writtenagain.com writtenagain.com
Site Home :> About Us :> Place Your Link :> Privacy Policy :> Terms of Use :> Submit Article
Search:   
Get 3 way links
 

Research & Science

Finance & Banking

Health & Therapy

Home Family & Garden

Games & Play

Automotive

Teens & Kids

Art & Culture

Eating & Drinking

Travel & Vacation

Healthcare & Medicine

Fashion & Relationships

Issues & News

Business & Services

Self Help

Recreation

Property & Estate

Society & Issues

Careers & Employment

Politics & Government

Academics & Education

Shopping Online

Adventure & Sports

Software & Networking

 

  Site Home » Software & Networking » Computer Certification
   
 

Cisco CCNP / BSCI Exam Tutorial: The BGP Attribute MED

   
Author: Chris Bryant
 

Your BSCI exam and CCNP certification success depend on mastering BGP, and a big part of that is knowing how and when to use the many BGP attributes. And for those of you with an eye on the CCIE, believe me - you've got to know BGP attributes like the back of your hand. One such BGP attribute is the Multi-Exit Discriminator, or MED.

The MED attribute is sent from a router or routers in one AS to another AS to indicate what path the remote AS should use to send data to the local AS.

That sounds a little confusing on paper, so let's walk through an example. R1 is in AS 1, and R2, R3, and R4 are in AS 234. R4 is advertising a loopback into BGP, and R1 has two possible next-hops to get to that loopback - R2 (172.12.123.2) and R3 (172.12.123.3). Let's see which of the two paths R1 is using.

R1#show ip bgp 4.4.4.4

BGP routing table entry for 4.4.4.4/32, version 8

Paths: (2 available, best #2, table Default-IP-Routing-Table)

Flag: 0x208

Advertised to non peer-group peers:

172.12.123.3

234

172.12.123.3 from 172.12.123.3 (3.3.3.3)

Origin IGP, localpref 100, valid, external

234

172.12.123.2 from 172.12.123.2 (2.2.2.2)

Origin IGP, localpref 100, valid, external, best

R1 is using 172.12.123.2 as the next-hop to enter AS 234. If all values are left at their default, we could have 100 routes being advertised from AS 234 to AS 1 and the next-hop would remain the same.

We can configure R2 and R3 to send different MED values to R1, and the router sending the lowest MED would be the preferred next-hop. (The MED is a metric, and the lowest metric is always preferred.) We'll configure the MED attribute on both R2 and R3, sending a MED of 200 from R2 and 100 from R3.

R2(config)#route-map SET_MED_200 permit 10

R2(config-route-map)#set metric 200

R2(config-route-map)#router bgp 234

R2(config-router)#neighbor 172.12.123.1 route-map SET_MED_200 out

R3(config)#route-map SET_MED_100 permit 10

R3(config-route-map)#set metric 100

R3(config-route-map)#router bgp 234

R3(config-router)#neighbor 172.12.123.1 route-map SET_MED_100 out

After clearing the BGP table on R1, R1 will still see both next-hop addresses and will still consider both to be valid, but the path through R3 will be selected due to its lower metric.

Just keep in mind that the MED is actually a metric, and lower metrics are more desirable in path selection. That will put you one step closer to passing the BSCI and earning your CCNP Certification!

 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Yahoo SEO Techniques
 
UPS Battery For Your Computer
 
Spyware - Know Your Enemy
 
Spyware. Different Types
 
Polyphonic Ringtones - Get Rid of the Monophonic Ones
 
Exclusive, $$ Saving Report for Pay-Per-Click Advertisers
 
Broadband Users ? Stop Hacker Attacks With Firewall Software
 
A brief look at the impact of role play games on social networking
 
Why to Choose Paid Hosting Instead of Free?
 
A Hitchhiker's Guide to the Internet
 
 
 
Site Home :> Privacy Policy :> Terms of Use
© 2008 www.writtenagain.com All Rights Reserved.