Router
password zebra
enable password zebra
!
log stdout
!
!
'!' and '#' are comment characters. If the first character of the
word is one of the comment characters then from the rest of the line
forward will be ignored as a comment.
password zebra!password
If a comment character is not the first character of the word, it's a
normal character. So in the above example '!' will not be regarded as a
comment and the password is set to 'zebra!password'.

File: quagga.info, Node: Terminal Mode Commands, Next: Config Commands, Up: Basic commands
3.2 Terminal Mode Commands
==========================
-- Command: write terminal
Displays the current configuration to the vty interface.
-- Command: write file
Write current configuration to configuration file.
-- Command: configure terminal
Change to configuration mode. This command is the first step to
configuration.
-- Command: terminal length <0-512>
Set terminal display length to <0-512>. If length is 0, no
display control is performed.
-- Command: who
Show a list of currently connected vty sessions.
-- Command: list
List all available commands.
-- Command: show version
Show the current version of Quagga and its build host information.
-- Command: show logging
Shows the current configuration of the logging system. This
includes the status of all logging destinations.
-- Command: logmsg LEVEL MESSAGE
Send a message to all logging destinations that are enabled for
messages of the given severity.

File: quagga.info, Node: Common Invocation Options, Next: Virtual Terminal Interfaces, Prev: Config Commands, Up: Basic commands
3.3 Common Invocation Options
=============================
These options apply to all Quagga daemons.
`-d'
`--daemon'
Runs in daemon mode.
`-f FILE'
`--config_file=FILE'
Set configuration file name.
`-h'
`--help'
Display this help and exit.
`-i FILE'
`--pid_file=FILE'
Upon startup the process identifier of the daemon is written to a
file, typically in `/var/run'. This file can be used by the init
system to implement commands such as `.../init.d/zebra status',
`.../init.d/zebra restart' or `.../init.d/zebra stop'.
The file name is an run-time option rather than a configure-time
option so that multiple routing daemons can be run simultaneously.
This is useful when using Quagga to implement a routing looking
glass. One machine can be used to collect differing routing views
from differing points in the network.
`-A ADDRESS'
`--vty_addr=ADDRESS'
Set the VTY local address to bind to. If set, the VTY socket will
only be bound to this address.
`-P PORT'
`--vty_port=PORT'
Set the VTY TCP port number. If set to 0 then the TCP VTY sockets
will not be opened.
`-u USER'
`--vty_addr=USER'
Set the user and group to run as.
`-v'
`--version'
Print program version.

File: quagga.info, Node: Virtual Terminal Interfaces, Prev: Common Invocation Options, Up: Basic commands
3.4 Virtual Terminal Interfaces
===============================
VTY - Virtual Terminal [aka TeletYpe] Interface is a command line
interface (CLI) for user interaction with the routing daemon.
* Menu:
* VTY Overview:: Basics about VTYs
* VTY Modes:: View, Enable, and Other VTY modes
* VTY CLI Commands:: Commands for movement, edition, and management

File: quagga.info, Node: VTY Overview, Next: VTY Modes, Up: Virtual Terminal Interfaces
3.4.1 VTY Overview
------------------
VTY stands for Virtual TeletYpe interface. It means you can connect to
the daemon via the telnet protocol.
To enable a VTY interface, you have to setup a VTY password. If
there is no VTY password, one cannot connect to the VTY interface at
all.
% telnet localhost 2601
Trying 127.0.0.1...
Connected to localhost.
Escape character is '^]'.
Hello, this is Quagga (version 0.99.4)
Copyright (C) 1999-2005 Kunihiro Ishiguro, et al.
User Access Verification
Password: XXXXX
Router> ?
enable Turn on privileged commands
exit Exit current mode and down to previous mode
help Description of the interactive help system
list Print command list
show Show running system information
who Display who is on a vty
Router> enable
Password: XXXXX
Router# configure terminal
Router(config)# interface eth0
Router(config-if)# ip address 10.0.0.1/8
Router(config-if)# ^Z
Router#
'?' is very useful for looking up commands.

File: quagga.info, Node: VTY Modes, Next: VTY CLI Commands, Prev: VTY Overview, Up: Virtual Terminal Interfaces
3.4.2 VTY Modes
---------------
There are three basic VTY modes:
* Menu:
* VTY View Mode:: Mode for read-only interaction
* VTY Enable Mode:: Mode for read-write interaction
* VTY Other Modes:: Special modes (tftp, etc)
There are commands that may be restricted to specific VTY modes.

File: quagga.info, Node: VTY View Mode, Next: VTY Enable Mode, Up: VTY Modes
3.4.2.1 VTY View Mode
.....................
This mode is for read-only access to the CLI. One may exit the mode by
leaving the system, or by entering `enable' mode.

File: quagga.info, Node: VTY Enable Mode, Next: VTY Other Modes, Prev: VTY View Mode, Up: VTY Modes
3.4.2.2 VTY Enable Mode
.......................
This mode is for read-write access to the CLI. One may exit the mode by
leaving the system, or by escaping to view mode.

File: quagga.info, Node: VTY Other Modes, Prev: VTY Enable Mode, Up: VTY Modes
3.4.2.3 VTY Other Modes
.......................
This page is for describing other modes.

File: quagga.info, Node: VTY CLI Commands, Prev: VTY Modes, Up: Virtual Terminal Interfaces
3.4.3 VTY CLI Commands
----------------------
Commands that you may use at the command-line are described in the
following three subsubsections.
* Menu:
* CLI Movement Commands:: Commands for moving the cursor about
* CLI Editing Commands:: Commands for changing text
* CLI Advanced Commands:: Other commands, session management and so on

File: quagga.info, Node: CLI Movement Commands, Next: CLI Editing Commands, Up: VTY CLI Commands
3.4.3.1 CLI Movement Commands
.............................
These commands are used for moving the CLI cursor. The <C> character
means press the Control Key.
`C-f'
`<RIGHT>'
Move forward one character.
`C-b'
`<LEFT>'
Move backward one character.
`M-f'
Move forward one word.
`M-b'
Move backward one word.
`C-a'
Move to the beginning of the line.
`C-e'
Move to the end of the line.

File: quagga.info, Node: CLI Editing Commands, Next: CLI Advanced Commands, Prev: CLI Movement Commands, Up: VTY CLI Commands
3.4.3.2 CLI Editing Commands
............................
These commands are used for editing text on a line. The <C> character
means press the Control Key.
`C-h'
`<DEL>'
Delete the character before point.
`C-d'
Delete the character after point.
`M-d'
Forward kill word.
`C-w'
Backward kill word.
`C-k'
Kill to the end of the line.
`C-u'
Kill line from the beginning, erasing input.
`C-t'
Transpose character.

File: quagga.info, Node: CLI Advanced Commands, Prev: CLI Editing Commands, Up: VTY CLI Commands
3.4.3.3 CLI Advanced Commands
.............................
There are several additional CLI commands for command line completions,
insta-help, and VTY session management.
`C-c'
Interrupt current input and moves to the next line.
`C-z'
End current configuration session and move to top node.
`C-n'
`<DOWN>'
Move down to next line in the history buffer.
`C-p'
`<UP>'
Move up to previous line in the history buffer.
`TAB'
Use command line completion by typing <TAB>.
`'
You can use command line help by typing `help' at the beginning of
the line. Typing `?' at any point in the line will show possible
completions.

File: quagga.info, Node: Zebra, Next: RIP, Prev: Basic commands, Up: Top
4 Zebra
*******
`zebra' is an IP routing manager. It provides kernel routing table
updates, interface lookups, and redistribution of routes between
different routing protocols.
* Menu:
* Invoking zebra:: Running the program
* Interface Commands:: Commands for zebra interfaces
* Static Route Commands:: Commands for adding static routes
* zebra Terminal Mode Commands:: Commands for zebra's VTY

File: quagga.info, Node: Invoking zebra, Next: Interface Commands, Up: Zebra
4.1 Invoking zebra
==================
Besides the common invocation options (*note Common Invocation
Options::), the `zebra' specific invocation options are listed below.
`-b'
`--batch'
Runs in batch mode. `zebra' parses configuration file and
terminates immediately.
`-k'
`--keep_kernel'
When zebra starts up, don't delete old self inserted routes.
`-r'
`--retain'
When program terminates, retain routes added by zebra.

File: quagga.info, Node: Interface Commands, Next: Static Route Commands, Prev: Invoking zebra, Up: Zebra
4.2 Interface Commands
======================
-- Command: interface IFNAME
-- Interface Command: shutdown
-- Interface Command: no shutdown
Up or down the current interface.
-- Interface Command: ip address ADDRESS/PREFIX
-- Interface Command: ip6 address ADDRESS/PREFIX
-- Interface Command: no ip address ADDRESS/PREFIX
-- Interface Command: no ip6 address ADDRESS/PREFIX
Set the IPv4 or IPv6 address/prefix for the interface.
-- Interface Command: ip address ADDRESS/PREFIX secondary
-- Interface Command: no ip address ADDRESS/PREFIX secondary
Set the secondary flag for this address. This causes ospfd to not
treat the address as a distinct subnet.
-- Interface Command: description DESCRIPTION ...
Set description for the interface.
-- Interface Command: multicast
-- Interface Command: no multicast
Enable or disables multicast flag for the interface.
-- Interface Command: bandwidth <1-10000000>
-- Interface Command: no bandwidth <1-10000000>
Set bandwidth value of the interface in kilobits/sec. This is for
calculating OSPF cost. This command does not affect the actual
device configuration.
-- Interface Command: link-detect
-- Interface Command: no link-detect
Enable/disable link-detect on platforms which support this.
Currently only linux and with certain drivers - those which
properly support the IFF_RUNNING flag.

File: quagga.info, Node: Static Route Commands, Next: zebra Terminal Mode Commands, Prev: Interface Commands, Up: Zebra
4.3 Static Route Commands
=========================
Static routing is a very fundamental feature of routing technology. It
defines static prefix and gateway.
-- Command: ip route NETWORK GATEWAY
NETWORK is destination prefix with format of A.B.C.D/M. GATEWAY
is gateway for the prefix. When GATEWAY is A.B.C.D format. It is
taken as a IPv4 address gateway. Otherwise it is treated as an
interface name. If the interface name is NULL0 then zebra installs
a blackhole route.
ip route 10.0.0.0/8 10.0.0.2
ip route 10.0.0.0/8 ppp0
ip route 10.0.0.0/8 null0
First example defines 10.0.0.0/8 static route with gateway
10.0.0.2. Second one defines the same prefix but with gateway to
interface ppp0. The third install a blackhole route.
-- Command: ip route NETWORK NETMASK GATEWAY
This is alternate version of above command. When NETWORK is
A.B.C.D format, user must define NETMASK value with A.B.C.D
format. GATEWAY is same option as above command
ip route 10.0.0.0 255.255.255.0 10.0.0.2
ip route 10.0.0.0 255.255.255.0 ppp0
ip route 10.0.0.0 255.255.255.0 null0
These statements are equivalent to those in the previous example.
-- Command: ip route NETWORK GATEWAY DISTANCE
Installs the route with the specified distance.
Multiple nexthop static route
ip route 10.0.0.1/32 10.0.0.2
ip route 10.0.0.1/32 10.0.0.3
ip route 10.0.0.1/32 eth0
If there is no route to 10.0.0.2 and 10.0.0.3, and interface eth0 is
reachable, then the last route is installed into the kernel.
If zebra has been compiled with multipath support, and both 10.0.0.2
and 10.0.0.3 are reachable, zebra will install a multipath route via
both nexthops, if the platform supports this.
zebra> show ip route
S> 10.0.0.1/32 [1/0] via 10.0.0.2 inactive
via 10.0.0.3 inactive
* is directly connected, eth0
ip route 10.0.0.0/8 10.0.0.2
ip route 10.0.0.0/8 10.0.0.3
ip route 10.0.0.0/8 null0 255
This will install a multihop route via the specified next-hops if
they are reachable, as well as a high-metric blackhole route, which can
be useful to prevent traffic destined for a prefix to match
less-specific routes (eg default) should the specified gateways not be
reachable. Eg:
zebra> show ip route 10.0.0.0/8
Routing entry for 10.0.0.0/8
Known via "static", distance 1, metric 0
10.0.0.2 inactive
10.0.0.3 inactive
Routing entry for 10.0.0.0/8
Known via "static", distance 255, metric 0
directly connected, Null0
-- Command: ipv6 route NETWORK GATEWAY
-- Command: ipv6 route NETWORK GATEWAY DISTANCE
These behave similarly to their ipv4 counterparts.
-- Command: table TABLENO
Select the primary kernel routing table to be used. This only
works for kernels supporting multiple routing tables (like
GNU/Linux 2.2.x and later). After setting TABLENO with this
command, static routes defined after this are added to the
specified table.

File: quagga.info, Node: zebra Terminal Mode Commands, Prev: Static Route Commands, Up: Zebra
4.4 zebra Terminal Mode Commands
================================
-- Command: show ip route
Display current routes which zebra holds in its database.
Router# show ip route
Codes: K - kernel route, C - connected, S - static, R - RIP,
B - BGP * - FIB route.
K* 0.0.0.0/0 203.181.89.241
S 0.0.0.0/0 203.181.89.1
C* 127.0.0.0/8 lo
C* 203.181.89.240/28 eth0
-- Command: show ipv6 route
-- Command: show interface
-- Command: show ipforward
Display whether the host's IP forwarding function is enabled or
not. Almost any UNIX kernel can be configured with IP forwarding
disabled. If so, the box can't work as a router.
-- Command: show ipv6forward
Display whether the host's IP v6 forwarding is enabled or not.

File: quagga.info, Node: RIP, Next: RIPng, Prev: Zebra, Up: Top
5 RIP
*****
RIP - Routing Information Protocol is widely deployed interior gateway
protocol. RIP was developed in the 1970s at Xerox Labs as part of the
XNS routing protocol. RIP is a "distance-vector" protocol and is based
on the "Bellman-Ford" algorithms. As a distance-vector protocol, RIP
router send updates to its neighbors periodically, thus allowing the
convergence to a known topology. In each update, the distance to any
given network will be broadcasted to its neighboring router.
`ripd' supports RIP version 2 as described in RFC2453 and RIP
version 1 as described in RFC1058.
* Menu:
* Starting and Stopping ripd::
* RIP Configuration::
* RIP Version Control::
* How to Announce RIP route::
* Filtering RIP Routes::
* RIP Metric Manipulation::
* RIP distance::
* RIP route-map::
* RIP Authentication::
* RIP Timers::
* Show RIP Information::
* RIP Debug Commands::

File: quagga.info, Node: Starting and Stopping ripd, Next: RIP Configuration, Up: RIP
5.1 Starting and Stopping ripd
==============================
The default configuration file name of `ripd''s is `ripd.conf'. When
invocation `ripd' searches directory /etc/quagga. If `ripd.conf' is
not there next search current directory.
RIP uses UDP port 520 to send and receive RIP packets. So the user
must have the capability to bind the port, generally this means that
the user must have superuser privileges. RIP protocol requires
interface information maintained by `zebra' daemon. So running `zebra'
is mandatory to run `ripd'. Thus minimum sequence for running RIP is
like below:
# zebra -d
# ripd -d
Please note that `zebra' must be invoked before `ripd'.
To stop `ripd'. Please use `kill `cat /var/run/ripd.pid`'. Certain
signals have special meaningss to `ripd'.
`SIGHUP'
Reload configuration file `ripd.conf'. All configurations are
reseted. All routes learned so far are cleared and removed from
routing table.
`SIGUSR1'
Rotate `ripd' logfile.
`SIGINT'
`SIGTERM'
`ripd' sweeps all installed RIP routes then terminates properly.
`ripd' invocation options. Common options that can be specified
(*note Common Invocation Options::).
`-r'
`--retain'
When the program terminates, retain routes added by `ripd'.
* Menu:
* RIP netmask::

File: quagga.info, Node: RIP netmask, Up: Starting and Stopping ripd
5.1.1 RIP netmask
-----------------
The netmask features of `ripd' support both version 1 and version 2 of
RIP. Version 1 of RIP originally contained no netmask information. In
RIP version 1, network classes were originally used to determine the
size of the netmask. Class A networks use 8 bits of mask, Class B
networks use 16 bits of masks, while Class C networks use 24 bits of
mask. Today, the most widely used method of a network mask is assigned
to the packet on the basis of the interface that received the packet.
Version 2 of RIP supports a variable length subnet mask (VLSM). By
extending the subnet mask, the mask can be divided and reused. Each
subnet can be used for different purposes such as large to middle size
LANs and WAN links. Quagga `ripd' does not support the non-sequential
netmasks that are included in RIP Version 2.
In a case of similar information with the same prefix and metric, the
old information will be suppressed. Ripd does not currently support
equal cost multipath routing.

File: quagga.info, Node: RIP Configuration, Next: RIP Version Control, Prev: Starting and Stopping ripd, Up: RIP
5.2 RIP Configuration
=====================
-- Command: router rip
The `router rip' command is necessary to enable RIP. To disable
RIP, use the `no router rip' command. RIP must be enabled before
carrying out any of the RIP commands.
-- Command: no router rip
Disable RIP.
-- RIP Command: network NETWORK
-- RIP Command: no network NETWORK
Set the RIP enable interface by NETWORK. The interfaces which
have addresses matching with NETWORK are enabled.
This group of commands either enables or disables RIP interfaces
between certain numbers of a specified network address. For
example, if the network for 10.0.0.0/24 is RIP enabled, this would
result in all the addresses from 10.0.0.0 to 10.0.0.255 being
enabled for RIP. The `no network' command will disable RIP for
the specified network.
-- RIP Command: network IFNAME
-- RIP Command: no network IFNAME
Set a RIP enabled interface by IFNAME. Both the sending and
receiving of RIP packets will be enabled on the port specified in
the `network ifname' command. The `no network ifname' command
will disable RIP on the specified interface.
-- RIP Command: neighbor A.B.C.D
-- RIP Command: no neighbor A.B.C.D
Specify RIP neighbor. When a neighbor doesn't understand
multicast, this command is used to specify neighbors. In some
cases, not all routers will be able to understand multicasting,
where packets are sent to a network or a group of addresses. In a
situation where a neighbor cannot process multicast packets, it is
necessary to establish a direct link between routers. The
neighbor command allows the network administrator to specify a
router as a RIP neighbor. The `no neighbor a.b.c.d' command will
disable the RIP neighbor.
Below is very simple RIP configuration. Interface `eth0' and
interface which address match to `10.0.0.0/8' are RIP enabled.
!
router rip
network 10.0.0.0/8
network eth0
!
Passive interface
-- RIP command: passive-interface (IFNAME|default)
-- RIP command: no passive-interface IFNAME
This command sets the specified interface to passive mode. On
passive mode interface, all receiving packets are processed as
normal and ripd does not send either multicast or unicast RIP
packets except to RIP neighbors specified with `neighbor' command.
The interface may be specified as DEFAULT to make ripd default to
passive on all interfaces.
The default is to be passive on all interfaces.
RIP split-horizon
-- Interface command: ip split-horizon
-- Interface command: no ip split-horizon
Control split-horizon on the interface. Default is `ip
split-horizon'. If you don't perform split-horizon on the
interface, please specify `no ip split-horizon'.

File: quagga.info, Node: RIP Version Control, Next: How to Announce RIP route, Prev: RIP Configuration, Up: RIP
5.3 RIP Version Control
=======================
RIP can be configured to send either Version 1 or Version 2 packets.
The default is to send RIPv2 while accepting both RIPv1 and RIPv2 (and
replying with packets of the appropriate version for REQUESTS /
triggered updates). The version to receive and send can be specified
globally, and further overriden on a per-interface basis if needs be
for send and receive seperately (see below).
It is important to note that RIPv1 can not be authenticated. Further,
if RIPv1 is enabled then RIP will reply to REQUEST packets, sending the
state of its RIP routing table to any remote routers that ask on
demand. For a more detailed discussion on the security implications of
RIPv1 see *Note RIP Authentication::.
-- RIP Command: version VERSION
Set RIP version to accept for reads and send. VERSION can be
either `1" or `2".
Disabling RIPv1 by specifying version 2 is STRONGLY encouraged,
*Note RIP Authentication::. This may become the default in a future
release.
Default: Send Version 2, and accept either version.
-- RIP Command: no version
Reset the global version setting back to the default.
-- Interface command: ip rip send version VERSION
VERSION can be `1', `2' or `1 2'.
This interface command overrides the global rip version setting,
and selects which version of RIP to send packets with, for this
interface specifically. Choice of RIP Version 1, RIP Version 2, or
both versions. In the latter case, where `1 2' is specified,
packets will be both broadcast and multicast.
Default: Send packets according to the global version (version 2)
-- Interface command: ip rip receive version VERSION
VERSION can be `1', `2' or `1 2'.
This interface command overrides the global rip version setting,
and selects which versions of RIP packets will be accepted on this
interface. Choice of RIP Version 1, RIP Version 2, or both.
Default: Accept packets according to the global setting (both 1
and 2).

File: quagga.info, Node: How to Announce RIP route, Next: Filtering RIP Routes, Prev: RIP Version Control, Up: RIP
5.4 How to Announce RIP route
=============================
-- RIP command: redistribute kernel
-- RIP command: redistribute kernel metric <0-16>
-- RIP command: redistribute kernel route-map ROUTE-MAP
-- RIP command: no redistribute kernel
`redistribute kernel' redistributes routing information from
kernel route entries into the RIP tables. `no redistribute kernel'
disables the routes.
-- RIP command: redistribute static
-- RIP command: redistribute static metric <0-16>
-- RIP command: redistribute static route-map ROUTE-MAP
-- RIP command: no redistribute static
`redistribute static' redistributes routing information from
static route entries into the RIP tables. `no redistribute static'
disables the routes.
-- RIP command: redistribute connected
-- RIP command: redistribute connected metric <0-16>
-- RIP command: redistribute connected route-map ROUTE-MAP
-- RIP command: no redistribute connected
Redistribute connected routes into the RIP tables. `no
redistribute connected' disables the connected routes in the RIP
tables. This command redistribute connected of the interface
which RIP disabled. The connected route on RIP enabled interface
is announced by default.
-- RIP command: redistribute ospf
-- RIP command: redistribute ospf metric <0-16>
-- RIP command: redistribute ospf route-map ROUTE-MAP
-- RIP command: no redistribute ospf
`redistribute ospf' redistributes routing information from ospf
route entries into the RIP tables. `no redistribute ospf' disables
the routes.
-- RIP command: redistribute bgp
-- RIP command: redistribute bgp metric <0-16>
-- RIP command: redistribute bgp route-map ROUTE-MAP
-- RIP command: no redistribute bgp
`redistribute bgp' redistributes routing information from bgp
route entries into the RIP tables. `no redistribute bgp' disables
the routes.
If you want to specify RIP only static routes:
-- RIP command: default-information originate
-- RIP command: route A.B.C.D/M
-- RIP command: no route A.B.C.D/M
This command is specific to Quagga. The `route' command makes a
static route only inside RIP. This command should be used only by
advanced users who are particularly knowledgeable about the RIP
protocol. In most cases, we recommend creating a static route in
Quagga and redistributing it in RIP using `redistribute static'.

File: quagga.info, Node: Filtering RIP Routes, Next: RIP Metric Manipulation, Prev: How to Announce RIP route, Up: RIP
5.5 Filtering RIP Routes
========================
RIP routes can be filtered by a distribute-list.
-- Command: distribute-list ACCESS_LIST DIRECT IFNAME
You can apply access lists to the interface with a
`distribute-list' command. ACCESS_LIST is the access list name.
DIRECT is `in' or `out'. If DIRECT is `in' the access list is
applied to input packets.
The `distribute-list' command can be used to filter the RIP path.
`distribute-list' can apply access-lists to a chosen interface.
First, one should specify the access-list. Next, the name of the
access-list is used in the distribute-list command. For example,
in the following configuration `eth0' will permit only the paths
that match the route 10.0.0.0/8
!
router rip
distribute-list private in eth0
!
access-list private permit 10 10.0.0.0/8
access-list private deny any
!
`distribute-list' can be applied to both incoming and outgoing data.
-- Command: distribute-list prefix PREFIX_LIST (in|out) IFNAME
You can apply prefix lists to the interface with a
`distribute-list' command. PREFIX_LIST is the prefix list name.
Next is the direction of `in' or `out'. If DIRECT is `in' the
access list is applied to input packets.

File: quagga.info, Node: RIP Metric Manipulation, Next: RIP distance, Prev: Filtering RIP Routes, Up: RIP
5.6 RIP Metric Manipulation
===========================
RIP metric is a value for distance for the network. Usually `ripd'
increment the metric when the network information is received.
Redistributed routes' metric is set to 1.
-- RIP command: default-metric <1-16>
-- RIP command: no default-metric <1-16>
This command modifies the default metric value for redistributed
routes. The default value is 1. This command does not affect
connected route even if it is redistributed by `redistribute
connected'. To modify connected route's metric value, please use
`redistribute connected metric' or `route-map'. `offset-list' also
affects connected routes.
-- RIP command: offset-list ACCESS-LIST (in|out)
-- RIP command: offset-list ACCESS-LIST (in|out) IFNAME

File: quagga.info, Node: RIP distance, Next: RIP route-map, Prev: RIP Metric Manipulation, Up: RIP
5.7 RIP distance
================
Distance value is used in zebra daemon. Default RIP distance is 120.
-- RIP command: distance <1-255>
-- RIP command: no distance <1-255>
Set default RIP distance to specified value.
-- RIP command: distance <1-255> A.B.C.D/M
-- RIP command: no distance <1-255> A.B.C.D/M
Set default RIP distance to specified value when the route's
source IP address matches the specified prefix.
-- RIP command: distance <1-255> A.B.C.D/M ACCESS-LIST
-- RIP command: no distance <1-255> A.B.C.D/M ACCESS-LIST
Set default RIP distance to specified value when the route's
source IP address matches the specified prefix and the specified
access-list.

File: quagga.info, Node: RIP route-map, Next: RIP Authentication, Prev: RIP distance, Up: RIP
5.8 RIP route-map
=================
Usage of `ripd''s route-map support.
Optional argument route-map MAP_NAME can be added to each
`redistribute' statement.
redistribute static [route-map MAP_NAME]
redistribute connected [route-map MAP_NAME]
.....
Cisco applies route-map _before_ routes will exported to rip route
table. In current Quagga's test implementation, `ripd' applies
route-map after routes are listed in the route table and before routes
will be announced to an interface (something like output filter). I
think it is not so clear, but it is draft and it may be changed at
future.
Route-map statement (*note Route Map::) is needed to use route-map
functionality.
-- Route Map: match interface WORD
This command match to incoming interface. Notation of this match
is different from Cisco. Cisco uses a list of interfaces - NAME1
NAME2 ... NAMEN. Ripd allows only one name (maybe will change in
the future). Next - Cisco means interface which includes next-hop
of routes (it is somewhat similar to "ip next-hop" statement).
Ripd means interface where this route will be sent. This
difference is because "next-hop" of same routes which sends to
different interfaces must be different. Maybe it'd be better to
made new matches - say "match interface-out NAME" or something
like that.
-- Route Map: match ip address WORD
-- Route Map: match ip address prefix-list WORD
Match if route destination is permitted by access-list.
-- Route Map: match ip next-hop A.B.C.D
Cisco uses here <access-list>, `ripd' IPv4 address. Match if route
has this next-hop (meaning next-hop listed in the rip route table
- "show ip rip")
-- Route Map: match metric <0-4294967295>
This command match to the metric value of RIP updates. For other
protocol compatibility metric range is shown as <0-4294967295>.
But for RIP protocol only the value range <0-16> make sense.
-- Route Map: set ip next-hop A.B.C.D
This command set next hop value in RIPv2 protocol. This command
does not affect RIPv1 because there is no next hop field in the
packet.
-- Route Map: set metric <0-4294967295>
Set a metric for matched route when sending announcement. The
metric value range is very large for compatibility with other
protocols. For RIP, valid metric values are from 1 to 16.

