Which NSX routing protocols offers the most flexible policy control when peering with the physical environment?
A. BGP
B. OSPF
C. ISIS
D. EIGRP
9 Comments on “Which NSX routing protocols offers the most flexible po…”
Ciro Saraviasays:
I have found some docs online that say he following:
A group of routers under the same administrative domain(AS), mention that OSPF is better suited via an IGP(OSPF), on the other hand, I have also found online that inside routing is better in an autonomous system(AS) via BGP.
I am still trying to determine which would be the correct answer for this, as asome say that BGP would be better suited when routing inside an (AS)
Has any one found the correct answer?
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Robczissays:
BGP
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Matzsays:
I assume BGP.
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Ariasays:
BGP.
NSX Design Guide :
Both the NSX DLR and the NSX ESG support OSPF and BGP. The primary difference between these routing protocols is the level of control on routes propagation and attribute manipulations they allow, with BGP being the more flexible of the two. The concept of an Autonomous System (AS), defined as a group of routers under the same administrative domain, comes also into play. Routing inside an AS is usually done via an IGP (e.g., OSPF) while routing between Autonomous Systems is done via an EGP (e.g., BGP).
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Andersonsays:
should be BGP
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Sanjaysays:
Besides, part of new 313Q VMWare 2V0-642 dumps are available here:
BGP is a policy based protocol while OSPF is a link-state protocol.
A is the correct answer.
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Isays:
I would say OSPF as it is vendor neutral & the most widely used routing protocol in the hardware routing world (for internal networking).
BGP is considered more for the external ISP peering systems.
I have found some docs online that say he following:
A group of routers under the same administrative domain(AS), mention that OSPF is better suited via an IGP(OSPF), on the other hand, I have also found online that inside routing is better in an autonomous system(AS) via BGP.
I am still trying to determine which would be the correct answer for this, as asome say that BGP would be better suited when routing inside an (AS)
Has any one found the correct answer?
1
0
BGP
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0
I assume BGP.
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0
BGP.
NSX Design Guide :
Both the NSX DLR and the NSX ESG support OSPF and BGP. The primary difference between these routing protocols is the level of control on routes propagation and attribute manipulations they allow, with BGP being the more flexible of the two. The concept of an Autonomous System (AS), defined as a group of routers under the same administrative domain, comes also into play. Routing inside an AS is usually done via an IGP (e.g., OSPF) while routing between Autonomous Systems is done via an EGP (e.g., BGP).
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should be BGP
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Besides, part of new 313Q VMWare 2V0-642 dumps are available here:
https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B-ob6L_QjGLpbVl3X1hXbUdteHc
Best Regards!
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BGP is a policy based protocol while OSPF is a link-state protocol.
A is the correct answer.
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I would say OSPF as it is vendor neutral & the most widely used routing protocol in the hardware routing world (for internal networking).
BGP is considered more for the external ISP peering systems.
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BGP for Bery Good Protocol.
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