[j-nsp] mx-class units now advertisement management interface networks in BGP

Jo Rhett jrhett at netconsonance.com
Thu Sep 27 16:06:30 EDT 2012


Reply to Harry and Doug both since you mostly asked the same question.

On Sep 27, 2012, at 12:13 PM, Harry Reynolds wrote:
> It might help if you posted your BGP export policy. IIRC, there is a no-readvertise flag available for a static but not aware of any inherent blocking of the advertisement of an fxpo address via BGP, more so if your export permits it.


To me it is a bug to advertise a route which you won't route packets for. Obviously it's your fault if you advertise a route and have a packet filter blocking packets -- the routing engine isn't responsible for this. But fxp0 is supposedly on its own routing fabric. I can't send packets in ae0 destined for something on the fxp0 network.

If a route visible in one routing engine was advertised out by another routing engine (with no route-sharing between them) this would be a bug, yes? Why isn't fxp0 treated the same way?

Finally, we have the same export policy on every node in our network. Having to break that out, and hand-tune every export policy to explicitly deny the fxp0 interface's routes is a lot of work with zero gain. If for some reason Juniper feels that it's important to someone somewhere to announce a route you won't accept packets for, why isn't there any easy method to disable this nonsensical, nonfunctional, nobody in their right mind would or could use it (non)functionality?

Obviously, a feature request for "protocol bgp { interface fxp0 { ignore; }}" would do the trick, but I struggle to believe that you've never seen this problem before, and you don't have a better way to prevent this behavior.

-- 
Jo Rhett
Net Consonance : net philanthropy to improve open source and internet projects.





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