File: quagga.info, Node: RIP Authentication, Next: RIP Timers, Prev: RIP route-map, Up: RIP
5.9 RIP Authentication
======================
RIPv2 allows packets to be authenticated via either an insecure plain
text password, included with the packet, or via a more secure MD5 based
HMAC (keyed-Hashing for Message AuthentiCation), RIPv1 can not be
authenticated at all, thus when authentication is configured `ripd'
will discard routing updates received via RIPv1 packets.
However, unless RIPv1 reception is disabled entirely, *Note RIP
Version Control::, RIPv1 REQUEST packets which are received, which
query the router for routing information, will still be honoured by
`ripd', and `ripd' WILL reply to such packets. This allows `ripd' to
honour such REQUESTs (which sometimes is used by old equipment and very
simple devices to bootstrap their default route), while still providing
security for route updates which are received.
In short: Enabling authentication prevents routes being updated by
unauthenticated remote routers, but still can allow routes (I.e. the
entire RIP routing table) to be queried remotely, potentially by anyone
on the internet, via RIPv1.
To prevent such unauthenticated querying of routes disable RIPv1,
*Note RIP Version Control::.
-- Interface command: ip rip authentication mode md5
-- Interface command: no ip rip authentication mode md5
Set the interface with RIPv2 MD5 authentication.
-- Interface command: ip rip authentication mode text
-- Interface command: no ip rip authentication mode text
Set the interface with RIPv2 simple password authentication.
-- Interface command: ip rip authentication string STRING
-- Interface command: no ip rip authentication string STRING
RIP version 2 has simple text authentication. This command sets
authentication string. The string must be shorter than 16
characters.
-- Interface command: ip rip authentication key-chain KEY-CHAIN
-- Interface command: no ip rip authentication key-chain KEY-CHAIN
Specifiy Keyed MD5 chain.
!
key chain test
key 1
key-string test
!
interface eth1
ip rip authentication mode md5
ip rip authentication key-chain test
!

File: quagga.info, Node: RIP Timers, Next: Show RIP Information, Prev: RIP Authentication, Up: RIP
5.10 RIP Timers
===============
-- RIP command: timers basic UPDATE TIMEOUT GARBAGE
RIP protocol has several timers. User can configure those timers'
values by `timers basic' command.
The default settings for the timers are as follows:
* The update timer is 30 seconds. Every update timer seconds,
the RIP process is awakened to send an unsolicited Response
message containing the complete routing table to all
neighboring RIP routers.
* The timeout timer is 180 seconds. Upon expiration of the
timeout, the route is no longer valid; however, it is
retained in the routing table for a short time so that
neighbors can be notified that the route has been dropped.
* The garbage collect timer is 120 seconds. Upon expiration of
the garbage-collection timer, the route is finally removed
from the routing table.
The `timers basic' command allows the the default values of the
timers listed above to be changed.
-- RIP command: no timers basic
The `no timers basic' command will reset the timers to the default
settings listed above.

File: quagga.info, Node: Show RIP Information, Next: RIP Debug Commands, Prev: RIP Timers, Up: RIP
5.11 Show RIP Information
=========================
To display RIP routes.
-- Command: show ip rip
Show RIP routes.
The command displays all RIP routes. For routes that are received
through RIP, this command will display the time the packet was sent and
the tag information. This command will also display this information
for routes redistributed into RIP.
-- Command: show ip protocols
The command displays current RIP status. It includes RIP timer,
filtering, version, RIP enabled interface and RIP peer inforation.
ripd> show ip protocols
Routing Protocol is "rip"
Sending updates every 30 seconds with +/-50%, next due in 35 seconds
Timeout after 180 seconds, garbage collect after 120 seconds
Outgoing update filter list for all interface is not set
Incoming update filter list for all interface is not set
Default redistribution metric is 1
Redistributing: kernel connected
Default version control: send version 2, receive version 2
Interface Send Recv
Routing for Networks:
eth0
eth1
1.1.1.1
203.181.89.241
Routing Information Sources:
Gateway BadPackets BadRoutes Distance Last Update

File: quagga.info, Node: RIP Debug Commands, Prev: Show RIP Information, Up: RIP
5.12 RIP Debug Commands
=======================
Debug for RIP protocol.
-- Command: debug rip events
Debug rip events.
`debug rip' will show RIP events. Sending and receiving packets,
timers, and changes in interfaces are events shown with `ripd'.
-- Command: debug rip packet
Debug rip packet.
`debug rip packet' will display detailed information about the RIP
packets. The origin and port number of the packet as well as a packet
dump is shown.
-- Command: debug rip zebra
Debug rip between zebra communication.
This command will show the communication between `ripd' and `zebra'.
The main information will include addition and deletion of paths to
the kernel and the sending and receiving of interface information.
-- Command: show debugging rip
Display `ripd''s debugging option.
`show debugging rip' will show all information currently set for ripd
debug.

File: quagga.info, Node: RIPng, Next: OSPFv2, Prev: RIP, Up: Top
6 RIPng
*******
`ripngd' supports the RIPng protocol as described in RFC2080. It's an
IPv6 reincarnation of the RIP protocol.
* Menu:
* Invoking ripngd::
* ripngd Configuration::
* ripngd Terminal Mode Commands::
* ripngd Filtering Commands::

File: quagga.info, Node: Invoking ripngd, Next: ripngd Configuration, Up: RIPng
6.1 Invoking ripngd
===================
There are no `ripngd' specific invocation options. Common options can
be specified (*note Common Invocation Options::).

File: quagga.info, Node: ripngd Configuration, Next: ripngd Terminal Mode Commands, Prev: Invoking ripngd, Up: RIPng
6.2 ripngd Configuration
========================
Currently ripngd supports the following commands:
-- Command: router ripng
Enable RIPng.
-- RIPng Command: flush_timer TIME
Set flush timer.
-- RIPng Command: network NETWORK
Set RIPng enabled interface by NETWORK
-- RIPng Command: network IFNAME
Set RIPng enabled interface by IFNAME
-- RIPng Command: route NETWORK
Set RIPng static routing announcement of NETWORK.
-- Command: router zebra
This command is the default and does not appear in the
configuration. With this statement, RIPng routes go to the
`zebra' daemon.

File: quagga.info, Node: ripngd Terminal Mode Commands, Next: ripngd Filtering Commands, Prev: ripngd Configuration, Up: RIPng
6.3 ripngd Terminal Mode Commands
=================================
-- Command: show ip ripng
-- Command: show debugging ripng
-- Command: debug ripng events
-- Command: debug ripng packet
-- Command: debug ripng zebra

File: quagga.info, Node: ripngd Filtering Commands, Prev: ripngd Terminal Mode Commands, Up: RIPng
6.4 ripngd Filtering Commands
=============================
-- Command: distribute-list ACCESS_LIST (in|out) IFNAME
You can apply an access-list to the interface using the
`distribute-list' command. ACCESS_LIST is an access-list name.
DIRECT is `in' or `out'. If DIRECT is `in', the access-list is
applied only to incoming packets.
distribute-list local-only out sit1

File: quagga.info, Node: OSPFv2, Next: OSPFv3, Prev: RIPng, Up: Top
7 OSPFv2
********
OSPF (Open Shortest Path First) version 2 is a routing protocol which
is described in `RFC2328, OSPF Version 2'. OSPF is an IGP (Interior
Gateway Protocol).. Compared with RIP, OSPF can provide scalable
network support and faster convergence times. OSPF is widely used in
large networks such as ISP (Internet Service Provider) backbone and
enterprise networks.
* Menu:
* Configuring ospfd::
* OSPF router::
* OSPF area::
* OSPF interface::
* Redistribute routes to OSPF::
* Showing OSPF information::
* Debugging OSPF::
* OSPF Configuration Examples::

File: quagga.info, Node: Configuring ospfd, Next: OSPF router, Up: OSPFv2
7.1 Configuring ospfd
=====================
There are no `ospfd' specific options. Common options can be specified
(*note Common Invocation Options::) to `ospfd'. `ospfd' needs to
acquire interface information from `zebra' in order to function.
Therefore `zebra' must be running before invoking `ospfd'. Also, if
`zebra' is restarted then `ospfd' must be too.
Like other daemons, `ospfd' configuration is done in OSPF specific
configuration file `ospfd.conf'.

File: quagga.info, Node: OSPF router, Next: OSPF area, Prev: Configuring ospfd, Up: OSPFv2
7.2 OSPF router
===============
To start OSPF process you have to specify the OSPF router. As of this
writing, `ospfd' does not support multiple OSPF processes.
-- Command: router ospf
-- Command: no router ospf
Enable or disable the OSPF process. `ospfd' does not yet support
multiple OSPF processes. So you can not specify an OSPF process
number.
-- OSPF Command: ospf router-id A.B.C.D
-- OSPF Command: no ospf router-id
This sets the router-ID of the OSPF process. The router-ID may be
an IP address of the router, but need not be - it can be any
arbitrary 32bit number. However it MUST be unique within the
entire OSPF domain to the OSPF speaker - bad things will happen if
multiple OSPF speakers are configured with the same router-ID! If
one is not specified then `ospfd' will obtain a router-ID
automatically from `zebra'.
-- OSPF Command: ospf abr-type TYPE
-- OSPF Command: no ospf abr-type TYPE
TYPE can be cisco|ibm|shortcut|standard.
More information regarding the behaviour controlled by this
command can be found in `RFC 3509, Alternative Implementations of
OSPF Area Border Routers', and
`draft-ietf-ospf-shortcut-abr-02.txt'.
Quote: "Though the definition of the ABR (Area Border Router) in
the OSPF specification does not require a router with multiple
attached areas to have a backbone connection, it is actually
necessary to provide successful routing to the inter-area and
external destinations. If this requirement is not met, all traffic
destined for the areas not connected to such an ABR or out of the
OSPF domain, is dropped. This document describes alternative ABR
behaviors implemented in Cisco and IBM routers."
The default ABR type is 'Cisco', allowing an ABR to consider
summaries from non-backbone areas if, and only if, it has lost its
link(s) to the backbone area.
-- OSPF Command: ospf rfc1583compatibility
-- OSPF Command: no ospf rfc1583compatibility
This `RFC2328', the sucessor to `RFC1583', suggests according to
section G.2 (changes) in section 16.4 a change to the path
preference algorithm that prevents possible routing loops that were
possible in the old version of OSPFv2. More specifically it demands
that inter-area paths and intra-area path are now of equal
preference but still both preferred to external paths.
This command should NOT be set normally.
-- OSPF Command: passive interface INTERFACE
-- OSPF Command: no passive interface INTERFACE
Do not speak OSPF interface on the given interface, but do
advertise the interface as a stub link in the router-LSA (Link
State Advertisement) for this router. This allows one to advertise
addresses on such connected interfaces without having to originate
AS-External/Type-5 LSAs (which have global flooding scope) - as
would occur if connected addresses were redistributed into OSPF,
*Note Redistribute routes to OSPF::.
-- OSPF Command: timers throttle spf DELAY INITIAL-HOLDTIME
MAX-HOLDTIME
-- OSPF Command: no timers throttle spf
This command sets the initial DELAY, the INITIAL-HOLDTIME and the
MAXIMUM-HOLDTIME between when SPF is calculated and the event
which triggered the calculation. The times are specified in
milliseconds and must be in the range of 0 to 600000 milliseconds.
The DELAY specifies the minimum amount of time to delay SPF
calculation (hence it affects how long SPF calculation is delayed
after an event which occurs outside of the holdtime of any
previous SPF calculation, and also serves as a minimum holdtime).
Consecutive SPF calculations will always be seperated by at least
'hold-time' milliseconds. The hold-time is adaptive and initially
is set to the INITIAL-HOLDTIME configured with the above command.
Events which occur within the holdtime of the previous SPF
calculation will cause the holdtime to be increased by
INITIAL-HOLDTIME, bounded by the MAXIMUM-HOLDTIME configured with
this command. If the adaptive hold-time elapses without any
SPF-triggering event occuring then the current holdtime is reset
to the INITIAL-HOLDTIME. The current holdtime can be viewed with
*Note show ip ospf::, where it is expressed as a multiplier of the
INITIAL-HOLDTIME.
router ospf
timers throttle spf 200 400 10000
In this example, the DELAY is set to 200ms, the INITIAL HOLDTIME
is set to 400ms and the MAXIMUM HOLDTIME to 10s. Hence there will
always be at least 200ms between an event which requires SPF
calculation and the actual SPF calculation. Further consecutive SPF
calculations will always be seperated by between 400ms to 10s, the
hold-time increasing by 400ms each time an SPF-triggering event
occurs within the hold-time of the previous SPF calculation.
This command supercedes the `timers spf' command in previous Quagga
releases.
-- OSPF Command: max-metric router-lsa [on-startup|on-shutdown]
<5-86400>
-- OSPF Command: max-metric router-lsa administrative
-- OSPF Command: no max-metric router-lsa
[on-startup|on-shutdown|administrative]
This enables `RFC3137, OSPF Stub Router Advertisement' support,
where the OSPF process describes its transit links in its
router-LSA as having infinite distance so that other routers will
avoid calculating transit paths through the router while still
being able to reach networks through the router.
This support may be enabled administratively (and indefinitely) or
conditionally. Conditional enabling of max-metric router-lsas can
be for a period of seconds after startup and/or for a period of
seconds prior to shutdown.
Enabling this for a period after startup allows OSPF to converge
fully first without affecting any existing routes used by other
routers, while still allowing any connected stub links and/or
redistributed routes to be reachable. Enabling this for a period
of time in advance of shutdown allows the router to gracefully
excuse itself from the OSPF domain.
Enabling this feature administratively allows for administrative
intervention for whatever reason, for an indefinite period of time.
Note that if the configuration is written to file, this
administrative form of the stub-router command will also be
written to file. If `ospfd' is restarted later, the command will
then take effect until manually deconfigured.
Configured state of this feature as well as current status, such
as the number of second remaining till on-startup or on-shutdown
ends, can be viewed with the *Note show ip ospf:: command.
-- OSPF Command: auto-cost reference-bandwidth <1-4294967>
-- OSPF Command: no auto-cost reference-bandwidth
This sets the reference bandwidth for cost calculations, where this
bandwidth is considered equivalent to an OSPF cost of 1, specified
in Mbits/s. The default is 100Mbit/s (i.e. a link of bandwidth
100Mbit/s or higher will have a cost of 1. Cost of lower bandwidth
links will be scaled with reference to this cost).
This configuration setting MUST be consistent across all routers
within the OSPF domain.
-- OSPF Command: network A.B.C.D/M area A.B.C.D
-- OSPF Command: network A.B.C.D/M area <0-4294967295>
-- OSPF Command: no network A.B.C.D/M area A.B.C.D
-- OSPF Command: no network A.B.C.D/M area <0-4294967295>
This command specifies the OSPF enabled interface(s). If the
interface has an address from range 192.168.1.0/24 then the
command below enables ospf on this interface so router can provide
network information to the other ospf routers via this interface.
router ospf
network 192.168.1.0/24 area 0.0.0.0
Prefix length in interface must be equal or bigger (ie. smaller
network) than prefix length in network statement. For example
statement above doesn't enable ospf on interface with address
192.168.1.1/23, but it does on interface with address
192.168.1.129/25.

File: quagga.info, Node: OSPF area, Next: OSPF interface, Prev: OSPF router, Up: OSPFv2
7.3 OSPF area
=============
-- OSPF Command: area A.B.C.D range A.B.C.D/M
-- OSPF Command: area <0-4294967295> range A.B.C.D/M
-- OSPF Command: no area A.B.C.D range A.B.C.D/M
-- OSPF Command: no area <0-4294967295> range A.B.C.D/M
Summarize intra area paths from specified area into one Type-3
summary-LSA announced to other areas. This command can be used
only in ABR and ONLY router-LSAs (Type-1) and network-LSAs
(Type-2) (ie. LSAs with scope area) can be summarized. Type-5
AS-external-LSAs can't be summarized - their scope is AS.
Summarizing Type-7 AS-external-LSAs isn't supported yet by Quagga.
router ospf
network 192.168.1.0/24 area 0.0.0.0
network 10.0.0.0/8 area 0.0.0.10
area 0.0.0.10 range 10.0.0.0/8
With configuration above one Type-3 Summary-LSA with routing info
10.0.0.0/8 is announced into backbone area if area 0.0.0.10
contains at least one intra-area network (ie. described with
router or network LSA) from this range.
-- OSPF Command: area A.B.C.D range IPV4_PREFIX not-advertise
-- OSPF Command: no area A.B.C.D range IPV4_PREFIX not-advertise
Instead of summarizing intra area paths filter them - ie. intra
area paths from this range are not advertised into other areas.
This command makes sense in ABR only.
-- OSPF Command: area A.B.C.D range IPV4_PREFIX substitute IPV4_PREFIX
-- OSPF Command: no area A.B.C.D range IPV4_PREFIX substitute
IPV4_PREFIX
Substitute summarized prefix with another prefix.
router ospf
network 192.168.1.0/24 area 0.0.0.0
network 10.0.0.0/8 area 0.0.0.10
area 0.0.0.10 range 10.0.0.0/8 substitute 11.0.0.0/8
One Type-3 summary-LSA with routing info 11.0.0.0/8 is announced
into backbone area if area 0.0.0.10 contains at least one
intra-area network (ie. described with router-LSA or network-LSA)
from range 10.0.0.0/8. This command makes sense in ABR only.
-- OSPF Command: area A.B.C.D virtual-link A.B.C.D
-- OSPF Command: area <0-4294967295> virtual-link A.B.C.D
-- OSPF Command: no area A.B.C.D virtual-link A.B.C.D
-- OSPF Command: no area <0-4294967295> virtual-link A.B.C.D
-- OSPF Command: area A.B.C.D shortcut
-- OSPF Command: area <0-4294967295> shortcut
-- OSPF Command: no area A.B.C.D shortcut
-- OSPF Command: no area <0-4294967295> shortcut
Configure th area as Shortcut capable. See `RFC3509'. This requires
that the 'abr-type' be set to 'shortcut'.
-- OSPF Command: area A.B.C.D stub
-- OSPF Command: area <0-4294967295> stub
-- OSPF Command: no area A.B.C.D stub
-- OSPF Command: no area <0-4294967295> stub
Configure the area to be a stub area. That is, an area where no
router originates routes external to OSPF and hence an area where
all external routes are via the ABR(s). Hence, ABRs for such an
area do not need to pass AS-External LSAs (type-5s) or
ASBR-Summary LSAs (type-4) into the area. They need only pass
Network-Summary (type-3) LSAs into such an area, just a default
summary.
-- OSPF Command: area A.B.C.D stub no-summary
-- OSPF Command: area <0-4294967295> stub no-summary
-- OSPF Command: no area A.B.C.D stub no-summary
-- OSPF Command: no area <0-4294967295> stub no-summary
Prevents an `ospfd' ABR from injecting inter-area summaries into
the specified stub area.
-- OSPF Command: area A.B.C.D default-cost <0-16777215>
-- OSPF Command: no area A.B.C.D default-cost <0-16777215>
Set the cost of default-summary LSAs announced to stubby areas.
-- OSPF Command: area A.B.C.D export-list NAME
-- OSPF Command: area <0-4294967295> export-list NAME
-- OSPF Command: no area A.B.C.D export-list NAME
-- OSPF Command: no area <0-4294967295> export-list NAME
Filter Type-3 summary-LSAs announced to other areas originated
from intra- area paths from specified area.
router ospf
network 192.168.1.0/24 area 0.0.0.0
network 10.0.0.0/8 area 0.0.0.10
area 0.0.0.10 export-list foo
!
access-list foo permit 10.10.0.0/16
access-list foo deny any
With example above any intra-area paths from area 0.0.0.10 and
from range 10.10.0.0/16 (for example 10.10.1.0/24 and
10.10.2.128/30) are announced into other areas as Type-3
summary-LSA's, but any others (for example 10.11.0.0/16 or
10.128.30.16/30) aren't.
This command is only relevant if the router is an ABR for the
specified area.
-- OSPF Command: area A.B.C.D import-list NAME
-- OSPF Command: area <0-4294967295> import-list NAME
-- OSPF Command: no area A.B.C.D import-list NAME
-- OSPF Command: no area <0-4294967295> import-list NAME
Same as export-list, but it applies to paths announced into
specified area as Type-3 summary-LSAs.
-- OSPF Command: area A.B.C.D filter-list prefix NAME in
-- OSPF Command: area A.B.C.D filter-list prefix NAME out
-- OSPF Command: area <0-4294967295> filter-list prefix NAME in
-- OSPF Command: area <0-4294967295> filter-list prefix NAME out
-- OSPF Command: no area A.B.C.D filter-list prefix NAME in
-- OSPF Command: no area A.B.C.D filter-list prefix NAME out
-- OSPF Command: no area <0-4294967295> filter-list prefix NAME in
-- OSPF Command: no area <0-4294967295> filter-list prefix NAME out
Filtering Type-3 summary-LSAs to/from area using prefix lists.
This command makes sense in ABR only.
-- OSPF Command: area A.B.C.D authentication
-- OSPF Command: area <0-4294967295> authentication
-- OSPF Command: no area A.B.C.D authentication
-- OSPF Command: no area <0-4294967295> authentication
Specify that simple password authentication should be used for the
given area.
-- OSPF Command: area A.B.C.D authentication message-digest
-- OSPF Command: area <0-4294967295> authentication message-digest
Specify that OSPF packets should be authenticated with MD5 HMACs
for the given area.

File: quagga.info, Node: OSPF interface, Next: Redistribute routes to OSPF, Prev: OSPF area, Up: OSPFv2
7.4 OSPF interface
==================
-- Interface Command: ip ospf authentication-key AUTH_KEY
-- Interface Command: no ip ospf authentication-key
Set OSPF authentication key to a simple password. After setting
AUTH_KEY, all OSPF packets are authenticated. AUTH_KEY has length
up to 8 chars.
-- Interface Command: ip ospf message-digest-key KEYID md5 KEY
-- Interface Command: no ip ospf message-digest-key
Set OSPF authentication key to a cryptographic password. The
cryptographic algorithm is MD5. KEYID identifies secret key used
to create the message digest. KEY is the actual message digest
key up to 16 chars.
Note that OSPF MD5 authentication requires that time never go
backwards (correct time is NOT important, only that it never goes
backwards), even across resets, if ospfd is to be able to promptly
reestabish adjacencies with its neighbours after restarts/reboots.
The host should have system time be set at boot from an external
source (eg battery backed clock, NTP, etc.) or else the system
clock should be periodically saved to non-volative storage and
restored at boot if MD5 authentication is to be expected to work
reliably.
-- Interface Command: ip ospf cost <1-65535>
-- Interface Command: no ip ospf cost
Set link cost for the specified interface. The cost value is set
to router-LSA's metric field and used for SPF calculation.
-- Interface Command: ip ospf dead-interval <1-65535>
-- Interface Command: ip ospf dead-interval minimal hello-multiplier
<2-20>
-- Interface Command: no ip ospf dead-interval
Set number of seconds for RouterDeadInterval timer value used for
Wait Timer and Inactivity Timer. This value must be the same for
all routers attached to a common network. The default value is 40
seconds.
If 'minimal' is specified instead, then the dead-interval is set
to 1 second and one must specify a hello-multiplier. The
hello-multiplier specifies how many Hellos to send per second,
from 2 (every 500ms) to 20 (every 50ms). Thus one can have 1s
convergence time for OSPF. If this form is specified, then the
hello-interval advertised in Hello packets is set to 0 and the
hello-interval on received Hello packets is not checked, thus the
hello-multiplier need NOT be the same across multiple routers on a
common link.
-- Interface Command: ip ospf hello-interval <1-65535>
-- Interface Command: no ip ospf hello-interval
Set number of seconds for HelloInterval timer value. Setting this
value, Hello packet will be sent every timer value seconds on the
specified interface. This value must be the same for all routers
attached to a common network. The default value is 10 seconds.
This command has no effect if *Note ip ospf dead-interval
minimal:: is also specified for the interface.
-- Interface Command: ip ospf network
(broadcast|non-broadcast|point-to-multipoint|point-to-point)
-- Interface Command: no ip ospf network
Set explicitly network type for specifed interface.
-- Interface Command: ip ospf priority <0-255>
-- Interface Command: no ip ospf priority
Set RouterPriority integer value. Setting higher value, router
will be more eligible to become Designated Router. Setting the
value to 0, router is no longer eligible to Designated Router.
The default value is 1.
-- Interface Command: ip ospf retransmit-interval <1-65535>
-- Interface Command: no ip ospf retransmit interval
Set number of seconds for RxmtInterval timer value. This value is
used when retransmitting Database Description and Link State
Request packets. The default value is 5 seconds.
-- Interface Command: ip ospf transmit-delay
-- Interface Command: no ip ospf transmit-delay
Set number of seconds for InfTransDelay value. LSAs' age should be
incremented by this value when transmitting. The default value is
1 seconds.

