
BGP and BGP4+ Introduction
BGP and BGP4+ Route Dampening
Route dampening is a BGP and BGP4+ feature designed to minimize the propagation of flapping routes across a network. A route is considered to be flapping when it is repeatedly available, then unavailable, then available, then unavailable, etc.
Consider a network with three BGP autonomous systems: autonomous system 1, autonomous system 2, and autonomous system 3. If the route to network A in autonomous system 1 flaps, and is unavailable without route dampening, the eBGP neighbor of autonomous system 2 sends a withdraw message to autonomous system 2.
The router in autonomous system 2 sends the withdraw message to autonomous system
3.When a route to network A appears, autonomous system 1 sends an advertisement message to autonomous system 2, which sends it to autonomous system 3.
If the route to network A repeatedly becomes unavailable, then available, many withdrawal and advertisement messages are sent. This is a problem in a network connected to the Internet since route flapping in the Internet often involves many routes.
The route dampening feature minimizes the flapping problem as follows. If the route to network A flaps, then the router in autonomous system 2, with route dampening enabled, assigns network A a penalty of 1000 and moves it to the history state.
The router in autonomous system 2 continues to advertise the status of the route to neighbors. When the route flaps so the penalty exceeds the limit, the router stops advertising the route to network A, so the route becomes dampened.
The penalty placed on network A is reduced until the limit is reached, when the route is advertised. At half the limit, dampening information for a route to network A is removed.
The below terms are used for BGP and BGP4+ route dampening:
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■History
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■Damp
■Suppress
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| Software Reference Supplement for SwitchBlade® x8112, x908, x900 and x610 Series Switches |
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AlliedWare PlusTM Operating System - Software Version | 1.23 |