H3C LS-3100-52P-OVS-H3 Operation Manual - page 680
1-17
Task
Remarks
Configuring BGP Keepalive Interval and
Holdtime
Optional
Configuring the Interval for Sending the
Same Update
Optional
Configuring BGP Soft-Reset
Optional
Enabling Quick eBGP Session
Reestablishment
Optional
Enabling MD5 Authentication for TCP
Connections
Optional
Configuring BGP Load Balancing
Optional
Tuning and Optimizing
BGP Networks
Forbiding Session Establishment with a Peer
or Peer Group
Optional
Configuring BGP Peer Groups
Optional
Configuring BGP Community
Optional
Configuring a BGP Route Reflector
Optional
Configuring a Large
Scale BGP Network
Configuring a BGP Confederation
Optional
Configuring BGP GR
Optional
Enabling Trap
Optional
Enabling Logging of Peer State Changes
Optional
Configuring BGP Basic Functions
This section does not differentiate between BGP and MP-BGP.
Prerequisites
The neighboring nodes are accessible to each other at the network layer.
Creating a BGP Connection
A router ID is the unique identifier of a BGP router in an AS.
z
To ensure the uniqueness of a router ID and enhance network reliability, you can specify in BGP
view the IP address of a local loopback interface as the router ID.
z
If no router ID is specified in BGP view, the global router ID is used. For information about global
router ID, refer to IP Routing Overview in the IP Routing Volume.
z
If the global router ID is used and then it is removed, the system will select a new router ID.
z
If the router ID is specified in BGP view, using the undo router-id command can make the system
select a new router ID.