File: quagga.info, Node: Redistribute routes to OSPF, Next: Showing OSPF information, Prev: OSPF interface, Up: OSPFv2
7.5 Redistribute routes to OSPF
===============================
-- OSPF Command: redistribute (kernel|connected|static|rip|bgp)
-- OSPF Command: redistribute (kernel|connected|static|rip|bgp)
ROUTE-MAP
-- OSPF Command: redistribute (kernel|connected|static|rip|bgp)
metric-type (1|2)
-- OSPF Command: redistribute (kernel|connected|static|rip|bgp)
metric-type (1|2) route-map WORD
-- OSPF Command: redistribute (kernel|connected|static|rip|bgp) metric
<0-16777214>
-- OSPF Command: redistribute (kernel|connected|static|rip|bgp) metric
<0-16777214> route-map WORD
-- OSPF Command: redistribute (kernel|connected|static|rip|bgp)
metric-type (1|2) metric <0-16777214>
-- OSPF Command: redistribute (kernel|connected|static|rip|bgp)
metric-type (1|2) metric <0-16777214> route-map WORD
-- OSPF Command: no redistribute (kernel|connected|static|rip|bgp)
Redistribute routes of the specified protocol or kind into OSPF,
with the metric type and metric set if specified, filtering the
routes using the given route-map if specified.
-- OSPF Command: default-information originate
-- OSPF Command: default-information originate metric <0-16777214>
-- OSPF Command: default-information originate metric <0-16777214>
metric-type (1|2)
-- OSPF Command: default-information originate metric <0-16777214>
metric-type (1|2) route-map WORD
-- OSPF Command: default-information originate always
-- OSPF Command: default-information originate always metric
<0-16777214>
-- OSPF Command: default-information originate always metric
<0-16777214> metric-type (1|2)
-- OSPF Command: default-information originate always metric
<0-16777214> metric-type (1|2) route-map WORD
-- OSPF Command: no default-information originate
Originate an AS-External (type-5) LSA describing a default route
into all external-routing capable areas, of the specified metric
and metric type. If the 'always' keyword is given then the default
is always advertised, even when there is no default present in the
routing table.
-- OSPF Command: distribute-list NAME out
(kernel|connected|static|rip|ospf
-- OSPF Command: no distribute-list NAME out
(kernel|connected|static|rip|ospf
-- OSPF Command: default-metric <0-16777214>
-- OSPF Command: no default-metric
-- OSPF Command: distance <1-255>
-- OSPF Command: no distance <1-255>
-- OSPF Command: distance ospf (intra-area|inter-area|external)
<1-255>
-- OSPF Command: no distance ospf
-- Command: router zebra
-- Command: no router zebra

File: quagga.info, Node: Showing OSPF information, Next: Debugging OSPF, Prev: Redistribute routes to OSPF, Up: OSPFv2
7.6 Showing OSPF information
============================
-- Command: show ip ospf
Show information on a variety of general OSPF and area state and
configuration information.
-- Command: show ip ospf interface [INTERFACE]
Show state and configuration of OSPF the specified interface, or
all interfaces if no interface is given.
-- Command: show ip ospf neighbor
-- Command: show ip ospf neighbor INTERFACE
-- Command: show ip ospf neighbor detail
-- Command: show ip ospf neighbor INTERFACE detail
-- Command: show ip ospf database
-- Command: show ip ospf database
(asbr-summary|external|network|router|summary)
-- Command: show ip ospf database
(asbr-summary|external|network|router|summary) LINK-STATE-ID
-- Command: show ip ospf database
(asbr-summary|external|network|router|summary) LINK-STATE-ID adv-router
ADV-ROUTER
-- Command: show ip ospf database
(asbr-summary|external|network|router|summary) adv-router ADV-ROUTER
-- Command: show ip ospf database
(asbr-summary|external|network|router|summary) LINK-STATE-ID
self-originate
-- Command: show ip ospf database
(asbr-summary|external|network|router|summary) self-originate
-- Command: show ip ospf database max-age
-- Command: show ip ospf database self-originate
-- Command: show ip ospf route
Show the OSPF routing table, as determined by the most recent SPF
calculation.

File: quagga.info, Node: Debugging OSPF, Next: OSPF Configuration Examples, Prev: Showing OSPF information, Up: OSPFv2
7.7 Debugging OSPF
==================
-- Command: debug ospf packet
(hello|dd|ls-request|ls-update|ls-ack|all) (send|recv) [detail]
-- Command: no debug ospf packet
(hello|dd|ls-request|ls-update|ls-ack|all) (send|recv) [detail]
-- Command: debug ospf ism
-- Command: debug ospf ism (status|events|timers)
-- Command: no debug ospf ism
-- Command: no debug ospf ism (status|events|timers)
-- Command: debug ospf nsm
-- Command: debug ospf nsm (status|events|timers)
-- Command: no debug ospf nsm
-- Command: no debug ospf nsm (status|events|timers)
-- Command: debug ospf lsa
-- Command: debug ospf lsa (generate|flooding|refresh)
-- Command: no debug ospf lsa
-- Command: no debug ospf lsa (generate|flooding|refresh)
-- Command: debug ospf zebra
-- Command: debug ospf zebra (interface|redistribute)
-- Command: no debug ospf zebra
-- Command: no debug ospf zebra (interface|redistribute)
-- Command: show debugging ospf

File: quagga.info, Node: OSPF Configuration Examples, Prev: Debugging OSPF, Up: OSPFv2
7.8 OSPF Configuration Examples
===============================
A simple example, with MD5 authentication enabled:
!
interface bge0
ip ospf authentication message-digest
ip ospf message-digest-key 1 md5 ABCDEFGHIJK
!
router ospf
network 192.168.0.0/16 area 0.0.0.1
area 0.0.0.1 authentication message-digest
An ABR router, with MD5 authentication and performing summarisation
of networks between the areas:
!
password ABCDEF
log file /var/log/quagga/ospfd.log
service advanced-vty
!
interface eth0
ip ospf authentication message-digest
ip ospf message-digest-key 1 md5 ABCDEFGHIJK
!
interface ppp0
!
interface br0
ip ospf authentication message-digest
ip ospf message-digest-key 2 md5 XYZ12345
!
router ospf
ospf router-id 192.168.0.1
redistribute connected
passive interface ppp0
network 192.168.0.0/24 area 0.0.0.0
network 10.0.0.0/16 area 0.0.0.0
network 192.168.1.0/24 area 0.0.0.1
area 0.0.0.0 authentication message-digest
area 0.0.0.0 range 10.0.0.0/16
area 0.0.0.0 range 192.168.0.0/24
area 0.0.0.1 authentication message-digest
area 0.0.0.1 range 10.2.0.0/16
!

File: quagga.info, Node: OSPFv3, Next: BGP, Prev: OSPFv2, Up: Top
8 OSPFv3
********
`ospf6d' is a daemon support OSPF version 3 for IPv6 network. OSPF for
IPv6 is described in RFC2740.
* Menu:
* OSPF6 router::
* OSPF6 area::
* OSPF6 interface::
* Redistribute routes to OSPF6::
* Showing OSPF6 information::
* OSPF6 Configuration Examples::

File: quagga.info, Node: OSPF6 router, Next: OSPF6 area, Up: OSPFv3
8.1 OSPF6 router
================
-- Command: router ospf6
-- OSPF6 Command: router-id A.B.C.D
Set router's Router-ID.
-- OSPF6 Command: interface IFNAME area AREA
Bind interface to specified area, and start sending OSPF packets.
AREA can be specified as 0.

File: quagga.info, Node: OSPF6 area, Next: OSPF6 interface, Prev: OSPF6 router, Up: OSPFv3
8.2 OSPF6 area
==============
Area support for OSPFv3 is not yet implemented.

File: quagga.info, Node: OSPF6 interface, Next: Redistribute routes to OSPF6, Prev: OSPF6 area, Up: OSPFv3
8.3 OSPF6 interface
===================
-- Interface Command: ipv6 ospf6 cost COST
Sets interface's output cost. Default value is 1.
-- Interface Command: ipv6 ospf6 hello-interval HELLOINTERVAL
Sets interface's Hello Interval. Default 40
-- Interface Command: ipv6 ospf6 dead-interval DEADINTERVAL
Sets interface's Router Dead Interval. Default value is 40.
-- Interface Command: ipv6 ospf6 retransmit-interval
RETRANSMITINTERVAL
Sets interface's Rxmt Interval. Default value is 5.
-- Interface Command: ipv6 ospf6 priority PRIORITY
Sets interface's Router Priority. Default value is 1.
-- Interface Command: ipv6 ospf6 transmit-delay TRANSMITDELAY
Sets interface's Inf-Trans-Delay. Default value is 1.

File: quagga.info, Node: Redistribute routes to OSPF6, Next: Showing OSPF6 information, Prev: OSPF6 interface, Up: OSPFv3
8.4 Redistribute routes to OSPF6
================================
-- OSPF6 Command: redistribute static
-- OSPF6 Command: redistribute connected
-- OSPF6 Command: redistribute ripng

File: quagga.info, Node: Showing OSPF6 information, Next: OSPF6 Configuration Examples, Prev: Redistribute routes to OSPF6, Up: OSPFv3
8.5 Showing OSPF6 information
=============================
-- Command: show ipv6 ospf6 [INSTANCE_ID]
INSTANCE_ID is an optional OSPF instance ID. To see router ID and
OSPF instance ID, simply type "show ipv6 ospf6 <cr>".
-- Command: show ipv6 ospf6 database
This command shows LSA database summary. You can specify the type
of LSA.
-- Command: show ipv6 ospf6 interface
To see OSPF interface configuration like costs.
-- Command: show ipv6 ospf6 neighbor
Shows state and chosen (Backup) DR of neighbor.
-- Command: show ipv6 ospf6 request-list A.B.C.D
Shows requestlist of neighbor.
-- Command: show ipv6 route ospf6
This command shows internal routing table.

File: quagga.info, Node: OSPF6 Configuration Examples, Prev: Showing OSPF6 information, Up: OSPFv3
8.6 OSPF6 Configuration Examples
================================
Example of ospf6d configured on one interface and area:
interface eth0
ipv6 ospf6 instance-id 0
!
router ospf6
router-id 212.17.55.53
area 0.0.0.0 range 2001:770:105:2::/64
interface eth0 area 0.0.0.0
!

File: quagga.info, Node: BGP, Next: Configuring Quagga as a Route Server, Prev: OSPFv3, Up: Top
9 BGP
*****
BGP stands for a Border Gateway Protocol. The lastest BGP version is
4. It is referred as BGP-4. BGP-4 is one of the Exterior Gateway
Protocols and de-fact standard of Inter Domain routing protocol. BGP-4
is described in `RFC1771, A Border Gateway Protocol 4 (BGP-4)'.
Many extensions have been added to `RFC1771'. `RFC2858,
Multiprotocol Extensions for BGP-4' provides multiprotocol support to
BGP-4.
* Menu:
* Starting BGP::
* BGP router::
* BGP network::
* BGP Peer::
* BGP Peer Group::
* BGP Address Family::
* Autonomous System::
* BGP Communities Attribute::
* BGP Extended Communities Attribute::
* Displaying BGP routes::
* Capability Negotiation::
* Route Reflector::
* Route Server::
* How to set up a 6-Bone connection::
* Dump BGP packets and table::
* BGP Configuration Examples::

File: quagga.info, Node: Starting BGP, Next: BGP router, Up: BGP
9.1 Starting BGP
================
Default configuration file of `bgpd' is `bgpd.conf'. `bgpd' searches
the current directory first then /etc/quagga/bgpd.conf. All of bgpd's
command must be configured in `bgpd.conf'.
`bgpd' specific invocation options are described below. Common
options may also be specified (*note Common Invocation Options::).
`-p PORT'
`--bgp_port=PORT'
Set the bgp protocol's port number.
`-r'
`--retain'
When program terminates, retain BGP routes added by zebra.

File: quagga.info, Node: BGP router, Next: BGP network, Prev: Starting BGP, Up: BGP
9.2 BGP router
==============
First of all you must configure BGP router with `router bgp' command.
To configure BGP router, you need AS number. AS number is an
identification of autonomous system. BGP protocol uses the AS number
for detecting whether the BGP connection is internal one or external
one.
-- Command: router bgp ASN
Enable a BGP protocol process with the specified ASN. After this
statement you can input any `BGP Commands'. You can not create
different BGP process under different ASN without specifying
`multiple-instance' (*note Multiple instance::).
-- Command: no router bgp ASN
Destroy a BGP protocol process with the specified ASN.
-- BGP: bgp router-id A.B.C.D
This command specifies the router-ID. If `bgpd' connects to
`zebra' it gets interface and address information. In that case
default router ID value is selected as the largest IP Address of
the interfaces. When `router zebra' is not enabled `bgpd' can't
get interface information so `router-id' is set to 0.0.0.0. So
please set router-id by hand.
* Menu:
* BGP distance::
* BGP decision process::

File: quagga.info, Node: BGP distance, Next: BGP decision process, Up: BGP router
9.2.1 BGP distance
------------------
-- BGP: distance bgp <1-255> <1-255> <1-255>
This command change distance value of BGP. Each argument is
distance value for external routes, internal routes and local
routes.
-- BGP: distance <1-255> A.B.C.D/M
-- BGP: distance <1-255> A.B.C.D/M WORD
This command set distance value to

File: quagga.info, Node: BGP decision process, Prev: BGP distance, Up: BGP router
9.2.2 BGP decision process
--------------------------
1. Weight check
2. Local preference check.
3. Local route check.
4. AS path length check.
5. Origin check.
6. MED check.
-- BGP: bgp bestpath as-path confed
This command specifies that the length of confederation path sets
and sequences should should be taken into account during the BGP
best path decision process.

File: quagga.info, Node: BGP network, Next: BGP Peer, Prev: BGP router, Up: BGP
9.3 BGP network
===============
* Menu:
* BGP route::
* Route Aggregation::
* Redistribute to BGP::

File: quagga.info, Node: BGP route, Next: Route Aggregation, Up: BGP network
9.3.1 BGP route
---------------
-- BGP: network A.B.C.D/M
This command adds the announcement network.
router bgp 1
network 10.0.0.0/8
This configuration example says that network 10.0.0.0/8 will
be announced to all neighbors. Some vendors' routers don't
advertise routes if they aren't present in their IGP routing
tables; `bgp' doesn't care about IGP routes when announcing its
routes.
-- BGP: no network A.B.C.D/M

File: quagga.info, Node: Route Aggregation, Next: Redistribute to BGP, Prev: BGP route, Up: BGP network
9.3.2 Route Aggregation
-----------------------
-- BGP: aggregate-address A.B.C.D/M
This command specifies an aggregate address.
-- BGP: aggregate-address A.B.C.D/M as-set
This command specifies an aggregate address. Resulting routes
inlucde AS set.
-- BGP: aggregate-address A.B.C.D/M summary-only
This command specifies an aggregate address. Aggreated routes will
not be announce.
-- BGP: no aggregate-address A.B.C.D/M

File: quagga.info, Node: Redistribute to BGP, Prev: Route Aggregation, Up: BGP network
9.3.3 Redistribute to BGP
-------------------------
-- BGP: redistribute kernel
Redistribute kernel route to BGP process.
-- BGP: redistribute static
Redistribute static route to BGP process.
-- BGP: redistribute connected
Redistribute connected route to BGP process.
-- BGP: redistribute rip
Redistribute RIP route to BGP process.
-- BGP: redistribute ospf
Redistribute OSPF route to BGP process.

File: quagga.info, Node: BGP Peer, Next: BGP Peer Group, Prev: BGP network, Up: BGP
9.4 BGP Peer
============
* Menu:
* Defining Peer::
* BGP Peer commands::
* Peer filtering::

File: quagga.info, Node: Defining Peer, Next: BGP Peer commands, Up: BGP Peer
9.4.1 Defining Peer
-------------------
-- BGP: neighbor PEER remote-as ASN
Creates a new neighbor whose remote-as is ASN. PEER can be an
IPv4 address or an IPv6 address.
router bgp 1
neighbor 10.0.0.1 remote-as 2
In this case my router, in AS-1, is trying to peer with AS-2
at 10.0.0.1.
This command must be the first command used when configuring a
neighbor. If the remote-as is not specified, `bgpd' will complain
like this:
can't find neighbor 10.0.0.1

File: quagga.info, Node: BGP Peer commands, Next: Peer filtering, Prev: Defining Peer, Up: BGP Peer
9.4.2 BGP Peer commands
-----------------------
In a `router bgp' clause there are neighbor specific configurations
required.
-- BGP: neighbor PEER shutdown
-- BGP: no neighbor PEER shutdown
Shutdown the peer. We can delete the neighbor's configuration by
`no neighbor PEER remote-as AS-NUMBER' but all configuration of
the neighbor will be deleted. When you want to preserve the
configuration, but want to drop the BGP peer, use this syntax.
-- BGP: neighbor PEER ebgp-multihop
-- BGP: no neighbor PEER ebgp-multihop
-- BGP: neighbor PEER description ...
-- BGP: no neighbor PEER description ...
Set description of the peer.
-- BGP: neighbor PEER version VERSION
Set up the neighbor's BGP version. VERSION can be 4, 4+ or 4-.
BGP version 4 is the default value used for BGP peering. BGP
version 4+ means that the neighbor supports Multiprotocol
Extensions for BGP-4. BGP version 4- is similar but the neighbor
speaks the old Internet-Draft revision 00's Multiprotocol
Extensions for BGP-4. Some routing software is still using this
version.
-- BGP: neighbor PEER interface IFNAME
-- BGP: no neighbor PEER interface IFNAME
When you connect to a BGP peer over an IPv6 link-local address,
you have to specify the IFNAME of the interface used for the
connection.
-- BGP: neighbor PEER next-hop-self
-- BGP: no neighbor PEER next-hop-self
This command specifies an announced route's nexthop as being
equivalent to the address of the bgp router.
-- BGP: neighbor PEER update-source
-- BGP: no neighbor PEER update-source
-- BGP: neighbor PEER default-originate
-- BGP: no neighbor PEER default-originate
`bgpd''s default is to not announce the default route (0.0.0.0/0)
even it is in routing table. When you want to announce default
routes to the peer, use this command.
-- BGP: neighbor PEER port PORT
-- BGP: neighbor PEER port PORT
-- BGP: neighbor PEER send-community
-- BGP: neighbor PEER send-community
-- BGP: neighbor PEER weight WEIGHT
-- BGP: no neighbor PEER weight WEIGHT
This command specifies a default WEIGHT value for the neighbor's
routes.
-- BGP: neighbor PEER maximum-prefix NUMBER
-- BGP: no neighbor PEER maximum-prefix NUMBER

File: quagga.info, Node: Peer filtering, Prev: BGP Peer commands, Up: BGP Peer
9.4.3 Peer filtering
--------------------
-- BGP: neighbor PEER distribute-list NAME [in|out]
This command specifies a distribute-list for the peer. DIRECT is
`in' or `out'.
-- BGP command: neighbor PEER prefix-list NAME [in|out]
-- BGP command: neighbor PEER filter-list NAME [in|out]
-- BGP: neighbor PEER route-map NAME [in|out]
Apply a route-map on the neighbor. DIRECT must be `in' or `out'.

File: quagga.info, Node: BGP Peer Group, Next: BGP Address Family, Prev: BGP Peer, Up: BGP
9.5 BGP Peer Group
==================
-- BGP: neighbor WORD peer-group
This command defines a new peer group.
-- BGP: neighbor PEER peer-group WORD
This command bind specific peer to peer group WORD.

File: quagga.info, Node: BGP Address Family, Next: Autonomous System, Prev: BGP Peer Group, Up: BGP
9.6 BGP Address Family
======================

File: quagga.info, Node: Autonomous System, Next: BGP Communities Attribute, Prev: BGP Address Family, Up: BGP
9.7 Autonomous System
=====================
The AS (Autonomous System) number is one of the essential element of
BGP. BGP is a distance vector routing protocol, and the AS-Path
framework provides distance vector metric and loop detection to BGP.
`RFC1930, Guidelines for creation, selection, and registration of an
Autonomous System (AS)' provides some background on the concepts of an
AS.
The AS number is a two octet value, ranging in value from 1 to 65535.
The AS numbers 64512 through 65535 are defined as private AS numbers.
Private AS numbers must not to be advertised in the global Internet.
* Menu:
* AS Path Regular Expression::
* Display BGP Routes by AS Path::
* AS Path Access List::
* Using AS Path in Route Map::
* Private AS Numbers::

File: quagga.info, Node: AS Path Regular Expression, Next: Display BGP Routes by AS Path, Up: Autonomous System
9.7.1 AS Path Regular Expression
--------------------------------
AS path regular expression can be used for displaying BGP routes and AS
path access list. AS path regular expression is based on `POSIX
1003.2' regular expressions. Following description is just a subset of
`POSIX' regular expression. User can use full `POSIX' regular
expression. Adding to that special character '_' is added for AS path
regular expression.
`.'
Matches any single character.
`*'
Matches 0 or more occurrences of pattern.
`+'
Matches 1 or more occurrences of pattern.
`?'
Match 0 or 1 occurrences of pattern.
`^'
Matches the beginning of the line.
`$'
Matches the end of the line.
`_'
Character `_' has special meanings in AS path regular expression.
It matches to space and comma , and AS set delimiter { and } and AS
confederation delimiter `(' and `)'. And it also matches to the
beginning of the line and the end of the line. So `_' can be used
for AS value boundaries match. `show ip bgp regexp _7675_'
matches to all of BGP routes which as AS number include 7675.

File: quagga.info, Node: Display BGP Routes by AS Path, Next: AS Path Access List, Prev: AS Path Regular Expression, Up: Autonomous System
9.7.2 Display BGP Routes by AS Path
-----------------------------------
To show BGP routes which has specific AS path information `show ip bgp'
command can be used.
-- Command: show ip bgp regexp LINE
This commands display BGP routes that matches AS path regular
expression LINE.

File: quagga.info, Node: AS Path Access List, Next: Using AS Path in Route Map, Prev: Display BGP Routes by AS Path, Up: Autonomous System
9.7.3 AS Path Access List
-------------------------
AS path access list is user defined AS path.
-- Command: ip as-path access-list WORD {permit|deny} LINE
This command defines a new AS path access list.
-- Command: no ip as-path access-list WORD
-- Command: no ip as-path access-list WORD {permit|deny} LINE

File: quagga.info, Node: Using AS Path in Route Map, Next: Private AS Numbers, Prev: AS Path Access List, Up: Autonomous System
9.7.4 Using AS Path in Route Map
--------------------------------
-- Route Map: match as-path WORD
-- Route Map: set as-path prepend AS-PATH

File: quagga.info, Node: Private AS Numbers, Prev: Using AS Path in Route Map, Up: Autonomous System
9.7.5 Private AS Numbers
------------------------

File: quagga.info, Node: BGP Communities Attribute, Next: BGP Extended Communities Attribute, Prev: Autonomous System, Up: BGP
9.8 BGP Communities Attribute
=============================
BGP communities attribute is widely used for implementing policy
routing. Network operators can manipulate BGP communities attribute
based on their network policy. BGP communities attribute is defined in
`RFC1997, BGP Communities Attribute' and `RFC1998, An Application of
the BGP Community Attribute in Multi-home Routing'. It is an optional
transitive attribute, therefore local policy can travel through
different autonomous system.
Communities attribute is a set of communities values. Each
communities value is 4 octet long. The following format is used to
define communities value.
`AS:VAL'
This format represents 4 octet communities value. `AS' is high
order 2 octet in digit format. `VAL' is low order 2 octet in
digit format. This format is useful to define AS oriented policy
value. For example, `7675:80' can be used when AS 7675 wants to
pass local policy value 80 to neighboring peer.
`internet'
`internet' represents well-known communities value 0.
`no-export'
`no-export' represents well-known communities value `NO_EXPORT'
(0xFFFFFF01). All routes carry this value must not be advertised
to outside a BGP confederation boundary. If neighboring BGP peer
is part of BGP confederation, the peer is considered as inside a
BGP confederation boundary, so the route will be announced to the
peer.
`no-advertise'
`no-advertise' represents well-known communities value
`NO_ADVERTISE'
(0xFFFFFF02). All routes carry this value must not be advertise
to other BGP peers.
`local-AS'
`local-AS' represents well-known communities value
`NO_EXPORT_SUBCONFED' (0xFFFFFF03). All routes carry this value
must not be advertised to external BGP peers. Even if the
neighboring router is part of confederation, it is considered as
external BGP peer, so the route will not be announced to the peer.
When BGP communities attribute is received, duplicated communities
value in the communities attribute is ignored and each communities
values are sorted in numerical order.
* Menu:
* BGP Community Lists::
* Numbered BGP Community Lists::
* BGP Community in Route Map::
* Display BGP Routes by Community::
* Using BGP Communities Attribute::

File: quagga.info, Node: BGP Community Lists, Next: Numbered BGP Community Lists, Up: BGP Communities Attribute
9.8.1 BGP Community Lists
-------------------------
BGP community list is a user defined BGP communites attribute list.
BGP community list can be used for matching or manipulating BGP
communities attribute in updates.
There are two types of community list. One is standard community
list and another is expanded community list. Standard community list
defines communities attribute. Expanded community list defines
communities attribute string with regular expression. Standard
community list is compiled into binary format when user define it.
Standard community list will be directly compared to BGP communities
attribute in BGP updates. Therefore the comparison is faster than
expanded community list.
-- Command: ip community-list standard NAME {permit|deny} COMMUNITY
This command defines a new standard community list. COMMUNITY is
communities value. The COMMUNITY is compiled into community
structure. We can define multiple community list under same name.
In that case match will happen user defined order. Once the
community list matches to communities attribute in BGP updates it
return permit or deny by the community list definition. When
there is no matched entry, deny will be returned. When COMMUNITY
is empty it matches to any routes.
-- Command: ip community-list expanded NAME {permit|deny} LINE
This command defines a new expanded community list. LINE is a
string expression of communities attribute. LINE can include
regular expression to match communities attribute in BGP updates.
-- Command: no ip community-list NAME
-- Command: no ip community-list standard NAME
-- Command: no ip community-list expanded NAME
These commands delete community lists specified by NAME. All of
community lists shares a single name space. So community lists
can be removed simpley specifying community lists name.
-- Command: show ip community-list
-- Command: show ip community-list NAME
This command display current community list information. When
NAME is specified the specified community list's information is
shown.
# show ip community-list
Named Community standard list CLIST
permit 7675:80 7675:100 no-export
deny internet
Named Community expanded list EXPAND
permit :
# show ip community-list CLIST
Named Community standard list CLIST
permit 7675:80 7675:100 no-export
deny internet

File: quagga.info, Node: Numbered BGP Community Lists, Next: BGP Community in Route Map, Prev: BGP Community Lists, Up: BGP Communities Attribute
9.8.2 Numbered BGP Community Lists
----------------------------------
When number is used for BGP community list name, the number has special
meanings. Community list number in the range from 1 and 99 is standard
community list. Community list number in the range from 100 to 199 is
expanded community list. These community lists are called as numbered
community lists. On the other hand normal community lists is called as
named community lists.
-- Command: ip community-list <1-99> {permit|deny} COMMUNITY
This command defines a new community list. <1-99> is standard
community list number. Community list name within this range
defines standard community list. When COMMUNITY is empty it
matches to any routes.
-- Command: ip community-list <100-199> {permit|deny} COMMUNITY
This command defines a new community list. <100-199> is expanded
community list number. Community list name within this range
defines expanded community list.
-- Command: ip community-list NAME {permit|deny} COMMUNITY
When community list type is not specifed, the community list type
is automatically detected. If COMMUNITY can be compiled into
communities attribute, the community list is defined as a standard
community list. Otherwise it is defined as an expanded community
list. This feature is left for backward compability. Use of this
feature is not recommended.

File: quagga.info, Node: BGP Community in Route Map, Next: Display BGP Routes by Community, Prev: Numbered BGP Community Lists, Up: BGP Communities Attribute
9.8.3 BGP Community in Route Map
--------------------------------
In Route Map (*note Route Map::), we can match or set BGP communities
attribute. Using this feature network operator can implement their
network policy based on BGP communities attribute.
Following commands can be used in Route Map.
-- Route Map: match community WORD
-- Route Map: match community WORD exact-match
This command perform match to BGP updates using community list
WORD. When the one of BGP communities value match to the one of
communities value in community list, it is match. When
`exact-match' keyword is spcified, match happen only when BGP
updates have completely same communities value specified in the
community list.
-- Route Map: set community none
-- Route Map: set community COMMUNITY
-- Route Map: set community COMMUNITY additive
This command manipulate communities value in BGP updates. When
`none' is specified as communities value, it removes entire
communities attribute from BGP updates. When COMMUNITY is not
`none', specified communities value is set to BGP updates. If BGP
updates already has BGP communities value, the existing BGP
communities value is replaced with specified COMMUNITY value.
When `additive' keyword is specified, COMMUNITY is appended to the
existing communities value.
-- Route Map: set comm-list WORD delete
This command remove communities value from BGP communities
attribute. The WORD is community list name. When BGP route's
communities value matches to the community list WORD, the
communities value is removed. When all of communities value is
removed eventually, the BGP update's communities attribute is
completely removed.

