3 Comments on “Which command is configured on this router?”
Snoopysays:
The BGP Maximum-Prefix feature allows you to control how many prefixes can be received from a
neighbor. By default, this feature allows a router to bring down a peer when the number of
received prefixes from that peer exceeds the configured Maximum-Prefix limit. This feature is
commonly used for external BGP peers, but can be applied to internal BGP peers also. When the
maximum number of prefixes have been received, the BGP sessions closes into the IDLE state.
Reference. http://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/support/docs/ip/border-gateway-protocol-bgp/25160-
bgp-maximum-prefix.html
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Bensays:
Key info: state idle.
It is because the router has reach max prefix pre-configured.
neighbor 10.100.1.1 maximum-prefix 200
The BGP Maximum-Prefix feature allows you to control how many prefixes can be received from a
neighbor. By default, this feature allows a router to bring down a peer when the number of
received prefixes from that peer exceeds the configured Maximum-Prefix limit. This feature is
commonly used for external BGP peers, but can be applied to internal BGP peers also. When the
maximum number of prefixes have been received, the BGP sessions closes into the IDLE state.
Reference. http://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/support/docs/ip/border-gateway-protocol-bgp/25160-
bgp-maximum-prefix.html
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Key info: state idle.
It is because the router has reach max prefix pre-configured.
neighbor 10.100.1.1 maximum-prefix 200
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Agree, but key info: “(PfxCt)”
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