BGP is also a path-vector routing protocol, which limits the distribution of a firewall’s reachability information to its peer or neighbor firewalls. BGP uses path attributes to provide more information about each route. BGP maintains an AS path, which includes the number of each AS that the route has transited. Path attributes may also be used to distinguish between groups of routes to determine administrative preferences. This allows greater flexibility in determining route preference and achieves a variety of administrative ends.

BGP supports two basic types of sessions between neighbors: internal (IBGP) and external (EBGP). Internal sessions run between firewalls in the same autonomous systems, while external sessions run between firewalls in different autonomous systems.

Route Maps

Route maps are used to control which routes are accepted and announced by dynamic routing protocols. Use route maps to configure inbound route filters, outbound route filters and to redistribute routes from one protocol to another.

You can define route maps only using the CLI, this feature is not available in Network Voyager. For information on route map commands, see the CLI Reference Guide.

Route maps support both IPv4 and IPv6 protocols, including RIP, BGP, RIPng, OSPFv2, and OSPFv3. BGP-4++ policy can only be specified using route maps. For the other protocols, you can use either route maps or the Route Redistribution and Inbound Route Filters features that you configure using Network Voyager. Route map for import policy corresponds to Inbound Route Filters; route map for export policy corresponds to Route Redistribution.

Note

Route maps offer more configuration options than the Network Voyager configuration for route redistribution and inbound route filters. They are not functionally equivalent.

Protocols can use route maps for redistribution and Network Voyager settings for inbound route filtering and vice versa. However, if one or more route maps are assigned to a protocol (for import or export) any corresponding Network Voyager configuration (for route redistribution or inbound route filters) is ignored.

OSPF

Open Shortest Path First (OSPF) is an interior gateway protocol (IGP) used to exchange routing information between routers within a single autonomous system (AS). OSPF calculates the best path based on true costs using a metric assigned by a network administrator. RIP, the oldest IGP protocol chooses the least-cost path based on hop count. OSPF is more efficient than RIP, has a quicker convergence, and provides equal-cost multipath routing where packets to a single destination can be sent using more than one interface. OSPF is suitable for complex networks with a large number of routers. It can coexist with RIP on a network.

Nokia Network Voyager for IPSO 4.0 Reference Guide

353

Page 353
Image 353
Nokia IPSO 4.0 manual Route Maps, Nokia Network Voyager for Ipso 4.0 Reference Guide 353