File: quagga.info, Node: Display BGP Routes by Community, Next: Using BGP Communities Attribute, Prev: BGP Community in Route Map, Up: BGP Communities Attribute
9.8.4 Display BGP Routes by Community
-------------------------------------
To show BGP routes which has specific BGP communities attribute, `show
ip bgp' command can be used. The COMMUNITY value and community list
can be used for `show ip bgp' command.
-- Command: show ip bgp community
-- Command: show ip bgp community COMMUNITY
-- Command: show ip bgp community COMMUNITY exact-match
`show ip bgp community' displays BGP routes which has communities
attribute. When COMMUNITY is specified, BGP routes that matches
COMMUNITY value is displayed. For this command, `internet'
keyword can't be used for COMMUNITY value. When `exact-match' is
specified, it display only routes that have an exact match.
-- Command: show ip bgp community-list WORD
-- Command: show ip bgp community-list WORD exact-match
This commands display BGP routes that matches community list WORD.
When `exact-match' is specified, display only routes that have an
exact match.

File: quagga.info, Node: Using BGP Communities Attribute, Prev: Display BGP Routes by Community, Up: BGP Communities Attribute
9.8.5 Using BGP Communities Attribute
-------------------------------------
Following configuration is the most typical usage of BGP communities
attribute. AS 7675 provides upstream Internet connection to AS 100.
When following configuration exists in AS 7675, AS 100 networks
operator can set local preference in AS 7675 network by setting BGP
communities attribute to the updates.
router bgp 7675
neighbor 192.168.0.1 remote-as 100
neighbor 192.168.0.1 route-map RMAP in
!
ip community-list 70 permit 7675:70
ip community-list 70 deny
ip community-list 80 permit 7675:80
ip community-list 80 deny
ip community-list 90 permit 7675:90
ip community-list 90 deny
!
route-map RMAP permit 10
match community 70
set local-preference 70
!
route-map RMAP permit 20
match community 80
set local-preference 80
!
route-map RMAP permit 30
match community 90
set local-preference 90
Following configuration announce 10.0.0.0/8 from AS 100 to AS 7675.
The route has communities value 7675:80 so when above configuration
exists in AS 7675, announced route's local preference will be set to
value 80.
router bgp 100
network 10.0.0.0/8
neighbor 192.168.0.2 remote-as 7675
neighbor 192.168.0.2 route-map RMAP out
!
ip prefix-list PLIST permit 10.0.0.0/8
!
route-map RMAP permit 10
match ip address prefix-list PLIST
set community 7675:80
Following configuration is an example of BGP route filtering using
communities attribute. This configuration only permit BGP routes which
has BGP communities value 0:80 or 0:90. Network operator can put
special internal communities value at BGP border router, then limit the
BGP routes announcement into the internal network.
router bgp 7675
neighbor 192.168.0.1 remote-as 100
neighbor 192.168.0.1 route-map RMAP in
!
ip community-list 1 permit 0:80 0:90
!
route-map RMAP permit in
match community 1
Following exmaple filter BGP routes which has communities value 1:1.
When there is no match community-list returns deny. To avoid filtering
all of routes, we need to define permit any at last.
router bgp 7675
neighbor 192.168.0.1 remote-as 100
neighbor 192.168.0.1 route-map RMAP in
!
ip community-list standard FILTER deny 1:1
ip community-list standard FILTER permit
!
route-map RMAP permit 10
match community FILTER
Communities value keyword `internet' has special meanings in
standard community lists. In below example `internet' act as match
any. It matches all of BGP routes even if the route does not have
communities attribute at all. So community list `INTERNET' is same as
above example's `FILTER'.
ip community-list standard INTERNET deny 1:1
ip community-list standard INTERNET permit internet
Following configuration is an example of communities value deletion.
With this configuration communities value 100:1 and 100:2 is removed
from BGP updates. For communities value deletion, only `permit'
community-list is used. `deny' community-list is ignored.
router bgp 7675
neighbor 192.168.0.1 remote-as 100
neighbor 192.168.0.1 route-map RMAP in
!
ip community-list standard DEL permit 100:1 100:2
!
route-map RMAP permit 10
set comm-list DEL delete

File: quagga.info, Node: BGP Extended Communities Attribute, Next: Displaying BGP routes, Prev: BGP Communities Attribute, Up: BGP
9.9 BGP Extended Communities Attribute
======================================
BGP extended communities attribute is introduced with MPLS VPN/BGP
technology. MPLS VPN/BGP expands capability of network infrastructure
to provide VPN functionality. At the same time it requires a new
framework for policy routing. With BGP Extended Communities Attribute
we can use Route Target or Site of Origin for implementing network
policy for MPLS VPN/BGP.
BGP Extended Communities Attribute is similar to BGP Communities
Attribute. It is an optional transitive attribute. BGP Extended
Communities Attribute can carry multiple Extended Community value.
Each Extended Community value is eight octet length.
BGP Extended Communities Attribute provides an extended range
compared with BGP Communities Attribute. Adding to that there is a
type field in each value to provides community space structure.
There are two format to define Extended Community value. One is AS
based format the other is IP address based format.
`AS:VAL'
This is a format to define AS based Extended Community value.
`AS' part is 2 octets Global Administrator subfield in Extended
Community value. `VAL' part is 4 octets Local Administrator
subfield. `7675:100' represents AS 7675 policy value 100.
`IP-Address:VAL'
This is a format to define IP address based Extended Community
value. `IP-Address' part is 4 octets Global Administrator
subfield. `VAL' part is 2 octets Local Administrator subfield.
`10.0.0.1:100' represents
* Menu:
* BGP Extended Community Lists::
* BGP Extended Communities in Route Map::

File: quagga.info, Node: BGP Extended Community Lists, Next: BGP Extended Communities in Route Map, Up: BGP Extended Communities Attribute
9.9.1 BGP Extended Community Lists
----------------------------------
Expanded Community Lists is a user defined BGP Expanded Community Lists.
-- Command: ip extcommunity-list standard NAME {permit|deny}
EXTCOMMUNITY
This command defines a new standard extcommunity-list.
EXTCOMMUNITY is extended communities value. The EXTCOMMUNITY is
compiled into extended community structure. We can define
multiple extcommunity-list under same name. In that case match
will happen user defined order. Once the extcommunity-list
matches to extended communities attribute in BGP updates it return
permit or deny based upon the extcommunity-list definition. When
there is no matched entry, deny will be returned. When
EXTCOMMUNITY is empty it matches to any routes.
-- Command: ip extcommunity-list expanded NAME {permit|deny} LINE
This command defines a new expanded extcommunity-list. LINE is a
string expression of extended communities attribute. LINE can
include regular expression to match extended communities attribute
in BGP updates.
-- Command: no ip extcommunity-list NAME
-- Command: no ip extcommunity-list standard NAME
-- Command: no ip extcommunity-list expanded NAME
These commands delete extended community lists specified by NAME.
All of extended community lists shares a single name space. So
extended community lists can be removed simpley specifying the
name.
-- Command: show ip extcommunity-list
-- Command: show ip extcommunity-list NAME
This command display current extcommunity-list information. When
NAME is specified the community list's information is shown.
# show ip extcommunity-list

File: quagga.info, Node: BGP Extended Communities in Route Map, Prev: BGP Extended Community Lists, Up: BGP Extended Communities Attribute
9.9.2 BGP Extended Communities in Route Map
-------------------------------------------
-- Route Map: match extcommunity WORD
-- Route Map: set extcommunity rt EXTCOMMUNITY
This command set Route Target value.
-- Route Map: set extcommunity soo EXTCOMMUNITY
This command set Site of Origin value.

File: quagga.info, Node: Displaying BGP routes, Next: Capability Negotiation, Prev: BGP Extended Communities Attribute, Up: BGP
9.10 Displaying BGP Routes
==========================
* Menu:
* Show IP BGP::
* More Show IP BGP::

File: quagga.info, Node: Show IP BGP, Next: More Show IP BGP, Up: Displaying BGP routes
9.10.1 Show IP BGP
------------------
-- Command: show ip bgp
-- Command: show ip bgp A.B.C.D
-- Command: show ip bgp X:X::X:X
This command displays BGP routes. When no route is specified it
display all of IPv4 BGP routes.
BGP table version is 0, local router ID is 10.1.1.1
Status codes: s suppressed, d damped, h history, * valid, > best, i - internal
Origin codes: i - IGP, e - EGP, ? - incomplete
Network Next Hop Metric LocPrf Weight Path
*> 1.1.1.1/32 0.0.0.0 0 32768 i
Total number of prefixes 1

File: quagga.info, Node: More Show IP BGP, Prev: Show IP BGP, Up: Displaying BGP routes
9.10.2 More Show IP BGP
-----------------------
-- Command: show ip bgp regexp LINE
This command display BGP routes using AS path regular expression
(*note Display BGP Routes by AS Path::).
-- Command: show ip bgp community COMMUNITY
-- Command: show ip bgp community COMMUNITY exact-match
This command display BGP routes using COMMUNITY (*note Display BGP
Routes by Community::).
-- Command: show ip bgp community-list WORD
-- Command: show ip bgp community-list WORD exact-match
This command display BGP routes using community list (*note
Display BGP Routes by Community::).
-- Command: show ip bgp summary
-- Command: show ip bgp neighbor [PEER]
-- Command: clear ip bgp PEER
Clear peers which have addresses of X.X.X.X
-- Command: clear ip bgp PEER soft in
Clear peer using soft reconfiguration.
-- Command: show debug
-- Command: debug event
-- Command: debug update
-- Command: debug keepalive
-- Command: no debug event
-- Command: no debug update
-- Command: no debug keepalive

File: quagga.info, Node: Capability Negotiation, Next: Route Reflector, Prev: Displaying BGP routes, Up: BGP
9.11 Capability Negotiation
===========================
When adding IPv6 routing information exchange feature to BGP. There
were some proposals. IETF (Internet Engineering Task Force) IDR (Inter
Domain Routing) WG (Working group) adopted a proposal called
Multiprotocol Extension for BGP. The specification is described in
`RFC2283'. The protocol does not define new protocols. It defines new
attributes to existing BGP. When it is used exchanging IPv6 routing
information it is called BGP-4+. When it is used for exchanging
multicast routing information it is called MBGP.
`bgpd' supports Multiprotocol Extension for BGP. So if remote peer
supports the protocol, `bgpd' can exchange IPv6 and/or multicast
routing information.
Traditional BGP did not have the feature to detect remote peer's
capabilities, e.g. whether it can handle prefix types other than IPv4
unicast routes. This was a big problem using Multiprotocol Extension
for BGP to operational network. `RFC2842, Capabilities Advertisement
with BGP-4' adopted a feature called Capability Negotiation. `bgpd' use
this Capability Negotiation to detect the remote peer's capabilities.
If the peer is only configured as IPv4 unicast neighbor, `bgpd' does
not send these Capability Negotiation packets (at least not unless
other optional BGP features require capability negotation).
By default, Quagga will bring up peering with minimal common
capability for the both sides. For example, local router has unicast
and multicast capabilitie and remote router has unicast capability. In
this case, the local router will establish the connection with unicast
only capability. When there are no common capabilities, Quagga sends
Unsupported Capability error and then resets the connection.
If you want to completely match capabilities with remote peer.
Please use `strict-capability-match' command.
-- BGP: neighbor PEER strict-capability-match
-- BGP: no neighbor PEER strict-capability-match
Strictly compares remote capabilities and local capabilities. If
capabilities are different, send Unsupported Capability error then
reset connection.
You may want to disable sending Capability Negotiation OPEN message
optional parameter to the peer when remote peer does not implement
Capability Negotiation. Please use `dont-capability-negotiate' command
to disable the feature.
-- BGP: neighbor PEER dont-capability-negotiate
-- BGP: no neighbor PEER dont-capability-negotiate
Suppress sending Capability Negotiation as OPEN message optional
parameter to the peer. This command only affects the peer is
configured other than IPv4 unicast configuration.
When remote peer does not have capability negotiation feature, remote
peer will not send any capabilities at all. In that case, bgp
configures the peer with configured capabilities.
You may prefer locally configured capabilities more than the
negotiated capabilities even though remote peer sends capabilities. If
the peer is configured by `override-capability', `bgpd' ignores
received capabilities then override negotiated capabilities with
configured values.
-- BGP: neighbor PEER override-capability
-- BGP: no neighbor PEER override-capability
Override the result of Capability Negotiation with local
configuration. Ignore remote peer's capability value.

File: quagga.info, Node: Route Reflector, Next: Route Server, Prev: Capability Negotiation, Up: BGP
9.12 Route Reflector
====================
-- BGP: bgp cluster-id A.B.C.D
-- BGP: neighbor PEER route-reflector-client
-- BGP: no neighbor PEER route-reflector-client

File: quagga.info, Node: Route Server, Next: How to set up a 6-Bone connection, Prev: Route Reflector, Up: BGP
9.13 Route Server
=================
At an Internet Exchange point, many ISPs are connected to each other by
external BGP peering. Normally these external BGP connection are done
by `full mesh' method. As with internal BGP full mesh formation, this
method has a scaling problem.
This scaling problem is well known. Route Server is a method to
resolve the problem. Each ISP's BGP router only peers to Route Server.
Route Server serves as BGP information exchange to other BGP routers.
By applying this method, numbers of BGP connections is reduced from
O(n*(n-1)/2) to O(n).
Unlike normal BGP router, Route Server must have several routing
tables for managing different routing policies for each BGP speaker.
We call the routing tables as different `view's. `bgpd' can work as
normal BGP router or Route Server or both at the same time.
* Menu:
* Multiple instance::
* BGP instance and view::
* Routing policy::
* Viewing the view::

File: quagga.info, Node: Multiple instance, Next: BGP instance and view, Up: Route Server
9.13.1 Multiple instance
------------------------
To enable multiple view function of `bgpd', you must turn on multiple
instance feature beforehand.
-- Command: bgp multiple-instance
Enable BGP multiple instance feature. After this feature is
enabled, you can make multiple BGP instances or multiple BGP views.
-- Command: no bgp multiple-instance
Disable BGP multiple instance feature. You can not disable this
feature when BGP multiple instances or views exist.
When you want to make configuration more Cisco like one,
-- Command: bgp config-type cisco
Cisco compatible BGP configuration output.
When bgp config-type cisco is specified,
"no synchronization" is displayed. "no auto-summary" is desplayed.
"network" and "aggregate-address" argument is displayed as "A.B.C.D
M.M.M.M"
Quagga: network 10.0.0.0/8 Cisco: network 10.0.0.0
Quagga: aggregate-address 192.168.0.0/24 Cisco: aggregate-address
192.168.0.0 255.255.255.0
Community attribute handling is also different. If there is no
configuration is specified community attribute and extended community
attribute are sent to neighbor. When user manually disable the feature
community attribute is not sent to the neighbor. In case of `bgp
config-type cisco' is specified, community attribute is not sent to the
neighbor by default. To send community attribute user has to specify
`neighbor A.B.C.D send-community' command.
!
router bgp 1
neighbor 10.0.0.1 remote-as 1
no neighbor 10.0.0.1 send-community
!
router bgp 1
neighbor 10.0.0.1 remote-as 1
neighbor 10.0.0.1 send-community
!
-- Command: bgp config-type zebra
Quagga style BGP configuration. This is default.

File: quagga.info, Node: BGP instance and view, Next: Routing policy, Prev: Multiple instance, Up: Route Server
9.13.2 BGP instance and view
----------------------------
BGP instance is a normal BGP process. The result of route selection
goes to the kernel routing table. You can setup different AS at the
same time when BGP multiple instance feature is enabled.
-- Command: router bgp AS-NUMBER
Make a new BGP instance. You can use arbitrary word for the NAME.
bgp multiple-instance
!
router bgp 1
neighbor 10.0.0.1 remote-as 2
neighbor 10.0.0.2 remote-as 3
!
router bgp 2
neighbor 10.0.0.3 remote-as 4
neighbor 10.0.0.4 remote-as 5
BGP view is almost same as normal BGP process. The result of route
selection does not go to the kernel routing table. BGP view is only
for exchanging BGP routing information.
-- Command: router bgp AS-NUMBER view NAME
Make a new BGP view. You can use arbitrary word for the NAME.
This view's route selection result does not go to the kernel
routing table.
With this command, you can setup Route Server like below.
bgp multiple-instance
!
router bgp 1 view 1
neighbor 10.0.0.1 remote-as 2
neighbor 10.0.0.2 remote-as 3
!
router bgp 2 view 2
neighbor 10.0.0.3 remote-as 4
neighbor 10.0.0.4 remote-as 5

File: quagga.info, Node: Routing policy, Next: Viewing the view, Prev: BGP instance and view, Up: Route Server
9.13.3 Routing policy
---------------------
You can set different routing policy for a peer. For example, you can
set different filter for a peer.
bgp multiple-instance
!
router bgp 1 view 1
neighbor 10.0.0.1 remote-as 2
neighbor 10.0.0.1 distribute-list 1 in
!
router bgp 1 view 2
neighbor 10.0.0.1 remote-as 2
neighbor 10.0.0.1 distribute-list 2 in
This means BGP update from a peer 10.0.0.1 goes to both BGP view 1
and view 2. When the update is inserted into view 1, distribute-list 1
is applied. On the other hand, when the update is inserted into view 2,
distribute-list 2 is applied.

File: quagga.info, Node: Viewing the view, Prev: Routing policy, Up: Route Server
9.13.4 Viewing the view
-----------------------
To display routing table of BGP view, you must specify view name.
-- Command: show ip bgp view NAME
Display routing table of BGP view NAME.

File: quagga.info, Node: How to set up a 6-Bone connection, Next: Dump BGP packets and table, Prev: Route Server, Up: BGP
9.14 How to set up a 6-Bone connection
======================================
zebra configuration
===================
!
! Actually there is no need to configure zebra
!
bgpd configuration
==================
!
! This means that routes go through zebra and into the kernel.
!
router zebra
!
! MP-BGP configuration
!
router bgp 7675
bgp router-id 10.0.0.1
neighbor 3ffe:1cfa:0:2:2a0:c9ff:fe9e:f56 remote-as AS-NUMBER
!
address-family ipv6
network 3ffe:506::/32
neighbor 3ffe:1cfa:0:2:2a0:c9ff:fe9e:f56 activate
neighbor 3ffe:1cfa:0:2:2a0:c9ff:fe9e:f56 route-map set-nexthop out
neighbor 3ffe:1cfa:0:2:2c0:4fff:fe68:a231 remote-as AS-NUMBER
neighbor 3ffe:1cfa:0:2:2c0:4fff:fe68:a231 route-map set-nexthop out
exit-address-family
!
ipv6 access-list all permit any
!
! Set output nexthop address.
!
route-map set-nexthop permit 10
match ipv6 address all
set ipv6 nexthop global 3ffe:1cfa:0:2:2c0:4fff:fe68:a225
set ipv6 nexthop local fe80::2c0:4fff:fe68:a225
!
! logfile FILENAME is obsolete. Please use log file FILENAME
log file bgpd.log
!

File: quagga.info, Node: Dump BGP packets and table, Next: BGP Configuration Examples, Prev: How to set up a 6-Bone connection, Up: BGP
9.15 Dump BGP packets and table
===============================
-- Command: dump bgp all PATH
-- Command: dump bgp all PATH INTERVAL
Dump all BGP packet and events to PATH file.
-- Command: dump bgp updates PATH
-- Command: dump bgp updates PATH INTERVAL
Dump BGP updates to PATH file.
-- Command: dump bgp routes PATH
-- Command: dump bgp routes PATH
Dump whole BGP routing table to PATH. This is heavy process.

File: quagga.info, Node: BGP Configuration Examples, Prev: Dump BGP packets and table, Up: BGP
9.16 BGP Configuration Examples
===============================
Example of a session to an upstream, advertising only one prefix to it.
router bgp 64512
bgp router-id 10.236.87.1
network 10.236.87.0/24
neighbor upstream peer-group
neighbor upstream remote-as 64515
neighbor upstream capability dynamic
neighbor upstream prefix-list pl-allowed-adv out
neighbor 10.1.1.1 peer-group upstream
neighbor 10.1.1.1 description ACME ISP
!
ip prefix-list pl-allowed-adv seq 5 permit 82.195.133.0/25
ip prefix-list pl-allowed-adv seq 10 deny any
A more complex example. With upstream, peer and customer sessions.
Advertising global prefixes and NO_EXPORT prefixes and providing
actions for customer routes based on community values. Extensive use of
route-maps and the 'call' feature to support selective advertising of
prefixes. This example is intended as guidance only, it has NOT been
tested and almost certainly containts silly mistakes, if not serious
flaws.
router bgp 64512
bgp router-id 10.236.87.1
network 10.123.456.0/24
network 10.123.456.128/25 route-map rm-no-export
neighbor upstream capability dynamic
neighbor upstream route-map rm-upstream-out out
neighbor cust capability dynamic
neighbor cust route-map rm-cust-in in
neighbor cust route-map rm-cust-out out
neighbor cust send-community both
neighbor peer capability dynamic
neighbor peer route-map rm-peer-in in
neighbor peer route-map rm-peer-out out
neighbor peer send-community both
neighbor 10.1.1.1 remote-as 64515
neighbor 10.1.1.1 peer-group upstream
neighbor 10.2.1.1 remote-as 64516
neighbor 10.2.1.1 peer-group upstream
neighbor 10.3.1.1 remote-as 64517
neighbor 10.3.1.1 peer-group cust-default
neighbor 10.3.1.1 description customer1
neighbor 10.3.1.1 prefix-list pl-cust1-network in
neighbor 10.4.1.1 remote-as 64518
neighbor 10.4.1.1 peer-group cust
neighbor 10.4.1.1 prefix-list pl-cust2-network in
neighbor 10.4.1.1 description customer2
neighbor 10.5.1.1 remote-as 64519
neighbor 10.5.1.1 peer-group peer
neighbor 10.5.1.1 prefix-list pl-peer1-network in
neighbor 10.5.1.1 description peer AS 1
neighbor 10.6.1.1 remote-as 64520
neighbor 10.6.1.1 peer-group peer
neighbor 10.6.1.1 prefix-list pl-peer2-network in
neighbor 10.6.1.1 description peer AS 2
!
ip prefix-list pl-default permit 0.0.0.0/0
!
ip prefix-list pl-upstream-peers permit 10.1.1.1/32
ip prefix-list pl-upstream-peers permit 10.2.1.1/32
!
ip prefix-list pl-cust1-network permit 10.3.1.0/24
ip prefix-list pl-cust1-network permit 10.3.2.0/24
!
ip prefix-list pl-cust2-network permit 10.4.1.0/24
!
ip prefix-list pl-peer1-network permit 10.5.1.0/24
ip prefix-list pl-peer1-network permit 10.5.2.0/24
ip prefix-list pl-peer1-network permit 192.168.0.0/24
!
ip prefix-list pl-peer2-network permit 10.6.1.0/24
ip prefix-list pl-peer2-network permit 10.6.2.0/24
ip prefix-list pl-peer2-network permit 192.168.1.0/24
ip prefix-list pl-peer2-network permit 192.168.2.0/24
ip prefix-list pl-peer2-network permit 172.16.1/24
!
ip as-path access-list asp-own-as permit ^$
ip as-path access-list asp-own-as permit _64512_
!
! #################################################################
! Match communities we provide actions for, on routes receives from
! customers. Communities values of <our-ASN>:X, with X, have actions:
!
! 100 - blackhole the prefix
! 200 - set no_export
! 300 - advertise only to other customers
! 400 - advertise only to upstreams
! 500 - set no_export when advertising to upstreams
! 2X00 - set local_preference to X00
!
! blackhole the prefix of the route
ip community-list standard cm-blackhole permit 64512:100
!
! set no-export community before advertising
ip community-list standard cm-set-no-export permit 64512:200
!
! advertise only to other customers
ip community-list standard cm-cust-only permit 64512:300
!
! advertise only to upstreams
ip community-list standard cm-upstream-only permit 64512:400
!
! advertise to upstreams with no-export
ip community-list standard cm-upstream-noexport permit 64512:500
!
! set local-pref to least significant 3 digits of the community
ip community-list standard cm-prefmod-100 permit 64512:2100
ip community-list standard cm-prefmod-200 permit 64512:2200
ip community-list standard cm-prefmod-300 permit 64512:2300
ip community-list standard cm-prefmod-400 permit 64512:2400
ip community-list expanded cme-prefmod-range permit 64512:2...
!
! Informational communities
!
! 3000 - learned from upstream
! 3100 - learned from customer
! 3200 - learned from peer
!
ip community-list standard cm-learnt-upstream permit 64512:3000
ip community-list standard cm-learnt-cust permit 64512:3100
ip community-list standard cm-learnt-peer permit 64512:3200
!
! ###################################################################
! Utility route-maps
!
! These utility route-maps generally should not used to permit/deny
! routes, i.e. they do not have meaning as filters, and hence probably
! should be used with 'on-match next'. These all finish with an empty
! permit entry so as not interfere with processing in the caller.
!
route-map rm-no-export permit 10
set community additive no-export
route-map rm-no-export permit 20
!
route-map rm-blackhole permit 10
description blackhole, up-pref and ensure it cant escape this AS
set ip next-hop 127.0.0.1
set local-preference 10
set community additive no-export
route-map rm-blackhole permit 20
!
! Set local-pref as requested
route-map rm-prefmod permit 10
match community cm-prefmod-100
set local-preference 100
route-map rm-prefmod permit 20
match community cm-prefmod-200
set local-preference 200
route-map rm-prefmod permit 30
match community cm-prefmod-300
set local-preference 300
route-map rm-prefmod permit 40
match community cm-prefmod-400
set local-preference 400
route-map rm-prefmod permit 50
!
! Community actions to take on receipt of route.
route-map rm-community-in permit 10
description check for blackholing, no point continuing if it matches.
match community cm-blackhole
call rm-blackhole
route-map rm-community-in permit 20
match community cm-set-no-export
call rm-no-export
on-match next
route-map rm-community-in permit 30
match community cme-prefmod-range
call rm-prefmod
route-map rm-community-in permit 40
!
! #####################################################################
! Community actions to take when advertising a route.
! These are filtering route-maps,
!
! Deny customer routes to upstream with cust-only set.
route-map rm-community-filt-to-upstream deny 10
match community cm-learnt-cust
match community cm-cust-only
route-map rm-community-filt-to-upstream permit 20
!
! Deny customer routes to other customers with upstream-only set.
route-map rm-community-filt-to-cust deny 10
match community cm-learnt-cust
match community cm-upstream-only
route-map rm-community-filt-to-cust permit 20
!
! ###################################################################
! The top-level route-maps applied to sessions. Further entries could
! be added obviously..
!
! Customers
route-map rm-cust-in permit 10
call rm-community-in
on-match next
route-map rm-cust-in permit 20
set community additive 64512:3100
route-map rm-cust-in permit 30
!
route-map rm-cust-out permit 10
call rm-community-filt-to-cust
on-match next
route-map rm-cust-out permit 20
!
! Upstream transit ASes
route-map rm-upstream-out permit 10
description filter customer prefixes which are marked cust-only
call rm-community-filt-to-upstream
on-match next
route-map rm-upstream-out permit 20
description only customer routes are provided to upstreams/peers
match community cm-learnt-cust
!
! Peer ASes
! outbound policy is same as for upstream
route-map rm-peer-out permit 10
call rm-upstream-out
!
route-map rm-peer-in permit 10
set community additive 64512:3200

File: quagga.info, Node: Configuring Quagga as a Route Server, Next: VTY shell, Prev: BGP, Up: Top
10 Configuring Quagga as a Route Server
***************************************
The purpose of a Route Server is to centralize the peerings between BGP
speakers. For example if we have an exchange point scenario with four
BGP speakers, each of which maintaining a BGP peering with the other
three (*note fig:full-mesh::), we can convert it into a centralized
scenario where each of the four establishes a single BGP peering
against the Route Server (*note fig:route-server::).
We will first describe briefly the Route Server model implemented by
Quagga. We will explain the commands that have been added for
configuring that model. And finally we will show a full example of
Quagga configured as Route Server.
* Menu:
* Description of the Route Server model::
* Commands for configuring a Route Server::
* Example of Route Server Configuration::

File: quagga.info, Node: Description of the Route Server model, Next: Commands for configuring a Route Server, Up: Configuring Quagga as a Route Server
10.1 Description of the Route Server model
==========================================
First we are going to describe the normal processing that BGP
announcements suffer inside a standard BGP speaker, as shown in *Note
fig:normal-processing::, it consists of three steps:
* When an announcement is received from some peer, the `In' filters
configured for that peer are applied to the announcement. These
filters can reject the announcement, accept it unmodified, or
accept it with some of its attributes modified.
* The announcements that pass the `In' filters go into the Best Path
Selection process, where they are compared to other announcements
referred to the same destination that have been received from
different peers (in case such other announcements exist). For each
different destination, the announcement which is selected as the
best is inserted into the BGP speaker's Loc-RIB.
* The routes which are inserted in the Loc-RIB are considered for
announcement to all the peers (except the one from which the route
came). This is done by passing the routes in the Loc-RIB through
the `Out' filters corresponding to each peer. These filters can
reject the route, accept it unmodified, or accept it with some of
its attributes modified. Those routes which are accepted by the
`Out' filters of a peer are announced to that peer.
_______________________________
/ _________ _________ \
From Peer A --->|(A)-|Best | | |-[A]|--->To Peer A
From Peer B --->|(B)-|Path |-->|Local-RIB|-[B]|--->To Peer B
From Peer C --->|(C)-|Selection| | |-[C]|--->To Peer C
From Peer D --->|(D)-|_________| |_________|-[D]|--->To Peer D
\_______________________________/
Key: (X) - 'In' Filter applied to Peer X's announcements
[X] - 'Out' Filter applied to announcements to Peer X
Figure 10.1: Announcement processing inside a "normal" BGP speaker
(RF1)--(RF2)
| \ / |
| \/ |
| /\ |
| / \ |
(RF3)--(RF4)
Figure 10.2: Full Mesh
(RF1) (RF2)
\ /
[RS]
/ \
(RF3) (RF4)
Figure 10.3: Route Server and clients
Of course we want that the routing tables obtained in each of the
routers are the same when using the route server than when not. But as
a consequence of having a single BGP peering (against the route
server), the BGP speakers can no longer distinguish from/to which peer
each announce comes/goes. This means that the routers connected to the
route server are not able to apply by themselves the same input/output
filters as in the full mesh scenario, so they have to delegate those
functions to the route server.
Even more, the "best path" selection must be also performed inside
the route server on behalf of its clients. The reason is that if, after
applying the filters of the announcer and the (potential) receiver, the
route server decides to send to some client two or more different
announcements referred to the same destination, the client will only
retain the last one, considering it as an implicit withdrawal of the
previous announcements for the same destination. This is the expected
behavior of a BGP speaker as defined in `RFC1771', and even though
there are some proposals of mechanisms that permit multiple paths for
the same destination to be sent through a single BGP peering, none are
currently supported by most existing BGP implementations.
As a consequence a route server must maintain additional information
and perform additional tasks for a RS-client that those necessary for
common BGP peerings. Essentially a route server must:
* Maintain a separated Routing Information Base (Loc-RIB) for each
peer configured as RS-client, containing the routes selected as a
result of the "Best Path Selection" process that is performed on
behalf of that RS-client.
* Whenever it receives an announcement from a RS-client, it must
consider it for the Loc-RIBs of the other RS-clients.
* This means that for each of them the route server must pass
the announcement through the appropriate `Out' filter of the
announcer.
* Then through the appropriate `In' filter of the potential
receiver.
* Only if the announcement is accepted by both filters it will
be passed to the "Best Path Selection" process.
* Finally, it might go into the Loc-RIB of the receiver.
When we talk about the "appropriate" filter, both the announcer and
the receiver of the route must be taken into account. Suppose that the
route server receives an announcement from client A, and the route
server is considering it for the Loc-RIB of client B. The filters that
should be applied are the same that would be used in the full mesh
scenario, i.e., first the `Out' filter of router A for announcements
going to router B, and then the `In' filter of router B for
announcements coming from router A.
We call "Export Policy" of a RS-client to the set of `Out' filters
that the client would use if there was no route server. The same
applies for the "Import Policy" of a RS-client and the set of `In'
filters of the client if there was no route server.
It is also common to demand from a route server that it does not
modify some BGP attributes (next-hop, as-path and MED) that are usually
modified by standard BGP speakers before announcing a route.
The announcement processing model implemented by Quagga is shown in
*Note fig:rs-processing::. The figure shows a mixture of RS-clients (B,
C and D) with normal BGP peers (A). There are some details that worth
additional comments:
* Announcements coming from a normal BGP peer are also considered
for the Loc-RIBs of all the RS-clients. But logically they do not
pass through any export policy.
* Those peers that are configured as RS-clients do not receive any
announce from the `Main' Loc-RIB.
* Apart from import and export policies, `In' and `Out' filters can
also be set for RS-clients. `In' filters might be useful when the
route server has also normal BGP peers. On the other hand, `Out'
filters for RS-clients are probably unnecessary, but we decided
not to remove them as they do not hurt anybody (they can always be
left empty).
�[image src="fig-rs-processing.png" alt="Route Server Processing Model" text="From Peer A
| From RS-Client B
| | From RS-Client C
| | | From RS-Client D
| | | |
| | | | Main / Normal RIB
| | | | ________________________________
| | | | / _________ _________ \\
| | | +--->|(D)-|Best | | Main | |
| | +--|--->|(C)-|Path |-->|Local-RIB|->[A]|--->To Peer A
| +--|--|--->|(B)-|Selection| | | |
+--|--|--|--->|(A)-|_________| |_________| |
| | | | \\________________________________/
| | | |
| | | | ________________________________
| | | | / _________ _________ \\
| | | +--->*D*->|{B}-|Best | |RS-Client| |
| | +--|--->*C*->|{B}-|Path |-->|Local-RIB|->[B]|--->To RS-Client B
| | | | | |Selection| | for B | |
+--|--|--|-------->|{B}-|_________| |_________| |
| | | | \\________________________________/
| | | |
| | | | ________________________________
| | | | / _________ _________ \\
| | | +--->*D*->|{C}-|Best | |RS-Client| |
| | | | | |Path |-->|Local-RIB|->[C]|--->To RS-Client C
| +--|--|--->*B*->|{C}-|Selection| | for C | |
+--|--|--|-------->|{C}-|_________| |_________| |
| | | \\________________________________/
| | |
| | | ________________________________
| | | / _________ _________ \\
| | | | |Best | |RS-Client| |
| | +------>*C*->|{D}-|Path |-->|Local-RIB|->[D]|--->To RS-Client D
| +--------->*B*->|{D}-|Selection| | for D | |
+----------------->|{D}-|_________| |_________| |
\\________________________________/
Key: (X) - 'In' Filter applied to Peer X's announcements before
considering announcement for the normal main Local-RIB
[X] - 'Out' Filter applied to announcements to Peer X
*X* - 'Export' Filter of RS-Client X, to apply X's policies
before its routes may be considered for other RS-Clients
RIBs.
{X} - 'Import' Filter of RS-Client X, to apply X's policies
on routes before allowing them into X's RIB.
"�]
Figure 10.4: Announcement processing model implemented by the Route Server

File: quagga.info, Node: Commands for configuring a Route Server, Next: Example of Route Server Configuration, Prev: Description of the Route Server model, Up: Configuring Quagga as a Route Server
10.2 Commands for configuring a Route Server
============================================
Now we will describe the commands that have been added to quagga in
order to support the route server features.
-- Route-Server: neighbor PEER-GROUP route-server-client
-- Route-Server: neighbor A.B.C.D route-server-client
-- Route-Server: neighbor X:X::X:X route-server-client
This command configures the peer given by PEER, A.B.C.D or
X:X::X:X as an RS-client.
Actually this command is not new, it already existed in standard
Quagga. It enables the transparent mode for the specified peer.
This means that some BGP attributes (as-path, next-hop and MED) of
the routes announced to that peer are not modified.
With the route server patch, this command, apart from setting the
transparent mode, creates a new Loc-RIB dedicated to the specified
peer (those named `Loc-RIB for X' in *Note Figure 10.4:
fig:rs-processing.). Starting from that moment, every announcement
received by the route server will be also considered for the new
Loc-RIB.
-- Route-Server: neigbor {A.B.C.D|X.X::X.X|peer-group} route-map WORD
{import|export}
This set of commands can be used to specify the route-map that
represents the Import or Export policy of a peer which is
configured as a RS-client (with the previous command).
-- Route-Server: match peer {A.B.C.D|X:X::X:X}
This is a new _match_ statement for use in route-maps, enabling
them to describe import/export policies. As we said before, an
import/export policy represents a set of input/output filters of
the RS-client. This statement makes possible that a single
route-map represents the full set of filters that a BGP speaker
would use for its different peers in a non-RS scenario.
The _match peer_ statement has different semantics whether it is
used inside an import or an export route-map. In the first case
the statement matches if the address of the peer who sends the
announce is the same that the address specified by
{A.B.C.D|X:X::X:X}. For export route-maps it matches when
{A.B.C.D|X:X::X:X} is the address of the RS-Client into whose
Loc-RIB the announce is going to be inserted (how the same export
policy is applied before different Loc-RIBs is shown in *Note
Figure 10.4: fig:rs-processing.).
-- Route-map Command: call WORD
This command (also used inside a route-map) jumps into a different
route-map, whose name is specified by WORD. When the called
route-map finishes, depending on its result the original route-map
continues or not. Apart from being useful for making import/export
route-maps easier to write, this command can also be used inside
any normal (in or out) route-map.

File: quagga.info, Node: Example of Route Server Configuration, Prev: Commands for configuring a Route Server, Up: Configuring Quagga as a Route Server
10.3 Example of Route Server Configuration
==========================================
Finally we are going to show how to configure a Quagga daemon to act as
a Route Server. For this purpose we are going to present a scenario
without route server, and then we will show how to use the
configurations of the BGP routers to generate the configuration of the
route server.
All the configuration files shown in this section have been taken
from scenarios which were tested using the VNUML tool VNUML
(http://www.dit.upm.es/vnuml).
* Menu:
* Configuration of the BGP routers without Route Server::
* Configuration of the BGP routers with Route Server::
* Configuration of the Route Server itself::
* Further considerations about Import and Export route-maps::

File: quagga.info, Node: Configuration of the BGP routers without Route Server, Next: Configuration of the BGP routers with Route Server, Up: Example of Route Server Configuration
10.3.1 Configuration of the BGP routers without Route Server
------------------------------------------------------------
We will suppose that our initial scenario is an exchange point with
three BGP capable routers, named RA, RB and RC. Each of the BGP
speakers generates some routes (with the NETWORK command), and
establishes BGP peerings against the other two routers. These peerings
have In and Out route-maps configured, named like "PEER-X-IN" or
"PEER-X-OUT". For example the configuration file for router RA could be
the following:
#Configuration for router 'RA'
!
hostname RA
password ****
!
router bgp 65001
no bgp default ipv4-unicast
neighbor 2001:0DB8::B remote-as 65002
neighbor 2001:0DB8::C remote-as 65003
!
address-family ipv6
network 2001:0DB8:AAAA:1::/64
network 2001:0DB8:AAAA:2::/64
network 2001:0DB8:0000:1::/64
network 2001:0DB8:0000:2::/64
neighbor 2001:0DB8::B activate
neighbor 2001:0DB8::B soft-reconfiguration inbound
neighbor 2001:0DB8::B route-map PEER-B-IN in
neighbor 2001:0DB8::B route-map PEER-B-OUT out
neighbor 2001:0DB8::C activate
neighbor 2001:0DB8::C soft-reconfiguration inbound
neighbor 2001:0DB8::C route-map PEER-C-IN in
neighbor 2001:0DB8::C route-map PEER-C-OUT out
exit-address-family
!
ipv6 prefix-list COMMON-PREFIXES seq 5 permit 2001:0DB8:0000::/48 ge 64 le 64
ipv6 prefix-list COMMON-PREFIXES seq 10 deny any
!
ipv6 prefix-list PEER-A-PREFIXES seq 5 permit 2001:0DB8:AAAA::/48 ge 64 le 64
ipv6 prefix-list PEER-A-PREFIXES seq 10 deny any
!
ipv6 prefix-list PEER-B-PREFIXES seq 5 permit 2001:0DB8:BBBB::/48 ge 64 le 64
ipv6 prefix-list PEER-B-PREFIXES seq 10 deny any
!
ipv6 prefix-list PEER-C-PREFIXES seq 5 permit 2001:0DB8:CCCC::/48 ge 64 le 64
ipv6 prefix-list PEER-C-PREFIXES seq 10 deny any
!
route-map PEER-B-IN permit 10
match ipv6 address prefix-list COMMON-PREFIXES
set metric 100
route-map PEER-B-IN permit 20
match ipv6 address prefix-list PEER-B-PREFIXES
set community 65001:11111
!
route-map PEER-C-IN permit 10
match ipv6 address prefix-list COMMON-PREFIXES
set metric 200
route-map PEER-C-IN permit 20
match ipv6 address prefix-list PEER-C-PREFIXES
set community 65001:22222
!
route-map PEER-B-OUT permit 10
match ipv6 address prefix-list PEER-A-PREFIXES
!
route-map PEER-C-OUT permit 10
match ipv6 address prefix-list PEER-A-PREFIXES
!
line vty
!

File: quagga.info, Node: Configuration of the BGP routers with Route Server, Next: Configuration of the Route Server itself, Prev: Configuration of the BGP routers without Route Server, Up: Example of Route Server Configuration
10.3.2 Configuration of the BGP routers with Route Server
---------------------------------------------------------
To convert the initial scenario into one with route server, first we
must modify the configuration of routers RA, RB and RC. Now they must
not peer between them, but only with the route server. For example, RA's
configuration would turn into:
# Configuration for router 'RA'
!
hostname RA
password ****
!
router bgp 65001
no bgp default ipv4-unicast
neighbor 2001:0DB8::FFFF remote-as 65000
!
address-family ipv6
network 2001:0DB8:AAAA:1::/64
network 2001:0DB8:AAAA:2::/64
network 2001:0DB8:0000:1::/64
network 2001:0DB8:0000:2::/64
neighbor 2001:0DB8::FFFF activate
neighbor 2001:0DB8::FFFF soft-reconfiguration inbound
exit-address-family
!
line vty
!
Which is logically much simpler than its initial configuration, as
it now maintains only one BGP peering and all the filters (route-maps)
have disappeared.

File: quagga.info, Node: Configuration of the Route Server itself, Next: Further considerations about Import and Export route-maps, Prev: Configuration of the BGP routers with Route Server, Up: Example of Route Server Configuration
10.3.3 Configuration of the Route Server itself
-----------------------------------------------
As we said when we described the functions of a route server (*note
Description of the Route Server model::), it is in charge of all the
route filtering. To achieve that, the In and Out filters from the RA,
RB and RC configurations must be converted into Import and Export
policies in the route server.
This is a fragment of the route server configuration (we only show
the policies for client RA):
# Configuration for Route Server ('RS')
!
hostname RS
password ix
!
bgp multiple-instance
!
router bgp 65000 view RS
no bgp default ipv4-unicast
neighbor 2001:0DB8::A remote-as 65001
neighbor 2001:0DB8::B remote-as 65002
neighbor 2001:0DB8::C remote-as 65003
!
address-family ipv6
neighbor 2001:0DB8::A activate
neighbor 2001:0DB8::A route-server-client
neighbor 2001:0DB8::A route-map RSCLIENT-A-IMPORT import
neighbor 2001:0DB8::A route-map RSCLIENT-A-EXPORT export
neighbor 2001:0DB8::A soft-reconfiguration inbound
neighbor 2001:0DB8::B activate
neighbor 2001:0DB8::B route-server-client
neighbor 2001:0DB8::B route-map RSCLIENT-B-IMPORT import
neighbor 2001:0DB8::B route-map RSCLIENT-B-EXPORT export
neighbor 2001:0DB8::B soft-reconfiguration inbound
neighbor 2001:0DB8::C activate
neighbor 2001:0DB8::C route-server-client
neighbor 2001:0DB8::C route-map RSCLIENT-C-IMPORT import
neighbor 2001:0DB8::C route-map RSCLIENT-C-EXPORT export
neighbor 2001:0DB8::C soft-reconfiguration inbound
exit-address-family
!
ipv6 prefix-list COMMON-PREFIXES seq 5 permit 2001:0DB8:0000::/48 ge 64 le 64
ipv6 prefix-list COMMON-PREFIXES seq 10 deny any
!
ipv6 prefix-list PEER-A-PREFIXES seq 5 permit 2001:0DB8:AAAA::/48 ge 64 le 64
ipv6 prefix-list PEER-A-PREFIXES seq 10 deny any
!
ipv6 prefix-list PEER-B-PREFIXES seq 5 permit 2001:0DB8:BBBB::/48 ge 64 le 64
ipv6 prefix-list PEER-B-PREFIXES seq 10 deny any
!
ipv6 prefix-list PEER-C-PREFIXES seq 5 permit 2001:0DB8:CCCC::/48 ge 64 le 64
ipv6 prefix-list PEER-C-PREFIXES seq 10 deny any
!
route-map RSCLIENT-A-IMPORT permit 10
match peer 2001:0DB8::B
call A-IMPORT-FROM-B
route-map RSCLIENT-A-IMPORT permit 20
match peer 2001:0DB8::C
call A-IMPORT-FROM-C
!
route-map A-IMPORT-FROM-B permit 10
match ipv6 address prefix-list COMMON-PREFIXES
set metric 100
route-map A-IMPORT-FROM-B permit 20
match ipv6 address prefix-list PEER-B-PREFIXES
set community 65001:11111
!
route-map A-IMPORT-FROM-C permit 10
match ipv6 address prefix-list COMMON-PREFIXES
set metric 200
route-map A-IMPORT-FROM-C permit 20
match ipv6 address prefix-list PEER-C-PREFIXES
set community 65001:22222
!
route-map RSCLIENT-A-EXPORT permit 10
match peer 2001:0DB8::B
match ipv6 address prefix-list PEER-A-PREFIXES
route-map RSCLIENT-A-EXPORT permit 20
match peer 2001:0DB8::C
match ipv6 address prefix-list PEER-A-PREFIXES
!
...
...
...
If you compare the initial configuration of RA with the route server
configuration above, you can see how easy it is to generate the Import
and Export policies for RA from the In and Out route-maps of RA's
original configuration.
When there was no route server, RA maintained two peerings, one with
RB and another with RC. Each of this peerings had an In route-map
configured. To build the Import route-map for client RA in the route
server, simply add route-map entries following this scheme:
route-map <NAME> permit 10
match peer <Peer Address>
call <In Route-Map for this Peer>
route-map <NAME> permit 20
match peer <Another Peer Address>
call <In Route-Map for this Peer>
This is exactly the process that has been followed to generate the
route-map RSCLIENT-A-IMPORT. The route-maps that are called inside it
(A-IMPORT-FROM-B and A-IMPORT-FROM-C) are exactly the same than the In
route-maps from the original configuration of RA (PEER-B-IN and
PEER-C-IN), only the name is different.
The same could have been done to create the Export policy for RA
(route-map RSCLIENT-A-EXPORT), but in this case the original Out
route-maps where so simple that we decided not to use the CALL WORD
commands, and we integrated all in a single route-map
(RSCLIENT-A-EXPORT).
The Import and Export policies for RB and RC are not shown, but the
process would be identical.

File: quagga.info, Node: Further considerations about Import and Export route-maps, Prev: Configuration of the Route Server itself, Up: Example of Route Server Configuration
10.3.4 Further considerations about Import and Export route-maps
----------------------------------------------------------------
The current version of the route server patch only allows to specify a
route-map for import and export policies, while in a standard BGP
speaker apart from route-maps there are other tools for performing
input and output filtering (access-lists, community-lists, ...). But
this does not represent any limitation, as all kinds of filters can be
included in import/export route-maps. For example suppose that in the
non-route-server scenario peer RA had the following filters configured
for input from peer B:
neighbor 2001:0DB8::B prefix-list LIST-1 in
neighbor 2001:0DB8::B filter-list LIST-2 in
neighbor 2001:0DB8::B route-map PEER-B-IN in
...
...
route-map PEER-B-IN permit 10
match ipv6 address prefix-list COMMON-PREFIXES
set local-preference 100
route-map PEER-B-IN permit 20
match ipv6 address prefix-list PEER-B-PREFIXES
set community 65001:11111
It is posible to write a single route-map which is equivalent to the
three filters (the community-list, the prefix-list and the route-map).
That route-map can then be used inside the Import policy in the route
server. Lets see how to do it:
neighbor 2001:0DB8::A route-map RSCLIENT-A-IMPORT import
...
!
...
route-map RSCLIENT-A-IMPORT permit 10
match peer 2001:0DB8::B
call A-IMPORT-FROM-B
...
...
!
route-map A-IMPORT-FROM-B permit 1
match ipv6 address prefix-list LIST-1
match as-path LIST-2
on-match goto 10
route-map A-IMPORT-FROM-B deny 2
route-map A-IMPORT-FROM-B permit 10
match ipv6 address prefix-list COMMON-PREFIXES
set local-preference 100
route-map A-IMPORT-FROM-B permit 20
match ipv6 address prefix-list PEER-B-PREFIXES
set community 65001:11111
!
...
...
The route-map A-IMPORT-FROM-B is equivalent to the three filters
(LIST-1, LIST-2 and PEER-B-IN). The first entry of route-map
A-IMPORT-FROM-B (sequence number 1) matches if and only if both the
prefix-list LIST-1 and the filter-list LIST-2 match. If that happens,
due to the "on-match goto 10" statement the next route-map entry to be
processed will be number 10, and as of that point route-map
A-IMPORT-FROM-B is identical to PEER-B-IN. If the first entry does not
match, `on-match goto 10" will be ignored and the next processed entry
will be number 2, which will deny the route.
Thus, the result is the same that with the three original filters,
i.e., if either LIST-1 or LIST-2 rejects the route, it does not reach
the route-map PEER-B-IN. In case both LIST-1 and LIST-2 accept the
route, it passes to PEER-B-IN, which can reject, accept or modify the
route.

File: quagga.info, Node: VTY shell, Next: Filtering, Prev: Configuring Quagga as a Route Server, Up: Top
11 VTY shell
************
`vtysh' is integrated shell of Quagga software.
To use vtysh please specify --enable-vtysh to configure script. To
use PAM for authentication use --with-libpam option to configure script.
vtysh only searches /etc/quagga path for vtysh.conf which is the
vtysh configuration file. Vtysh does not search current directory for
configuration file because the file includes user authentication
settings.
Currently, vtysh.conf has only two commands.
* Menu:
* VTY shell username::
* VTY shell integrated configuration::

File: quagga.info, Node: VTY shell username, Next: VTY shell integrated configuration, Up: VTY shell
11.1 VTY shell username
=======================
-- Command: username USERNAME nopassword
With this set, user foo does not need password authentication for
user vtysh. With PAM vtysh uses PAM authentication mechanism.
If vtysh is compiled without PAM authentication, every user can
use vtysh without authentication. vtysh requires read/write
permission to the various daemons vty sockets, this can be
accomplished through use of unix groups and the -enable-vty-group
configure option.

File: quagga.info, Node: VTY shell integrated configuration, Prev: VTY shell username, Up: VTY shell
11.2 VTY shell integrated configuration
=======================================
-- Command: service integrated-vtysh-config
Write out integrated Quagga.conf file when 'write file' is issued.
This command controls the behaviour of vtysh when it is told to
write out the configuration. Per default, vtysh will instruct
each daemon to write out their own config files when `write file'
is issued. However, if `service integrated-vtysh-config' is set,
when `write file' is issued, vtysh will instruct the daemons will
write out a Quagga.conf with all daemons' commands integrated into
it.
Vtysh per default behaves as if `write-conf daemon' is set. Note
that both may be set at same time if one wishes to have both
Quagga.conf and daemon specific files written out. Further, note
that the daemons are hard-coded to first look for the integrated
Quagga.conf file before looking for their own file.
We recommend you do not mix the use of the two types of files.
Further, it is better not to use the integrated Quagga.conf file,
as any syntax error in it can lead to /all/ of your daemons being
unable to start up. Per daemon files are more robust as impact of
errors in configuration are limited to the daemon in whose file
the error is made.

File: quagga.info, Node: Filtering, Next: Route Map, Prev: VTY shell, Up: Top
12 Filtering
************
Quagga provides many very flexible filtering features. Filtering is
used for both input and output of the routing information. Once
filtering is defined, it can be applied in any direction.
* Menu:
* IP Access List::
* IP Prefix List::

File: quagga.info, Node: IP Access List, Next: IP Prefix List, Up: Filtering
12.1 IP Access List
===================
-- Command: access-list NAME permit IPV4-NETWORK
-- Command: access-list NAME deny IPV4-NETWORK
Basic filtering is done by `access-list' as shown in the following
example.
access-list filter deny 10.0.0.0/9
access-list filter permit 10.0.0.0/8

File: quagga.info, Node: IP Prefix List, Prev: IP Access List, Up: Filtering
12.2 IP Prefix List
===================
`ip prefix-list' provides the most powerful prefix based filtering
mechanism. In addition to `access-list' functionality, `ip
prefix-list' has prefix length range specification and sequential
number specification. You can add or delete prefix based filters to
arbitrary points of prefix-list using sequential number specification.
If no ip prefix-list is specified, it acts as permit. If `ip
prefix-list' is defined, and no match is found, default deny is applied.
-- Command: ip prefix-list NAME (permit|deny) PREFIX [le LEN] [ge LEN]
-- Command: ip prefix-list NAME seq NUMBER (permit|deny) PREFIX [le
LEN] [ge LEN]
You can create `ip prefix-list' using above commands.
seq
seq NUMBER can be set either automatically or manually. In
the case that sequential numbers are set manually, the user
may pick any number less than 4294967295. In the case that
sequential number are set automatically, the sequential
number will increase by a unit of five (5) per list. If a
list with no specified sequential number is created after a
list with a specified sequential number, the list will
automatically pick the next multiple of five (5) as the list
number. For example, if a list with number 2 already exists
and a new list with no specified number is created, the next
list will be numbered 5. If lists 2 and 7 already exist and
a new list with no specified number is created, the new list
will be numbered 10.
le
`le' command specifies prefix length. The prefix list will be
applied if the prefix length is less than or equal to the le
prefix length.
ge
`ge' command specifies prefix length. The prefix list will be
applied if the prefix length is greater than or equal to the
ge prefix length.
Less than or equal to prefix numbers and greater than or equal to
prefix numbers can be used together. The order of the le and ge
commands does not matter.
If a prefix list with a different sequential number but with the
exact same rules as a previous list is created, an error will result.
However, in the case that the sequential number and the rules are
exactly similar, no error will result.
If a list with the same sequential number as a previous list is
created, the new list will overwrite the old list.
Matching of IP Prefix is performed from the smaller sequential
number to the larger. The matching will stop once any rule has been
applied.
In the case of no le or ge command, the prefix length must match
exactly the length specified in the prefix list.
-- Command: no ip prefix-list NAME
* Menu:
* ip prefix-list description::
* ip prefix-list sequential number control::
* Showing ip prefix-list::
* Clear counter of ip prefix-list::

File: quagga.info, Node: ip prefix-list description, Next: ip prefix-list sequential number control, Up: IP Prefix List
12.2.1 ip prefix-list description
---------------------------------
-- Command: ip prefix-list NAME description DESC
Descriptions may be added to prefix lists. This command adds a
description to the prefix list.
-- Command: no ip prefix-list NAME description [DESC]
Deletes the description from a prefix list. It is possible to use
the command without the full description.

File: quagga.info, Node: ip prefix-list sequential number control, Next: Showing ip prefix-list, Prev: ip prefix-list description, Up: IP Prefix List
12.2.2 ip prefix-list sequential number control
-----------------------------------------------
-- Command: ip prefix-list sequence-number
With this command, the IP prefix list sequential number is
displayed. This is the default behavior.
-- Command: no ip prefix-list sequence-number
With this command, the IP prefix list sequential number is not
displayed.

File: quagga.info, Node: Showing ip prefix-list, Next: Clear counter of ip prefix-list, Prev: ip prefix-list sequential number control, Up: IP Prefix List
12.2.3 Showing ip prefix-list
-----------------------------
-- Command: show ip prefix-list
Display all IP prefix lists.
-- Command: show ip prefix-list NAME
Show IP prefix list can be used with a prefix list name.
-- Command: show ip prefix-list NAME seq NUM
Show IP prefix list can be used with a prefix list name and
sequential number.
-- Command: show ip prefix-list NAME A.B.C.D/M
If the command longer is used, all prefix lists with prefix
lengths equal to or longer than the specified length will be
displayed. If the command first match is used, the first prefix
length match will be displayed.
-- Command: show ip prefix-list NAME A.B.C.D/M longer
-- Command: show ip prefix-list NAME A.B.C.D/M first-match
-- Command: show ip prefix-list summary
-- Command: show ip prefix-list summary NAME
-- Command: show ip prefix-list detail
-- Command: show ip prefix-list detail NAME

File: quagga.info, Node: Clear counter of ip prefix-list, Prev: Showing ip prefix-list, Up: IP Prefix List
12.2.4 Clear counter of ip prefix-list
--------------------------------------
-- Command: clear ip prefix-list
Clears the counters of all IP prefix lists. Clear IP Prefix List
can be used with a specified name and prefix.
-- Command: clear ip prefix-list NAME
-- Command: clear ip prefix-list NAME A.B.C.D/M

File: quagga.info, Node: Route Map, Next: IPv6 Support, Prev: Filtering, Up: Top
13 Route Map
************
Route maps provide a means to both filter and/or apply actions to
route, hence allowing policy to be applied to routes.
* Menu:
* Route Map Command::
* Route Map Match Command::
* Route Map Set Command::
* Route Map Call Command::
* Route Map Exit Action Command::
* Route Map Examples::
Route-maps are an ordered list of route-map entries. Each entry may
specify up to four distincts sets of clauses:
`Matching Policy'
This specifies the policy implied if the `Matching Conditions' are
met or not met, and which actions of the route-map are to be
taken, if any. The two possibilities are:
- `permit': If the entry matches, then carry out the `Set
Actions'. Then finish processing the route-map, permitting
the route, unless an `Exit Action' indicates otherwise.
- `deny': If the entry matches, then finish processing the
route-map and deny the route (return `deny').
The `Matching Policy' is specified as part of the command which
defines the ordered entry in the route-map. See below.
`Matching Conditions'
A route-map entry may, optionally, specify one or more conditions
which must be matched if the entry is to be considered further, as
governed by the Match Policy. If a route-map entry does not
explicitely specify any matching conditions, then it always
matches.
`Set Actions'
A route-map entry may, optionally, specify one or more `Set
Actions' to set or modify attributes of the route.
`Call Action'
Call to another route-map, after any `Set Actions' have been
carried out. If the route-map called returns `deny' then
processing of the route-map finishes and the route is denied,
regardless of the `Matching Policy' or the `Exit Policy'. If the
called route-map returns `permit', then `Matching Policy' and
`Exit Policy' govern further behaviour, as normal.
`Exit Policy'
An entry may, optionally, specify an alternative `Exit Policy' to
take if the entry matched, rather than the normal policy of
exiting the route-map and permitting the route. The two
possibilities are:
- `next': Continue on with processing of the route-map entries.
- `goto N': Jump ahead to the first route-map entry whose order
in the route-map is >= N. Jumping to a previous entry is not
permitted.
The default action of a route-map, if no entries match, is to deny.
I.e. a route-map essentially has as its last entry an empty `deny'
entry, which matches all routes. To change this behaviour, one must
specify an empty `permit' entry as the last entry in the route-map.
To summarise the above:
Match No Match
-----------------------------
_Permit_ action cont
_Deny_ deny cont
`action'
- Apply _set_ statements
- If _call_ is present, call given route-map. If that returns a
`deny', finish processing and return `deny'.
- If `Exit Policy' is _next_, goto next route-map entry
- If `Exit Policy' is _goto_, goto first entry whose order in
the list is >= the given order.
- Finish processing the route-map and permit the route.
`deny'
- The route is denied by the route-map (return `deny').
`cont'
- goto next route-map entry

File: quagga.info, Node: Route Map Command, Next: Route Map Match Command, Up: Route Map
13.1 Route Map Command
======================
-- Command: route-map ROUTE-MAP-NAME (permit|deny) ORDER
Configure the ORDER'th entry in ROUTE-MAP-NAME with `Match Policy'
of either _permit_ or _deny_.

File: quagga.info, Node: Route Map Match Command, Next: Route Map Set Command, Prev: Route Map Command, Up: Route Map
13.2 Route Map Match Command
============================
-- Route-map Command: match ip address ACCESS_LIST
Matches the specified ACCESS_LIST
-- Route-map Command: match ip next-hop IPV4_ADDR
Matches the specified IPV4_ADDR.
-- Route-map Command: match aspath AS_PATH
Matches the specified AS_PATH.
-- Route-map Command: match metric METRIC
Matches the specified METRIC.
-- Route-map Command: match community COMMUNITY_LIST
Matches the specified COMMUNITY_LIST

File: quagga.info, Node: Route Map Set Command, Next: Route Map Call Command, Prev: Route Map Match Command, Up: Route Map
13.3 Route Map Set Command
==========================
-- Route-map Command: set ip next-hop IPV4_ADDRESS
Set the BGP nexthop address.
-- Route-map Command: set local-preference LOCAL_PREF
Set the BGP local preference.
-- Route-map Command: set weight WEIGHT
Set the route's weight.
-- Route-map Command: set metric METRIC
Set the BGP attribute MED.
-- Route-map Command: set as-path prepend AS_PATH
Set the BGP AS path to prepend.
-- Route-map Command: set community COMMUNITY
Set the BGP community attribute.
-- Route-map Command: set ipv6 next-hop global IPV6_ADDRESS
Set the BGP-4+ global IPv6 nexthop address.
-- Route-map Command: set ipv6 next-hop local IPV6_ADDRESS
Set the BGP-4+ link local IPv6 nexthop address.

File: quagga.info, Node: Route Map Call Command, Next: Route Map Exit Action Command, Prev: Route Map Set Command, Up: Route Map
13.4 Route Map Call Command
===========================
-- Route-map Command: call NAME
Call route-map NAME. If it returns deny, deny the route and finish
processing the route-map.

File: quagga.info, Node: Route Map Exit Action Command, Next: Route Map Examples, Prev: Route Map Call Command, Up: Route Map
13.5 Route Map Exit Action Command
==================================
-- Route-map Command: on-match next
-- Route-map Command: continue
Proceed on to the next entry in the route-map.
-- Route-map Command: on-match goto N
-- Route-map Command: continue N
Proceed processing the route-map at the first entry whose order is
>= N

File: quagga.info, Node: Route Map Examples, Prev: Route Map Exit Action Command, Up: Route Map
13.6 Route Map Examples
=======================
A simple example of a route-map:
route-map test permit 10
match ip address 10
set local-preference 200
This means that if a route matches ip access-list number 10 it's
local-preference value is set to 200.
See *Note BGP Configuration Examples:: for examples of more
sophisticated useage of route-maps, including of the `call' action.

File: quagga.info, Node: IPv6 Support, Next: Kernel Interface, Prev: Route Map, Up: Top
14 IPv6 Support
***************
Quagga fully supports IPv6 routing. As described so far, Quagga
supports RIPng, OSPFv3 and BGP-4+. You can give IPv6 addresses to an
interface and configure static IPv6 routing information. Quagga IPv6
also provides automatic address configuration via a feature called
`address auto configuration'. To do it, the router must send router
advertisement messages to the all nodes that exist on the network.
* Menu:
* Router Advertisement::

File: quagga.info, Node: Router Advertisement, Up: IPv6 Support
14.1 Router Advertisement
=========================
-- Interface Command: no ipv6 nd suppress-ra
Send router advertisment messages.
-- Interface Command: ipv6 nd suppress-ra
Don't send router advertisment messages.
-- Interface Command: ipv6 nd prefix IPV6PREFIX [VALID-LIFETIME]
[PREFERRED-LIFETIME] [off-link] [no-autoconfig] [router-address]
Configuring the IPv6 prefix to include in router advertisements.
Several prefix specific optional parameters and flags may follow:
* VALID-LIFETIME - the length of time in seconds during what
the prefix is valid for the purpose of on-link determination.
Value INFINITE represents infinity (i.e. a value of all one
bits (`0xffffffff')).
Range: `<0-4294967295>' Default: `2592000'
* PREFERRED-LIFETIME - the length of time in seconds during
what addresses generated from the prefix remain preferred.
Value INFINITE represents infinity.
Range: `<0-4294967295>' Default: `604800'
* OFF-LINK - indicates that advertisement makes no statement
about on-link or off-link properties of the prefix.
Default: not set, i.e. this prefix can be used for on-link
determination.
* NO-AUTOCONFIG - indicates to hosts on the local link that the
specified prefix cannot be used for IPv6 autoconfiguration.
Default: not set, i.e. prefix can be used for
autoconfiguration.
* ROUTER-ADDRESS - indicates to hosts on the local link that
the specified prefix contains a complete IP address by
setting R flag.
Default: not set, i.e. hosts do not assume a complete IP
address is placed.
-- Interface Command: ipv6 nd ra-interval SECONDS
-- Interface Command: no ipv6 nd ra-interval
The maximum time allowed between sending unsolicited multicast
router advertisements from the interface, in seconds. Must be no
less than 3 seconds.
Default: `600'
-- Interface Command: ipv6 nd ra-interval msec MILLISECONDS
-- Interface Command: no ipv6 nd ra-interval msec
The maximum time allowed between sending unsolicited multicast
router advertisements from the interface, in milliseconds. Must be
no less than 30 milliseconds.
Default: `600000'
-- Interface Command: ipv6 nd ra-lifetime SECONDS
-- Interface Command: no ipv6 nd ra-lifetime
The value to be placed in the Router Lifetime field of router
advertisements sent from the interface, in seconds. Indicates the
usefulness of the router as a default router on this interface.
Setting the value to zero indicates that the router should not be
considered a default router on this interface. Must be either
zero or between value specified with IPV6 ND RA-INTERVAL (or
default) and 9000 seconds.
Default: `1800'
-- Interface Command: ipv6 nd reachable-time MILLISECONDS
-- Interface Command: no ipv6 nd reachable-time
The value to be placed in the Reachable Time field in the Router
Advertisement messages sent by the router, in milliseconds. The
configured time enables the router to detect unavailable
neighbors. The value zero means unspecified (by this router). Must
be no greater than `3,600,000' milliseconds (1 hour).
Default: `0'
-- Interface Command: ipv6 nd managed-config-flag
-- Interface Command: no ipv6 nd managed-config-flag
Set/unset flag in IPv6 router advertisements which indicates to
hosts that they should use managed (stateful) protocol for
addresses autoconfiguration in addition to any addresses
autoconfigured using stateless address autoconfiguration.
Default: not set
-- Interface Command: ipv6 nd other-config-flag
-- Interface Command: no ipv6 nd other-config-flag
Set/unset flag in IPv6 router advertisements which indicates to
hosts that they should use administered (stateful) protocol to
obtain autoconfiguration information other than addresses.
Default: not set
-- Interface Command: ipv6 nd home-agent-config-flag
-- Interface Command: no ipv6 nd home-agent-config-flag
Set/unset flag in IPv6 router advertisements which indicates to
hosts that the router acts as a Home Agent and includes a Home
Agent Option.
Default: not set
-- Interface Command: ipv6 nd home-agent-preference
-- Interface Command: no ipv6 nd home-agent-preference
The value to be placed in Home Agent Option, when Home Agent
config flag is set, which indicates to hosts Home Agent preference.
Default: 0
-- Interface Command: ipv6 nd home-agent-lifetime
-- Interface Command: no ipv6 nd home-agent-lifetime
The value to be placed in Home Agent Option, when Home Agent
config flag is set, which indicates to hosts Home Agent Lifetime.
A value of 0 means to place Router Lifetime value.
Default: 0
-- Interface Command: ipv6 nd adv-interval-option
-- Interface Command: no ipv6 nd adv-interval-option
Include an Advertisement Interval option which indicates to hosts
the maximum time, in milliseconds, between successive unsolicited
Router Advertisements.
Default: not set
interface eth0
no ipv6 nd suppress-ra
ipv6 nd prefix 2001:0DB8:5009::/64
For more information see `RFC2462 (IPv6 Stateless Address
Autoconfiguration)' , `RFC2461 (Neighbor Discovery for IP Version 6
(IPv6))' and `RFC3775 (Mobility Support in IPv6 (Mobile IPv6))'.

File: quagga.info, Node: Kernel Interface, Next: SNMP Support, Prev: IPv6 Support, Up: Top
15 Kernel Interface
*******************
There are several different methods for reading kernel routing table
information, updating kernel routing tables, and for looking up
interfaces.
`ioctl'
The `ioctl' method is a very traditional way for reading or writing
kernel information. `ioctl' can be used for looking up interfaces
and for modifying interface addresses, flags, mtu settings and
other types of information. Also, `ioctl' can insert and delete
kernel routing table entries. It will soon be available on almost
any platform which zebra supports, but it is a little bit ugly
thus far, so if a better method is supported by the kernel, zebra
will use that.
`sysctl'
`sysctl' can lookup kernel information using MIB (Management
Information Base) syntax. Normally, it only provides a way of
getting information from the kernel. So one would usually want to
change kernel information using another method such as `ioctl'.
`proc filesystem'
`proc filesystem' provides an easy way of getting kernel
information.
`routing socket'
`netlink'
On recent Linux kernels (2.0.x and 2.2.x), there is a kernel/user
communication support called `netlink'. It makes asynchronous
communication between kernel and Quagga possible, similar to a
routing socket on BSD systems.
Before you use this feature, be sure to select (in kernel
configuration) the kernel/netlink support option 'Kernel/User
network link driver' and 'Routing messages'.
Today, the /dev/route special device file is obsolete. Netlink
communication is done by reading/writing over netlink socket.
After the kernel configuration, please reconfigure and rebuild
Quagga. You can use netlink as a dynamic routing update channel
between Quagga and the kernel.

File: quagga.info, Node: SNMP Support, Next: Zebra Protocol, Prev: Kernel Interface, Up: Top
16 SNMP Support
***************
SNMP (Simple Network Managing Protocol) is a widely implemented feature
for collecting network information from router and/or host. Quagga
itself does not support SNMP agent (server daemon) functionality but is
able to connect to a SNMP agent using the SMUX protocol (`RFC1227') and
make the routing protocol MIBs available through it.
* Menu:
* Getting and installing an SNMP agent::
* SMUX configuration::
* MIB and command reference::
* Handling SNMP Traps::

File: quagga.info, Node: Getting and installing an SNMP agent, Next: SMUX configuration, Up: SNMP Support
16.1 Getting and installing an SNMP agent
=========================================
There are several SNMP agent which support SMUX. We recommend to use
the latest version of `net-snmp' which was formerly known as `ucd-snmp'.
It is free and open software and available at `http://www.net-snmp.org/'
and as binary package for most Linux distributions. `net-snmp' has to
be compiled with `--with-mib-modules=smux' to be able to accept
connections from Quagga.

File: quagga.info, Node: SMUX configuration, Next: MIB and command reference, Prev: Getting and installing an SNMP agent, Up: SNMP Support
16.2 SMUX configuration
=======================
To enable SMUX protocol support, Quagga must have been build with the
`--enable-snmp' option.
A separate connection has then to be established between between the
SNMP agent (snmpd) and each of the Quagga daemons. This connections
each use different OID numbers and passwords. Be aware that this OID
number is not the one that is used in queries by clients, it is solely
used for the intercommunication of the daemons.
In the following example the ospfd daemon will be connected to the
snmpd daemon using the password "quagga_ospfd". For testing it is
recommending to take exactly the below snmpd.conf as wrong access
restrictions can be hard to debug.
/etc/snmp/snmpd.conf:
#
# example access restrictions setup
#
com2sec readonly default public
group MyROGroup v1 readonly
view all included .1 80
access MyROGroup "" any noauth exact all none none
#
# the following line is relevant for Quagga
#
smuxpeer .1.3.6.1.4.1.3317.1.2.5 quagga_ospfd
/etc/quagga/ospf:
! ... the rest of ospfd.conf has been omitted for clarity ...
!
smux peer .1.3.6.1.4.1.3317.1.2.5 quagga_ospfd
!
After restarting snmpd and quagga, a successful connection can be
verified in the syslog and by querying the SNMP daemon:
snmpd[12300]: [smux_accept] accepted fd 12 from 127.0.0.1:36255
snmpd[12300]: accepted smux peer: \
oid GNOME-PRODUCT-ZEBRA-MIB::ospfd, quagga-0.96.5
# snmpwalk -c public -v1 localhost .1.3.6.1.2.1.14.1.1
OSPF-MIB::ospfRouterId.0 = IpAddress: 192.168.42.109
Be warned that the current version (5.1.1) of the Net-SNMP daemon
writes a line for every SNMP connect to the syslog which can lead to
enormous log file sizes. If that is a problem you should consider to
patch snmpd and comment out the troublesome `snmp_log()' line in the
function `netsnmp_agent_check_packet()' in `agent/snmp_agent.c'.

File: quagga.info, Node: MIB and command reference, Next: Handling SNMP Traps, Prev: SMUX configuration, Up: SNMP Support
16.3 MIB and command reference
==============================
The following OID numbers are used for the interprocess communication
of snmpd and the Quagga daemons. Sadly, SNMP has not been implemented
in all daemons yet.
(OIDs below .iso.org.dod.internet.private.enterprises)
zebra .1.3.6.1.4.1.3317.1.2.1 .gnome.gnomeProducts.zebra.zserv
bgpd .1.3.6.1.4.1.3317.1.2.2 .gnome.gnomeProducts.zebra.bgpd
ripd .1.3.6.1.4.1.3317.1.2.3 .gnome.gnomeProducts.zebra.ripd
ospfd .1.3.6.1.4.1.3317.1.2.5 .gnome.gnomeProducts.zebra.ospfd
ospf6d .1.3.6.1.4.1.3317.1.2.6 .gnome.gnomeProducts.zebra.ospf6d
The following OID numbers are used for querying the SNMP daemon by a
client:
zebra .1.3.6.1.2.1.4.24 .iso.org.dot.internet.mgmt.mib-2.ip.ipForward
ospfd .1.3.6.1.2.1.14 .iso.org.dot.internet.mgmt.mib-2.ospf
bgpd .1.3.6.1.2.1.15 .iso.org.dot.internet.mgmt.mib-2.bgp
ripd .1.3.6.1.2.1.23 .iso.org.dot.internet.mgmt.mib-2.rip2
ospf6d .1.3.6.1.3.102 .iso.org.dod.internet.experimental.ospfv3
The following syntax is understood by the Quagga daemons for
configuring SNMP:
-- Command: smux peer OID
-- Command: no smux peer OID
-- Command: smux peer OID PASSWORD
-- Command: no smux peer OID PASSWORD

File: quagga.info, Node: Handling SNMP Traps, Prev: MIB and command reference, Up: SNMP Support
16.4 Handling SNMP Traps
========================
To handle snmp traps make sure your snmp setup of quagga works
correctly as described in the quagga documentation in *Note SNMP
Support::.
The BGP4 mib will send traps on peer up/down events. These should be
visible in your snmp logs with a message similar to:
`snmpd[13733]: Got trap from peer on fd 14'
To react on these traps they should be handled by a trapsink.
Configure your trapsink by adding the following lines to
`/etc/snmpd/snmpd.conf':
# send traps to the snmptrapd on localhost
trapsink localhost
This will send all traps to an snmptrapd running on localhost. You
can of course also use a dedicated management station to catch traps.
Configure the snmptrapd daemon by adding the following line to
`/etc/snmpd/snmptrapd.conf':
traphandle .1.3.6.1.4.1.3317.1.2.2 /etc/snmp/snmptrap_handle.sh
This will use the bash script `/etc/snmp/snmptrap_handle.sh' to
handle the BGP4 traps. To add traps for other protocol daemons, lookup
their appropriate OID from their mib. (For additional information about
which traps are supported by your mib, lookup the mib on
`http://www.oidview.com/mibs/detail.html').
Make sure snmptrapd is started.
The snmptrap_handle.sh script I personally use for handling BGP4
traps is below. You can of course do all sorts of things when handling
traps, like sound a siren, have your display flash, etc., be creative
;).
#!/bin/bash
# routers name
ROUTER=`hostname -s`
#email address use to sent out notification
EMAILADDR="john@doe.com"
#email address used (allongside above) where warnings should be sent
EMAILADDR_WARN="sms-john@doe.com"
# type of notification
TYPE="Notice"
# local snmp community for getting AS belonging to peer
COMMUNITY="<community>"
# if a peer address is in $WARN_PEERS a warning should be sent
WARN_PEERS="192.0.2.1"
# get stdin
INPUT=`cat -`
# get some vars from stdin
uptime=`echo $INPUT | cut -d' ' -f5`
peer=`echo $INPUT | cut -d' ' -f8 | sed -e 's/SNMPv2-SMI::mib-2.15.3.1.14.//g'`
peerstate=`echo $INPUT | cut -d' ' -f13`
errorcode=`echo $INPUT | cut -d' ' -f9 | sed -e 's/\"//g'`
suberrorcode=`echo $INPUT | cut -d' ' -f10 | sed -e 's/\"//g'`
remoteas=`snmpget -v2c -c $COMMUNITY localhost SNMPv2-SMI::mib-2.15.3.1.9.$peer | cut -d' ' -f4`
WHOISINFO=`whois -h whois.ripe.net " -r AS$remoteas" | egrep '(as-name|descr)'`
asname=`echo "$WHOISINFO" | grep "^as-name:" | sed -e 's/^as-name://g' -e 's/ //g' -e 's/^ //g' | uniq`
asdescr=`echo "$WHOISINFO" | grep "^descr:" | sed -e 's/^descr://g' -e 's/ //g' -e 's/^ //g' | uniq`
# if peer address is in $WARN_PEER, the email should also
# be sent to $EMAILADDR_WARN
for ip in $WARN_PEERS; do
if [ "x$ip" == "x$peer" ]; then
EMAILADDR="$EMAILADDR,$EMAILADDR_WARN"
TYPE="WARNING"
break
fi
done
# convert peer state
case "$peerstate" in
1) peerstate="Idle" ;;
2) peerstate="Connect" ;;
3) peerstate="Active" ;;
4) peerstate="Opensent" ;;
5) peerstate="Openconfirm" ;;
6) peerstate="Established" ;;
*) peerstate="Unknown" ;;
esac
# get textual messages for errors
case "$errorcode" in
00)
error="No error"
suberror=""
;;
01)
error="Message Header Error"
case "$suberrorcode" in
01) suberror="Connection Not Synchronized" ;;
02) suberror="Bad Message Length" ;;
03) suberror="Bad Message Type" ;;
*) suberror="Unknown" ;;
esac
;;
02)
error="OPEN Message Error"
case "$suberrorcode" in
01) suberror="Unsupported Version Number" ;;
02) suberror="Bad Peer AS" ;;
03) suberror="Bad BGP Identifier" ;;
04) suberror="Unsupported Optional Parameter" ;;
05) suberror="Authentication Failure" ;;
06) suberror="Unacceptable Hold Time" ;;
*) suberror="Unknown" ;;
esac
;;
03)
error="UPDATE Message Error"
case "$suberrorcode" in
01) suberror="Malformed Attribute List" ;;
02) suberror="Unrecognized Well-known Attribute" ;;
03) suberror="Missing Well-known Attribute" ;;
04) suberror="Attribute Flags Error" ;;
05) suberror="Attribute Length Error" ;;
06) suberror="Invalid ORIGIN Attribute" ;;
07) suberror="AS Routing Loop" ;;
08) suberror="Invalid NEXT_HOP Attribute" ;;
09) suberror="Optional Attribute Error" ;;
10) suberror="Invalid Network Field" ;;
11) suberror="Malformed AS_PATH" ;;
*) suberror="Unknown" ;;
esac
;;
04)
error="Hold Timer Expired"
suberror=""
;;
05)
error="Finite State Machine Error"
suberror=""
;;
06)
error="Cease"
case "$suberrorcode" in
01) suberror="Maximum Number of Prefixes Reached" ;;
02) suberror="Administratively Shutdown" ;;
03) suberror="Peer Unconfigured" ;;
04) suberror="Administratively Reset" ;;
05) suberror="Connection Rejected" ;;
06) suberror="Other Configuration Change" ;;
07) suberror="Connection collision resolution" ;;
08) suberror="Out of Resource" ;;
09) suberror="MAX" ;;
*) suberror="Unknown" ;;
esac
;;
*)
error="Unknown"
suberror=""
;;
esac
# create textual message from errorcodes
if [ "x$suberror" == "x" ]; then
NOTIFY="$errorcode ($error)"
else
NOTIFY="$errorcode/$suberrorcode ($error/$suberror)"
fi
# form a decent subject
SUBJECT="$TYPE: $ROUTER [bgp] $peer is $peerstate: $NOTIFY"
# create the email body
MAIL=`cat << EOF
BGP notification on router $ROUTER.
Peer: $peer
AS: $remoteas
New state: $peerstate
Notification: $NOTIFY
Info:
$asname
$asdescr
Snmpd uptime: $uptime
EOF`
# mail the notification
echo "$MAIL" | mail -s "$SUBJECT" $EMAILADDR

File: quagga.info, Node: Zebra Protocol, Next: Packet Binary Dump Format, Prev: SNMP Support, Up: Top
Appendix A Zebra Protocol
*************************
A.1 Overview of the Zebra Protocol
==================================
Zebra Protocol is used by protocol daemons to communicate with the
zebra daemon.
Each protocol daemon may request and send information to and from the
zebra daemon such as interface states, routing state,
nexthop-validation, and so on. Protocol daemons may also install routes
with zebra. The zebra daemon manages which route is installed into the
forwarding table with the kernel.
Zebra Protocol is a streaming protocol, with a common header. Two
versions of the header are in use. Version 0 is implicitely versioned.
Version 1 has an explicit version field. Version 0 can be distinguished
from all other versions by examining the 3rd byte of the header, which
contains a marker value for all versions bar version 0. The marker byte
corresponds to the command field in version 0, and the marker value is
a reserved command in version 0.
We do not anticipate there will be further versions of the header for
the foreseeable future, as the command field in version 1 is wide
enough to allow for future extensions to done compatibly through
seperate commands.
Version 0 is used by all versions of GNU Zebra as of this writing,
and versions of Quagga up to and including Quagga 0.98. Version 1 will
be used as of Quagga 1.0.
A.2 Zebra Protocol Definition
=============================
A.2.1 Zebra Protocol Header (version 0)
---------------------------------------
0 1 2 3
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
+-------------------------------+---------------+
| Length (2) | Command (1) |
+-------------------------------+---------------+
A.2.2 Zebra Protocol Common Header (version 1)
----------------------------------------------
0 1 2 3
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
+-------------------------------+---------------+-------------+
| Length (2) | Marker (1) | Version (1) |
+-------------------------------+---------------+-------------+
| Command (2) |
+-------------------------------+
A.2.3 Zebra Protocol Header Field Definitions
---------------------------------------------
`Length'
Total packet length including this header. The minimum length is 3
bytes for version 0 messages and 6 bytes for version 1 messages.
`Marker'
Static marker with a value of 255 always. This is to allow version
0 Zserv headers (which do not include version explicitely) to be
distinguished from versioned headers. Not present in version 0
messages.
`Version'
Version number of the Zserv message. Clients should not continue
processing messages past the version field for versions they do not
recognise. Not present in version 0 messages.
`Command'
The Zebra Protocol command.
A.2.4 Zebra Protocol Commands
-----------------------------
Command Value
-----------------------------------------------------
ZEBRA_INTERFACE_ADD 1
ZEBRA_INTERFACE_DELETE 2
ZEBRA_INTERFACE_ADDRESS_ADD 3
ZEBRA_INTERFACE_ADDRESS_DELETE 4
ZEBRA_INTERFACE_UP 5
ZEBRA_INTERFACE_DOWN 6
ZEBRA_IPV4_ROUTE_ADD 7
ZEBRA_IPV4_ROUTE_DELETE 8
ZEBRA_IPV6_ROUTE_ADD 9
ZEBRA_IPV6_ROUTE_DELETE 10
ZEBRA_REDISTRIBUTE_ADD 11
ZEBRA_REDISTRIBUTE_DELETE 12
ZEBRA_REDISTRIBUTE_DEFAULT_ADD 13
ZEBRA_REDISTRIBUTE_DEFAULT_DELETE 14
ZEBRA_IPV4_NEXTHOP_LOOKUP 15
ZEBRA_IPV6_NEXTHOP_LOOKUP 16

File: quagga.info, Node: Packet Binary Dump Format, Next: Command Index, Prev: Zebra Protocol, Up: Top
Appendix B Packet Binary Dump Format
************************************
Quagga can dump routing protocol packet into file with a binary format
(*note Dump BGP packets and table::).
It seems to be better that we share the MRT's header format for
backward compatibility with MRT's dump logs. We should also define the
binary format excluding the header, because we must support both IP v4
and v6 addresses as socket addresses and / or routing entries.
In the last meeting, we discussed to have a version field in the
header. But Masaki told us that we can define new `type' value rather
than having a `version' field, and it seems to be better because we
don't need to change header format.
Here is the common header format. This is same as that of MRT.
0 1 2 3
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Time |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Type | Subtype |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Length |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
If `type' is PROTOCOL_BGP4MP, `subtype' is BGP4MP_STATE_CHANGE, and
Address Family == IP (version 4)
0 1 2 3
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Source AS number | Destination AS number |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Interface Index | Address Family |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Source IP address |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Destination IP address |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Old State | New State |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
Where State is the value defined in RFC1771.
If `type' is PROTOCOL_BGP4MP, `subtype' is BGP4MP_STATE_CHANGE, and
Address Family == IP version 6
0 1 2 3
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Source AS number | Destination AS number |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Interface Index | Address Family |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Source IP address |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Source IP address (Cont'd) |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Source IP address (Cont'd) |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Source IP address (Cont'd) |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Destination IP address |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Destination IP address (Cont'd) |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Destination IP address (Cont'd) |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Destination IP address (Cont'd) |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Old State | New State |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
If `type' is PROTOCOL_BGP4MP, `subtype' is BGP4MP_MESSAGE, and
Address Family == IP (version 4)
0 1 2 3
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Source AS number | Destination AS number |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Interface Index | Address Family |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Source IP address |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Destination IP address |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| BGP Message Packet |
| |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
Where BGP Message Packet is the whole contents of the BGP4 message
including header portion.
If `type' is PROTOCOL_BGP4MP, `subtype' is BGP4MP_MESSAGE, and
Address Family == IP version 6
0 1 2 3
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Source AS number | Destination AS number |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Interface Index | Address Family |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Source IP address |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Source IP address (Cont'd) |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Source IP address (Cont'd) |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Source IP address (Cont'd) |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Destination IP address |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Destination IP address (Cont'd) |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Destination IP address (Cont'd) |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Destination IP address (Cont'd) |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| BGP Message Packet |
| |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
If `type' is PROTOCOL_BGP4MP, `subtype' is BGP4MP_ENTRY, and Address
Family == IP (version 4)
0 1 2 3
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| View # | Status |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Time Last Change |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Address Family | SAFI | Next-Hop-Len |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Next Hop Address |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Prefix Length | Address Prefix [variable] |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Attribute Length |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| BGP Attribute [variable length] |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
If `type' is PROTOCOL_BGP4MP, `subtype' is BGP4MP_ENTRY, and Address
Family == IP version 6
0 1 2 3
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| View # | Status |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Time Last Change |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Address Family | SAFI | Next-Hop-Len |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Next Hop Address |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Next Hop Address (Cont'd) |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Next Hop Address (Cont'd) |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Next Hop Address (Cont'd) |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Prefix Length | Address Prefix [variable] |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Address Prefix (cont'd) [variable] |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Attribute Length |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| BGP Attribute [variable length] |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
BGP4 Attribute must not contain MP_UNREACH_NLRI. If BGP Attribute
has MP_REACH_NLRI field, it must has zero length NLRI, e.g.,
MP_REACH_NLRI has only Address Family, SAFI and next-hop values.
If `type' is PROTOCOL_BGP4MP and `subtype' is BGP4MP_SNAPSHOT,
0 1 2 3
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| View # | File Name [variable] |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
The file specified in "File Name" contains all routing entries,
which are in the format of "subtype == BGP4MP_ENTRY".
Constants:
/* type value */
#define MSG_PROTOCOL_BGP4MP 16
/* subtype value */
#define BGP4MP_STATE_CHANGE 0
#define BGP4MP_MESSAGE 1
#define BGP4MP_ENTRY 2
#define BGP4MP_SNAPSHOT 3

File: quagga.info, Node: Command Index, Next: VTY Key Index, Prev: Packet Binary Dump Format, Up: Top
Command Index
*************
�[index�]
* Menu:
* access-class ACCESS-LIST: Basic Config Commands.
(line 128)
* access-list NAME deny IPV4-NETWORK: IP Access List. (line 8)
* access-list NAME permit IPV4-NETWORK: IP Access List. (line 7)
* aggregate-address A.B.C.D/M: Route Aggregation. (line 7)
* aggregate-address A.B.C.D/M as-set: Route Aggregation. (line 10)
* aggregate-address A.B.C.D/M summary-only: Route Aggregation.
(line 14)
* area <0-4294967295> authentication: OSPF area. (line 127)
* area <0-4294967295> authentication message-digest: OSPF area.
(line 134)
* area <0-4294967295> export-list NAME: OSPF area. (line 85)
* area <0-4294967295> filter-list prefix NAME in: OSPF area. (line 117)
* area <0-4294967295> filter-list prefix NAME out: OSPF area. (line 118)
* area <0-4294967295> import-list NAME: OSPF area. (line 109)
* area <0-4294967295> range A.B.C.D/M: OSPF area. (line 8)
* area <0-4294967295> shortcut: OSPF area. (line 55)
* area <0-4294967295> stub: OSPF area. (line 62)
* area <0-4294967295> stub no-summary: OSPF area. (line 74)
* area <0-4294967295> virtual-link A.B.C.D: OSPF area. (line 50)
* area A.B.C.D authentication: OSPF area. (line 126)
* area A.B.C.D authentication message-digest: OSPF area. (line 133)
* area A.B.C.D default-cost <0-16777215>: OSPF area. (line 80)
* area A.B.C.D export-list NAME: OSPF area. (line 84)
* area A.B.C.D filter-list prefix NAME in: OSPF area. (line 115)
* area A.B.C.D filter-list prefix NAME out: OSPF area. (line 116)
* area A.B.C.D import-list NAME: OSPF area. (line 108)
* area A.B.C.D range A.B.C.D/M: OSPF area. (line 7)
* area A.B.C.D range IPV4_PREFIX not-advertise: OSPF area. (line 28)
* area A.B.C.D range IPV4_PREFIX substitute IPV4_PREFIX: OSPF area.
(line 34)
* area A.B.C.D shortcut: OSPF area. (line 54)
* area A.B.C.D stub: OSPF area. (line 61)
* area A.B.C.D stub no-summary: OSPF area. (line 73)
* area A.B.C.D virtual-link A.B.C.D: OSPF area. (line 49)
* auto-cost reference-bandwidth <1-4294967>: OSPF router. (line 143)
* bandwidth <1-10000000>: Interface Commands. (line 31)
* banner motd default: Basic Config Commands.
(line 110)
* bgp bestpath as-path confed: BGP decision process.
(line 19)
* bgp cluster-id A.B.C.D: Route Reflector. (line 7)
* bgp config-type cisco: Multiple instance. (line 20)
* bgp config-type zebra: Multiple instance. (line 53)
* bgp multiple-instance: Multiple instance. (line 10)
* bgp router-id A.B.C.D: BGP router. (line 22)
* call NAME: Route Map Call Command.
(line 7)
* call WORD: Commands for configuring a Route Server.
(line 52)
* clear ip bgp PEER: More Show IP BGP. (line 25)
* clear ip bgp PEER soft in: More Show IP BGP. (line 28)
* clear ip prefix-list: Clear counter of ip prefix-list.
(line 7)
* clear ip prefix-list NAME: Clear counter of ip prefix-list.
(line 11)
* clear ip prefix-list NAME A.B.C.D/M: Clear counter of ip prefix-list.
(line 13)
* configure terminal: Terminal Mode Commands.
(line 13)
* continue: Route Map Exit Action Command.
(line 8)
* continue N: Route Map Exit Action Command.
(line 12)
* debug event: More Show IP BGP. (line 33)
* debug keepalive: More Show IP BGP. (line 37)
* debug ospf ism: Debugging OSPF. (line 12)
* debug ospf ism (status|events|timers): Debugging OSPF. (line 13)
* debug ospf lsa: Debugging OSPF. (line 22)
* debug ospf lsa (generate|flooding|refresh): Debugging OSPF. (line 23)
* debug ospf nsm: Debugging OSPF. (line 17)
* debug ospf nsm (status|events|timers): Debugging OSPF. (line 18)
* debug ospf packet (hello|dd|ls-request|ls-update|ls-ack|all) (send|recv) [detail]: Debugging OSPF.
(line 8)
* debug ospf zebra: Debugging OSPF. (line 27)
* debug ospf zebra (interface|redistribute): Debugging OSPF. (line 28)
* debug rip events: RIP Debug Commands. (line 9)
* debug rip packet: RIP Debug Commands. (line 15)
* debug rip zebra: RIP Debug Commands. (line 22)
* debug ripng events: ripngd Terminal Mode Commands.
(line 11)
* debug ripng packet: ripngd Terminal Mode Commands.
(line 13)
* debug ripng zebra: ripngd Terminal Mode Commands.
(line 15)
* debug update: More Show IP BGP. (line 35)
* default-information originate <1>: Redistribute routes to OSPF.
(line 27)
* default-information originate: How to Announce RIP route.
(line 51)
* default-information originate always: Redistribute routes to OSPF.
(line 33)
* default-information originate always metric <0-16777214>: Redistribute routes to OSPF.
(line 35)
* default-information originate always metric <0-16777214> metric-type (1|2): Redistribute routes to OSPF.
(line 37)
* default-information originate always metric <0-16777214> metric-type (1|2) route-map WORD: Redistribute routes to OSPF.
(line 39)
* default-information originate metric <0-16777214>: Redistribute routes to OSPF.
(line 28)
* default-information originate metric <0-16777214> metric-type (1|2): Redistribute routes to OSPF.
(line 30)
* default-information originate metric <0-16777214> metric-type (1|2) route-map WORD: Redistribute routes to OSPF.
(line 32)
* default-metric <0-16777214>: Redistribute routes to OSPF.
(line 52)
* default-metric <1-16>: RIP Metric Manipulation.
(line 11)
* description DESCRIPTION ...: Interface Commands. (line 24)
* distance <1-255> <1>: Redistribute routes to OSPF.
(line 55)
* distance <1-255>: RIP distance. (line 9)
* distance <1-255> A.B.C.D/M <1>: BGP distance. (line 12)
* distance <1-255> A.B.C.D/M: RIP distance. (line 13)
* distance <1-255> A.B.C.D/M ACCESS-LIST: RIP distance. (line 18)
* distance <1-255> A.B.C.D/M WORD: BGP distance. (line 13)
* distance bgp <1-255> <1-255> <1-255>: BGP distance. (line 7)
* distance ospf (intra-area|inter-area|external) <1-255>: Redistribute routes to OSPF.
(line 59)
* distribute-list ACCESS_LIST (in|out) IFNAME: ripngd Filtering Commands.
(line 7)
* distribute-list ACCESS_LIST DIRECT IFNAME: Filtering RIP Routes.
(line 9)
* distribute-list NAME out (kernel|connected|static|rip|ospf: Redistribute routes to OSPF.
(line 48)
* distribute-list prefix PREFIX_LIST (in|out) IFNAME: Filtering RIP Routes.
(line 32)
* dump bgp all PATH: Dump BGP packets and table.
(line 7)
* dump bgp all PATH INTERVAL: Dump BGP packets and table.
(line 8)
* dump bgp routes PATH: Dump BGP packets and table.
(line 15)
* dump bgp updates PATH: Dump BGP packets and table.
(line 11)
* dump bgp updates PATH INTERVAL: Dump BGP packets and table.
(line 12)
* enable password PASSWORD: Basic Config Commands.
(line 14)
* exec-timeout MINUTE: Basic Config Commands.
(line 116)
* exec-timeout MINUTE SECOND: Basic Config Commands.
(line 117)
* flush_timer TIME: ripngd Configuration.
(line 12)
* hostname HOSTNAME: Basic Config Commands.
(line 7)
* interface IFNAME: Interface Commands. (line 7)
* interface IFNAME area AREA: OSPF6 router. (line 12)
* ip address ADDRESS/PREFIX: Interface Commands. (line 13)
* ip address ADDRESS/PREFIX secondary: Interface Commands. (line 19)
* ip as-path access-list WORD {permit|deny} LINE: AS Path Access List.
(line 9)
* ip community-list <1-99> {permit|deny} COMMUNITY: Numbered BGP Community Lists.
(line 14)
* ip community-list <100-199> {permit|deny} COMMUNITY: Numbered BGP Community Lists.
(line 20)
* ip community-list expanded NAME {permit|deny} LINE: BGP Community Lists.
(line 30)
* ip community-list NAME {permit|deny} COMMUNITY: Numbered BGP Community Lists.
(line 25)
* ip community-list standard NAME {permit|deny} COMMUNITY: BGP Community Lists.
(line 20)
* ip extcommunity-list expanded NAME {permit|deny} LINE: BGP Extended Community Lists.
(line 21)
* ip extcommunity-list standard NAME {permit|deny} EXTCOMMUNITY: BGP Extended Community Lists.
(line 10)
* ip ospf authentication-key AUTH_KEY: OSPF interface. (line 7)
* ip ospf cost <1-65535>: OSPF interface. (line 30)
* ip ospf dead-interval <1-65535>: OSPF interface. (line 35)
* ip ospf dead-interval minimal hello-multiplier <2-20>: OSPF interface.
(line 37)
* ip ospf hello-interval <1-65535>: OSPF interface. (line 54)
* ip ospf message-digest-key KEYID md5 KEY: OSPF interface. (line 13)
* ip ospf network (broadcast|non-broadcast|point-to-multipoint|point-to-point): OSPF interface.
(line 65)
* ip ospf priority <0-255>: OSPF interface. (line 69)
* ip ospf retransmit-interval <1-65535>: OSPF interface. (line 76)
* ip ospf transmit-delay: OSPF interface. (line 82)
* ip prefix-list NAME (permit|deny) PREFIX [le LEN] [ge LEN]: IP Prefix List.
(line 16)
* ip prefix-list NAME description DESC: ip prefix-list description.
(line 7)
* ip prefix-list NAME seq NUMBER (permit|deny) PREFIX [le LEN] [ge LEN]: IP Prefix List.
(line 18)
* ip prefix-list sequence-number: ip prefix-list sequential number control.
(line 7)
* ip rip authentication key-chain KEY-CHAIN: RIP Authentication.
(line 43)
* ip rip authentication mode md5: RIP Authentication. (line 29)
* ip rip authentication mode text: RIP Authentication. (line 33)
* ip rip authentication string STRING: RIP Authentication. (line 37)
* ip rip receive version VERSION: RIP Version Control. (line 44)
* ip rip send version VERSION: RIP Version Control. (line 33)
* ip route NETWORK GATEWAY: Static Route Commands.
(line 10)
* ip route NETWORK GATEWAY DISTANCE: Static Route Commands.
(line 36)
* ip route NETWORK NETMASK GATEWAY: Static Route Commands.
(line 25)
* ip split-horizon: RIP Configuration. (line 70)
* ip6 address ADDRESS/PREFIX: Interface Commands. (line 14)
* ipv6 nd adv-interval-option: Router Advertisement.
(line 127)
* ipv6 nd home-agent-config-flag: Router Advertisement.
(line 104)
* ipv6 nd home-agent-lifetime: Router Advertisement.
(line 119)
* ipv6 nd home-agent-preference: Router Advertisement.
(line 112)
* ipv6 nd managed-config-flag: Router Advertisement.
(line 87)
* ipv6 nd other-config-flag: Router Advertisement.
(line 96)
* ipv6 nd prefix IPV6PREFIX [VALID-LIFETIME] [PREFERRED-LIFETIME] [off-link] [no-autoconfig] [router-address]: Router Advertisement.
(line 14)
* ipv6 nd ra-interval msec MILLISECONDS: Router Advertisement.
(line 57)
* ipv6 nd ra-interval SECONDS: Router Advertisement.
(line 49)
* ipv6 nd ra-lifetime SECONDS: Router Advertisement.
(line 65)
* ipv6 nd reachable-time MILLISECONDS: Router Advertisement.
(line 77)
* ipv6 nd suppress-ra: Router Advertisement.
(line 10)
* ipv6 ospf6 cost COST: OSPF6 interface. (line 7)
* ipv6 ospf6 dead-interval DEADINTERVAL: OSPF6 interface. (line 13)
* ipv6 ospf6 hello-interval HELLOINTERVAL: OSPF6 interface. (line 10)
* ipv6 ospf6 priority PRIORITY: OSPF6 interface. (line 20)
* ipv6 ospf6 retransmit-interval RETRANSMITINTERVAL: OSPF6 interface.
(line 17)
* ipv6 ospf6 transmit-delay TRANSMITDELAY: OSPF6 interface. (line 23)
* ipv6 route NETWORK GATEWAY: Static Route Commands.
(line 77)
* ipv6 route NETWORK GATEWAY DISTANCE: Static Route Commands.
(line 78)
* line vty: Basic Config Commands.
(line 107)
* link-detect: Interface Commands. (line 37)
* list: Terminal Mode Commands.
(line 24)
* log facility FACILITY: Basic Config Commands.
(line 81)
* log file FILENAME: Basic Config Commands.
(line 41)
* log file FILENAME LEVEL: Basic Config Commands.
(line 42)
* log monitor: Basic Config Commands.
(line 68)
* log monitor LEVEL: Basic Config Commands.
(line 69)
* log record-priority: Basic Config Commands.
(line 87)
* log stdout: Basic Config Commands.
(line 28)
* log stdout LEVEL: Basic Config Commands.
(line 29)
* log syslog: Basic Config Commands.
(line 59)
* log syslog LEVEL: Basic Config Commands.
(line 60)
* log trap LEVEL: Basic Config Commands.
(line 17)
* logmsg LEVEL MESSAGE: Terminal Mode Commands.
(line 34)
* match as-path WORD: Using AS Path in Route Map.
(line 7)
* match aspath AS_PATH: Route Map Match Command.
(line 13)
* match community COMMUNITY_LIST: Route Map Match Command.
(line 19)
* match community WORD: BGP Community in Route Map.
(line 13)
* match community WORD exact-match: BGP Community in Route Map.
(line 14)
* match extcommunity WORD: BGP Extended Communities in Route Map.
(line 7)
* match interface WORD: RIP route-map. (line 26)
* match ip address ACCESS_LIST: Route Map Match Command.
(line 7)
* match ip address prefix-list WORD: RIP route-map. (line 39)
* match ip address WORD: RIP route-map. (line 38)
* match ip next-hop A.B.C.D: RIP route-map. (line 42)
* match ip next-hop IPV4_ADDR: Route Map Match Command.
(line 10)
* match metric <0-4294967295>: RIP route-map. (line 47)
* match metric METRIC: Route Map Match Command.
(line 16)
* match peer {A.B.C.D|X:X::X:X}: Commands for configuring a Route Server.
(line 34)
* max-metric router-lsa [on-startup|on-shutdown] <5-86400>: OSPF router.
(line 110)
* max-metric router-lsa administrative: OSPF router. (line 111)
* multicast: Interface Commands. (line 27)
* neigbor {A.B.C.D|X.X::X.X|peer-group} route-map WORD {import|export}: Commands for configuring a Route Server.
(line 29)
* neighbor A.B.C.D: RIP Configuration. (line 34)
* neighbor A.B.C.D route-server-client: Commands for configuring a Route Server.
(line 11)
* neighbor PEER default-originate: BGP Peer commands. (line 47)
* neighbor PEER description ...: BGP Peer commands. (line 20)
* neighbor PEER distribute-list NAME [in|out]: Peer filtering.
(line 7)
* neighbor PEER dont-capability-negotiate: Capability Negotiation.
(line 51)
* neighbor PEER ebgp-multihop: BGP Peer commands. (line 17)
* neighbor PEER filter-list NAME [in|out]: Peer filtering. (line 13)
* neighbor PEER interface IFNAME: BGP Peer commands. (line 33)
* neighbor PEER maximum-prefix NUMBER: BGP Peer commands. (line 64)
* neighbor PEER next-hop-self: BGP Peer commands. (line 39)
* neighbor PEER override-capability: Capability Negotiation.
(line 67)
* neighbor PEER peer-group WORD: BGP Peer Group. (line 10)
* neighbor PEER port PORT: BGP Peer commands. (line 53)
* neighbor PEER prefix-list NAME [in|out]: Peer filtering. (line 11)
* neighbor PEER remote-as ASN: Defining Peer. (line 7)
* neighbor PEER route-map NAME [in|out]: Peer filtering. (line 15)
* neighbor PEER route-reflector-client: Route Reflector. (line 9)
* neighbor PEER send-community: BGP Peer commands. (line 56)
* neighbor PEER shutdown: BGP Peer commands. (line 10)
* neighbor PEER strict-capability-match: Capability Negotiation.
(line 40)
* neighbor PEER update-source: BGP Peer commands. (line 44)
* neighbor PEER version VERSION: BGP Peer commands. (line 24)
* neighbor PEER weight WEIGHT: BGP Peer commands. (line 59)
* neighbor PEER-GROUP route-server-client: Commands for configuring a Route Server.
(line 10)
* neighbor WORD peer-group: BGP Peer Group. (line 7)
* neighbor X:X::X:X route-server-client: Commands for configuring a Route Server.
(line 12)
* network A.B.C.D/M: BGP route. (line 7)
* network A.B.C.D/M area <0-4294967295>: OSPF router. (line 155)
* network A.B.C.D/M area A.B.C.D: OSPF router. (line 154)
* network IFNAME <1>: ripngd Configuration.
(line 18)
* network IFNAME: RIP Configuration. (line 27)
* network NETWORK <1>: ripngd Configuration.
(line 15)
* network NETWORK: RIP Configuration. (line 15)
* no aggregate-address A.B.C.D/M: Route Aggregation. (line 18)
* no area <0-4294967295> authentication: OSPF area. (line 129)
* no area <0-4294967295> export-list NAME: OSPF area. (line 87)
* no area <0-4294967295> filter-list prefix NAME in: OSPF area.
(line 121)
* no area <0-4294967295> filter-list prefix NAME out: OSPF area.
(line 122)
* no area <0-4294967295> import-list NAME: OSPF area. (line 111)
* no area <0-4294967295> range A.B.C.D/M: OSPF area. (line 10)
* no area <0-4294967295> shortcut: OSPF area. (line 57)
* no area <0-4294967295> stub: OSPF area. (line 64)
* no area <0-4294967295> stub no-summary: OSPF area. (line 76)
* no area <0-4294967295> virtual-link A.B.C.D: OSPF area. (line 52)
* no area A.B.C.D authentication: OSPF area. (line 128)
* no area A.B.C.D default-cost <0-16777215>: OSPF area. (line 81)
* no area A.B.C.D export-list NAME: OSPF area. (line 86)
* no area A.B.C.D filter-list prefix NAME in: OSPF area. (line 119)
* no area A.B.C.D filter-list prefix NAME out: OSPF area. (line 120)
* no area A.B.C.D import-list NAME: OSPF area. (line 110)
* no area A.B.C.D range A.B.C.D/M: OSPF area. (line 9)
* no area A.B.C.D range IPV4_PREFIX not-advertise: OSPF area. (line 29)
* no area A.B.C.D range IPV4_PREFIX substitute IPV4_PREFIX: OSPF area.
(line 36)
* no area A.B.C.D shortcut: OSPF area. (line 56)
* no area A.B.C.D stub: OSPF area. (line 63)
* no area A.B.C.D stub no-summary: OSPF area. (line 75)
* no area A.B.C.D virtual-link A.B.C.D: OSPF area. (line 51)
* no auto-cost reference-bandwidth: OSPF router. (line 144)
* no bandwidth <1-10000000>: Interface Commands. (line 32)
* no banner motd: Basic Config Commands.
(line 113)
* no bgp multiple-instance: Multiple instance. (line 14)
* no debug event: More Show IP BGP. (line 39)
* no debug keepalive: More Show IP BGP. (line 43)
* no debug ospf ism: Debugging OSPF. (line 14)
* no debug ospf ism (status|events|timers): Debugging OSPF. (line 15)
* no debug ospf lsa: Debugging OSPF. (line 24)
* no debug ospf lsa (generate|flooding|refresh): Debugging OSPF.
(line 25)
* no debug ospf nsm: Debugging OSPF. (line 19)
* no debug ospf nsm (status|events|timers): Debugging OSPF. (line 20)
* no debug ospf packet (hello|dd|ls-request|ls-update|ls-ack|all) (send|recv) [detail]: Debugging OSPF.
(line 10)
* no debug ospf zebra: Debugging OSPF. (line 29)
* no debug ospf zebra (interface|redistribute): Debugging OSPF.
(line 30)
* no debug update: More Show IP BGP. (line 41)
* no default-information originate: Redistribute routes to OSPF.
(line 40)
* no default-metric: Redistribute routes to OSPF.
(line 53)
* no default-metric <1-16>: RIP Metric Manipulation.
(line 12)
* no distance <1-255> <1>: Redistribute routes to OSPF.
(line 56)
* no distance <1-255>: RIP distance. (line 10)
* no distance <1-255> A.B.C.D/M: RIP distance. (line 14)
* no distance <1-255> A.B.C.D/M ACCESS-LIST: RIP distance. (line 19)
* no distance ospf: Redistribute routes to OSPF.
(line 60)
* no distribute-list NAME out (kernel|connected|static|rip|ospf: Redistribute routes to OSPF.
(line 50)
* no exec-timeout: Basic Config Commands.
(line 124)
* no ip address ADDRESS/PREFIX: Interface Commands. (line 15)
* no ip address ADDRESS/PREFIX secondary: Interface Commands. (line 20)
* no ip as-path access-list WORD: AS Path Access List. (line 12)
* no ip as-path access-list WORD {permit|deny} LINE: AS Path Access List.
(line 13)
* no ip community-list expanded NAME: BGP Community Lists. (line 37)
* no ip community-list NAME: BGP Community Lists. (line 35)
* no ip community-list standard NAME: BGP Community Lists. (line 36)
* no ip extcommunity-list expanded NAME: BGP Extended Community Lists.
(line 29)
* no ip extcommunity-list NAME: BGP Extended Community Lists.
(line 27)
* no ip extcommunity-list standard NAME: BGP Extended Community Lists.
(line 28)
* no ip ospf authentication-key: OSPF interface. (line 8)
* no ip ospf cost: OSPF interface. (line 31)
* no ip ospf dead-interval: OSPF interface. (line 38)
* no ip ospf hello-interval: OSPF interface. (line 55)
* no ip ospf message-digest-key: OSPF interface. (line 14)
* no ip ospf network: OSPF interface. (line 66)
* no ip ospf priority: OSPF interface. (line 70)
* no ip ospf retransmit interval: OSPF interface. (line 77)
* no ip ospf transmit-delay: OSPF interface. (line 83)
* no ip prefix-list NAME: IP Prefix List. (line 67)
* no ip prefix-list NAME description [DESC]: ip prefix-list description.
(line 11)
* no ip prefix-list sequence-number: ip prefix-list sequential number control.
(line 11)
* no ip rip authentication key-chain KEY-CHAIN: RIP Authentication.
(line 44)
* no ip rip authentication mode md5: RIP Authentication. (line 30)
* no ip rip authentication mode text: RIP Authentication. (line 34)
* no ip rip authentication string STRING: RIP Authentication. (line 38)
* no ip split-horizon: RIP Configuration. (line 71)
* no ip6 address ADDRESS/PREFIX: Interface Commands. (line 16)
* no ipv6 nd adv-interval-option: Router Advertisement.
(line 128)
* no ipv6 nd home-agent-config-flag: Router Advertisement.
(line 105)
* no ipv6 nd home-agent-lifetime: Router Advertisement.
(line 120)
* no ipv6 nd home-agent-preference: Router Advertisement.
(line 113)
* no ipv6 nd managed-config-flag: Router Advertisement.
(line 88)
* no ipv6 nd other-config-flag: Router Advertisement.
(line 97)
* no ipv6 nd ra-interval: Router Advertisement.
(line 50)
* no ipv6 nd ra-interval msec: Router Advertisement.
(line 58)
* no ipv6 nd ra-lifetime: Router Advertisement.
(line 66)
* no ipv6 nd reachable-time: Router Advertisement.
(line 78)
* no ipv6 nd suppress-ra: Router Advertisement.
(line 7)
* no link-detect: Interface Commands. (line 38)
* no log facility: Basic Config Commands.
(line 82)
* no log file: Basic Config Commands.
(line 43)
* no log monitor: Basic Config Commands.
(line 70)
* no log record-priority: Basic Config Commands.
(line 88)
* no log stdout: Basic Config Commands.
(line 30)
* no log syslog: Basic Config Commands.
(line 61)
* no log trap: Basic Config Commands.
(line 18)
* no max-metric router-lsa [on-startup|on-shutdown|administrative]: OSPF router.
(line 113)
* no multicast: Interface Commands. (line 28)
* no neighbor A.B.C.D: RIP Configuration. (line 35)
* no neighbor PEER default-originate: BGP Peer commands. (line 48)
* no neighbor PEER description ...: BGP Peer commands. (line 21)
* no neighbor PEER dont-capability-negotiate: Capability Negotiation.
(line 52)
* no neighbor PEER ebgp-multihop: BGP Peer commands. (line 18)
* no neighbor PEER interface IFNAME: BGP Peer commands. (line 34)
* no neighbor PEER maximum-prefix NUMBER: BGP Peer commands. (line 65)
* no neighbor PEER next-hop-self: BGP Peer commands. (line 40)
* no neighbor PEER override-capability: Capability Negotiation.
(line 68)
* no neighbor PEER route-reflector-client: Route Reflector. (line 10)
* no neighbor PEER shutdown: BGP Peer commands. (line 11)
* no neighbor PEER strict-capability-match: Capability Negotiation.
(line 41)
* no neighbor PEER update-source: BGP Peer commands. (line 45)
* no neighbor PEER weight WEIGHT: BGP Peer commands. (line 60)
* no network A.B.C.D/M: BGP route. (line 17)
* no network A.B.C.D/M area <0-4294967295>: OSPF router. (line 157)
* no network A.B.C.D/M area A.B.C.D: OSPF router. (line 156)
* no network IFNAME: RIP Configuration. (line 28)
* no network NETWORK: RIP Configuration. (line 16)
* no ospf abr-type TYPE: OSPF router. (line 27)
* no ospf rfc1583compatibility: OSPF router. (line 49)
* no ospf router-id: OSPF router. (line 17)
* no passive interface INTERFACE: OSPF router. (line 60)
* no passive-interface IFNAME: RIP Configuration. (line 58)
* no redistribute (kernel|connected|static|rip|bgp): Redistribute routes to OSPF.
(line 22)
* no redistribute bgp: How to Announce RIP route.
(line 44)
* no redistribute connected: How to Announce RIP route.
(line 26)
* no redistribute kernel: How to Announce RIP route.
(line 10)
* no redistribute ospf: How to Announce RIP route.
(line 36)
* no redistribute static: How to Announce RIP route.
(line 18)
* no route A.B.C.D/M: How to Announce RIP route.
(line 54)
* no router bgp ASN: BGP router. (line 19)
* no router ospf: OSPF router. (line 11)
* no router rip: RIP Configuration. (line 12)
* no router zebra: Redistribute routes to OSPF.
(line 63)
* no shutdown: Interface Commands. (line 10)
* no smux peer OID: MIB and command reference.
(line 29)
* no smux peer OID PASSWORD: MIB and command reference.
(line 32)
* no timers basic: RIP Timers. (line 31)
* no timers throttle spf: OSPF router. (line 72)
* no version: RIP Version Control. (line 30)
* offset-list ACCESS-LIST (in|out): RIP Metric Manipulation.
(line 20)
* offset-list ACCESS-LIST (in|out) IFNAME: RIP Metric Manipulation.
(line 21)
* on-match goto N: Route Map Exit Action Command.
(line 11)
* on-match next: Route Map Exit Action Command.
(line 7)
* ospf abr-type TYPE: OSPF router. (line 26)
* ospf rfc1583compatibility: OSPF router. (line 48)
* ospf router-id A.B.C.D: OSPF router. (line 16)
* passive interface INTERFACE: OSPF router. (line 59)
* passive-interface (IFNAME|default): RIP Configuration. (line 57)
* password PASSWORD: Basic Config Commands.
(line 10)
* redistribute (kernel|connected|static|rip|bgp): Redistribute routes to OSPF.
(line 7)
* redistribute (kernel|connected|static|rip|bgp) metric <0-16777214>: Redistribute routes to OSPF.
(line 15)
* redistribute (kernel|connected|static|rip|bgp) metric <0-16777214> route-map WORD: Redistribute routes to OSPF.
(line 17)
* redistribute (kernel|connected|static|rip|bgp) metric-type (1|2): Redistribute routes to OSPF.
(line 11)
* redistribute (kernel|connected|static|rip|bgp) metric-type (1|2) metric <0-16777214>: Redistribute routes to OSPF.
(line 19)
* redistribute (kernel|connected|static|rip|bgp) metric-type (1|2) metric <0-16777214> route-map WORD: Redistribute routes to OSPF.
(line 21)
* redistribute (kernel|connected|static|rip|bgp) metric-type (1|2) route-map WORD: Redistribute routes to OSPF.
(line 13)
* redistribute (kernel|connected|static|rip|bgp) ROUTE-MAP: Redistribute routes to OSPF.
(line 9)
* redistribute bgp: How to Announce RIP route.
(line 41)
* redistribute bgp metric <0-16>: How to Announce RIP route.
(line 42)
* redistribute bgp route-map ROUTE-MAP: How to Announce RIP route.
(line 43)
* redistribute connected <1>: Redistribute to BGP. (line 13)
* redistribute connected <2>: Redistribute routes to OSPF6.
(line 8)
* redistribute connected: How to Announce RIP route.
(line 23)
* redistribute connected metric <0-16>: How to Announce RIP route.
(line 24)
* redistribute connected route-map ROUTE-MAP: How to Announce RIP route.
(line 25)
* redistribute kernel <1>: Redistribute to BGP. (line 7)
* redistribute kernel: How to Announce RIP route.
(line 7)
* redistribute kernel metric <0-16>: How to Announce RIP route.
(line 8)
* redistribute kernel route-map ROUTE-MAP: How to Announce RIP route.
(line 9)
* redistribute ospf <1>: Redistribute to BGP. (line 19)
* redistribute ospf: How to Announce RIP route.
(line 33)
* redistribute ospf metric <0-16>: How to Announce RIP route.
(line 34)
* redistribute ospf route-map ROUTE-MAP: How to Announce RIP route.
(line 35)
* redistribute rip: Redistribute to BGP. (line 16)
* redistribute ripng: Redistribute routes to OSPF6.
(line 9)
* redistribute static <1>: Redistribute to BGP. (line 10)
* redistribute static <2>: Redistribute routes to OSPF6.
(line 7)
* redistribute static: How to Announce RIP route.
(line 15)
* redistribute static metric <0-16>: How to Announce RIP route.
(line 16)
* redistribute static route-map ROUTE-MAP: How to Announce RIP route.
(line 17)
* route A.B.C.D/M: How to Announce RIP route.
(line 53)
* route NETWORK: ripngd Configuration.
(line 21)
* route-map ROUTE-MAP-NAME (permit|deny) ORDER: Route Map Command.
(line 7)
* router bgp AS-NUMBER: BGP instance and view.
(line 11)
* router bgp AS-NUMBER view NAME: BGP instance and view.
(line 28)
* router bgp ASN: BGP router. (line 13)
* router ospf: OSPF router. (line 10)
* router ospf6: OSPF6 router. (line 7)
* router rip: RIP Configuration. (line 7)
* router ripng: ripngd Configuration.
(line 9)
* router zebra <1>: Redistribute routes to OSPF.
(line 62)
* router zebra: ripngd Configuration.
(line 24)
* router-id A.B.C.D: OSPF6 router. (line 9)
* service advanced-vty: Basic Config Commands.
(line 100)
* service integrated-vtysh-config: VTY shell integrated configuration.
(line 7)
* service password-encryption: Basic Config Commands.
(line 97)
* service terminal-length <0-512>: Basic Config Commands.
(line 103)
* set as-path prepend AS-PATH: Using AS Path in Route Map.
(line 9)
* set as-path prepend AS_PATH: Route Map Set Command.
(line 19)
* set comm-list WORD delete: BGP Community in Route Map.
(line 34)
* set community COMMUNITY <1>: Route Map Set Command.
(line 22)
* set community COMMUNITY: BGP Community in Route Map.
(line 23)
* set community COMMUNITY additive: BGP Community in Route Map.
(line 24)
* set community none: BGP Community in Route Map.
(line 22)
* set extcommunity rt EXTCOMMUNITY: BGP Extended Communities in Route Map.
(line 9)
* set extcommunity soo EXTCOMMUNITY: BGP Extended Communities in Route Map.
(line 12)
* set ip next-hop A.B.C.D: RIP route-map. (line 52)
* set ip next-hop IPV4_ADDRESS: Route Map Set Command.
(line 7)
* set ipv6 next-hop global IPV6_ADDRESS: Route Map Set Command.
(line 25)
* set ipv6 next-hop local IPV6_ADDRESS: Route Map Set Command.
(line 28)
* set local-preference LOCAL_PREF: Route Map Set Command.
(line 10)
* set metric <0-4294967295>: RIP route-map. (line 57)
* set metric METRIC: Route Map Set Command.
(line 16)
* set weight WEIGHT: Route Map Set Command.
(line 13)
* show debug: More Show IP BGP. (line 31)
* show debugging ospf: Debugging OSPF. (line 32)
* show debugging rip: RIP Debug Commands. (line 29)
* show debugging ripng: ripngd Terminal Mode Commands.
(line 9)
* show interface: zebra Terminal Mode Commands.
(line 21)
* show ip bgp: Show IP BGP. (line 7)
* show ip bgp A.B.C.D: Show IP BGP. (line 8)
* show ip bgp community: Display BGP Routes by Community.
(line 11)
* show ip bgp community COMMUNITY <1>: More Show IP BGP. (line 11)
* show ip bgp community COMMUNITY: Display BGP Routes by Community.
(line 12)
* show ip bgp community COMMUNITY exact-match <1>: More Show IP BGP.
(line 12)
* show ip bgp community COMMUNITY exact-match: Display BGP Routes by Community.
(line 13)
* show ip bgp community-list WORD <1>: More Show IP BGP. (line 16)
* show ip bgp community-list WORD: Display BGP Routes by Community.
(line 20)
* show ip bgp community-list WORD exact-match <1>: More Show IP BGP.
(line 17)
* show ip bgp community-list WORD exact-match: Display BGP Routes by Community.
(line 21)
* show ip bgp neighbor [PEER]: More Show IP BGP. (line 23)
* show ip bgp regexp LINE <1>: More Show IP BGP. (line 7)
* show ip bgp regexp LINE: Display BGP Routes by AS Path.
(line 10)
* show ip bgp summary: More Show IP BGP. (line 21)
* show ip bgp view NAME: Viewing the view. (line 9)
* show ip bgp X:X::X:X: Show IP BGP. (line 9)
* show ip community-list: BGP Community Lists. (line 42)
* show ip community-list NAME: BGP Community Lists. (line 43)
* show ip extcommunity-list: BGP Extended Community Lists.
(line 35)
* show ip extcommunity-list NAME: BGP Extended Community Lists.
(line 36)
* show ip ospf: Showing OSPF information.
(line 7)
* show ip ospf database: Showing OSPF information.
(line 20)
* show ip ospf database (asbr-summary|external|network|router|summary): Showing OSPF information.
(line 23)
* show ip ospf database (asbr-summary|external|network|router|summary) adv-router ADV-ROUTER: Showing OSPF information.
(line 30)
* show ip ospf database (asbr-summary|external|network|router|summary) LINK-STATE-ID: Showing OSPF information.
(line 25)
* show ip ospf database (asbr-summary|external|network|router|summary) LINK-STATE-ID adv-router ADV-ROUTER: Showing OSPF information.
(line 28)
* show ip ospf database (asbr-summary|external|network|router|summary) LINK-STATE-ID self-originate: Showing OSPF information.
(line 33)
* show ip ospf database (asbr-summary|external|network|router|summary) self-originate: Showing OSPF information.
(line 35)
* show ip ospf database max-age: Showing OSPF information.
(line 37)
* show ip ospf database self-originate: Showing OSPF information.
(line 39)
* show ip ospf interface [INTERFACE]: Showing OSPF information.
(line 11)
* show ip ospf neighbor: Showing OSPF information.
(line 15)
* show ip ospf neighbor detail: Showing OSPF information.
(line 17)
* show ip ospf neighbor INTERFACE: Showing OSPF information.
(line 16)
* show ip ospf neighbor INTERFACE detail: Showing OSPF information.
(line 18)
* show ip ospf route: Showing OSPF information.
(line 41)
* show ip prefix-list: Showing ip prefix-list.
(line 7)
* show ip prefix-list detail: Showing ip prefix-list.
(line 31)
* show ip prefix-list detail NAME: Showing ip prefix-list.
(line 33)
* show ip prefix-list NAME: Showing ip prefix-list.
(line 10)
* show ip prefix-list NAME A.B.C.D/M: Showing ip prefix-list.
(line 17)
* show ip prefix-list NAME A.B.C.D/M first-match: Showing ip prefix-list.
(line 25)
* show ip prefix-list NAME A.B.C.D/M longer: Showing ip prefix-list.
(line 23)
* show ip prefix-list NAME seq NUM: Showing ip prefix-list.
(line 13)
* show ip prefix-list summary: Showing ip prefix-list.
(line 27)
* show ip prefix-list summary NAME: Showing ip prefix-list.
(line 29)
* show ip protocols: Show RIP Information.
(line 17)
* show ip rip: Show RIP Information.
(line 9)
* show ip ripng: ripngd Terminal Mode Commands.
(line 7)
* show ip route: zebra Terminal Mode Commands.
(line 7)
* show ipforward: zebra Terminal Mode Commands.
(line 23)
* show ipv6 ospf6 [INSTANCE_ID]: Showing OSPF6 information.
(line 7)
* show ipv6 ospf6 database: Showing OSPF6 information.
(line 11)
* show ipv6 ospf6 interface: Showing OSPF6 information.
(line 15)
* show ipv6 ospf6 neighbor: Showing OSPF6 information.
(line 18)
* show ipv6 ospf6 request-list A.B.C.D: Showing OSPF6 information.
(line 21)
* show ipv6 route: zebra Terminal Mode Commands.
(line 19)
* show ipv6 route ospf6: Showing OSPF6 information.
(line 24)
* show ipv6forward: zebra Terminal Mode Commands.
(line 28)
* show logging: Terminal Mode Commands.
(line 30)
* show version: Terminal Mode Commands.
(line 27)
* shutdown: Interface Commands. (line 9)
* smux peer OID: MIB and command reference.
(line 28)
* smux peer OID PASSWORD: MIB and command reference.
(line 31)
* table TABLENO: Static Route Commands.
(line 81)
* terminal length <0-512>: Terminal Mode Commands.
(line 17)
* timers basic UPDATE TIMEOUT GARBAGE: RIP Timers. (line 7)
* timers throttle spf DELAY INITIAL-HOLDTIME MAX-HOLDTIME: OSPF router.
(line 71)
* username USERNAME nopassword: VTY shell username. (line 7)
* version VERSION: RIP Version Control. (line 20)
* who: Terminal Mode Commands.
(line 21)
* write file: Terminal Mode Commands.
(line 10)
* write terminal: Terminal Mode Commands.
(line 7)

File: quagga.info, Node: VTY Key Index, Prev: Command Index, Up: Top
VTY Key Index
*************
�[index�]
* Menu:
* <DEL>: CLI Editing Commands. (line 11)
* <DOWN>: CLI Advanced Commands.
(line 17)
* <LEFT>: CLI Movement Commands.
(line 15)
* <RIGHT>: CLI Movement Commands.
(line 11)
* <TAB>: CLI Advanced Commands.
(line 24)
* <UP>: CLI Advanced Commands.
(line 21)
* ?: CLI Advanced Commands.
(line 27)
* C-a: CLI Movement Commands.
(line 24)
* C-b: CLI Movement Commands.
(line 15)
* C-c: CLI Advanced Commands.
(line 10)
* C-d: CLI Editing Commands. (line 14)
* C-e: CLI Movement Commands.
(line 27)
* C-f: CLI Movement Commands.
(line 11)
* C-h: CLI Editing Commands. (line 11)
* C-k: CLI Editing Commands. (line 23)
* C-n: CLI Advanced Commands.
(line 17)
* C-p: CLI Advanced Commands.
(line 21)
* C-t: CLI Editing Commands. (line 29)
* C-u: CLI Editing Commands. (line 26)
* C-w: CLI Editing Commands. (line 20)
* C-z: CLI Advanced Commands.
(line 13)
* M-b: CLI Movement Commands.
(line 21)
* M-d: CLI Editing Commands. (line 17)
* M-f: CLI Movement Commands.
(line 18)

Tag Table:
Node: Top1971
Node: Overview3329
Node: About Quagga4730
Node: System Architecture6983
Node: Supported Platforms9673
Node: Supported RFC10814
Node: How to get Quagga12896
Node: Mailing List13650
Node: Bug Reports14097
Node: Installation14975
Node: Configure the Software15409
Node: The Configure script and its options15657
Node: Least-Privilege support18845
Node: Linux notes20581
Ref: Linux notes-Footnote-122439
Node: Build the Software22505
Node: Install the Software23053
Node: Basic commands24513
Node: Config Commands25288
Node: Basic Config Commands26181
Node: Sample Config File31671
Node: Terminal Mode Commands32441
Node: Common Invocation Options33538
Node: Virtual Terminal Interfaces34945
Node: VTY Overview35456
Node: VTY Modes36707
Node: VTY View Mode37157
Node: VTY Enable Mode37407
Node: VTY Other Modes37685
Node: VTY CLI Commands37861
Node: CLI Movement Commands38321
Node: CLI Editing Commands38844
Node: CLI Advanced Commands39432
Node: Zebra40198
Node: Invoking zebra40707
Node: Interface Commands41238
Node: Static Route Commands42770
Node: zebra Terminal Mode Commands46043
Node: RIP47008
Node: Starting and Stopping ripd47969
Node: RIP netmask49382
Node: RIP Configuration50481
Node: RIP Version Control53481
Node: How to Announce RIP route55663
Node: Filtering RIP Routes58228
Node: RIP Metric Manipulation59695
Node: RIP distance60608
Node: RIP route-map61423
Node: RIP Authentication63939
Node: RIP Timers66182
Node: Show RIP Information67470
Node: RIP Debug Commands68843
Node: RIPng69839
Node: Invoking ripngd70159
Node: ripngd Configuration70408
Node: ripngd Terminal Mode Commands71159
Node: ripngd Filtering Commands71523
Node: OSPFv272032
Node: Configuring ospfd72684
Node: OSPF router73232
Node: OSPF area81558
Node: OSPF interface87683
Ref: ip ospf dead-interval minimal89252
Node: Redistribute routes to OSPF91824
Node: Showing OSPF information94482
Ref: show ip ospf94667
Node: Debugging OSPF95998
Node: OSPF Configuration Examples97073
Node: OSPFv398443
Node: OSPF6 router98796
Node: OSPF6 area99150
Node: OSPF6 interface99328
Node: Redistribute routes to OSPF6100205
Node: Showing OSPF6 information100521
Node: OSPF6 Configuration Examples101378
Node: BGP101799
Node: Starting BGP102721
Node: BGP router103298
Node: BGP distance104542
Node: BGP decision process104980
Node: BGP network105462
Node: BGP route105652
Node: Route Aggregation106208
Node: Redistribute to BGP106777
Node: BGP Peer107304
Node: Defining Peer107491
Node: BGP Peer commands108104
Node: Peer filtering110508
Node: BGP Peer Group111016
Node: BGP Address Family111329
Node: Autonomous System111483
Node: AS Path Regular Expression112360
Node: Display BGP Routes by AS Path113607
Node: AS Path Access List114047
Node: Using AS Path in Route Map114514
Node: Private AS Numbers114795
Node: BGP Communities Attribute114953
Node: BGP Community Lists117414
Node: Numbered BGP Community Lists120068
Node: BGP Community in Route Map121655
Node: Display BGP Routes by Community123598
Node: Using BGP Communities Attribute124767
Node: BGP Extended Communities Attribute128335
Node: BGP Extended Community Lists130107
Node: BGP Extended Communities in Route Map131982
Node: Displaying BGP routes132441
Node: Show IP BGP132678
Node: More Show IP BGP133378
Node: Capability Negotiation134529
Node: Route Reflector138001
Node: Route Server138280
Node: Multiple instance139346
Node: BGP instance and view141191
Node: Routing policy142571
Node: Viewing the view143339
Node: How to set up a 6-Bone connection143624
Node: Dump BGP packets and table144996
Node: BGP Configuration Examples145578
Node: Configuring Quagga as a Route Server154529
Node: Description of the Route Server model155490
Ref: fig:normal-processing157067
Ref: fig:full-mesh157669
Ref: fig:route-server157764
Ref: filter-delegation158159
Ref: Route Server tasks159328
Ref: Route-server path filter process159699
Ref: fig:rs-processing162013
Node: Commands for configuring a Route Server164422
Node: Example of Route Server Configuration167449
Node: Configuration of the BGP routers without Route Server168370
Node: Configuration of the BGP routers with Route Server171253
Node: Configuration of the Route Server itself172554
Node: Further considerations about Import and Export route-maps177553
Node: VTY shell180597
Node: VTY shell username181266
Node: VTY shell integrated configuration181898
Node: Filtering183346
Node: IP Access List183699
Node: IP Prefix List184085
Node: ip prefix-list description187104
Node: ip prefix-list sequential number control187631
Node: Showing ip prefix-list188173
Node: Clear counter of ip prefix-list189281
Node: Route Map189720
Node: Route Map Command193165
Node: Route Map Match Command193474
Node: Route Map Set Command194098
Node: Route Map Call Command195006
Node: Route Map Exit Action Command195336
Node: Route Map Examples195818
Node: IPv6 Support196330
Node: Router Advertisement196902
Node: Kernel Interface202518
Node: SNMP Support204475
Node: Getting and installing an SNMP agent205074
Node: SMUX configuration205647
Node: MIB and command reference207783
Node: Handling SNMP Traps209198
Node: Zebra Protocol215277
Node: Packet Binary Dump Format219366
Node: Command Index230976
Node: VTY Key Index289710

End Tag Table