Allied Telesis X908 user manual

User manual for the device Allied Telesis X908

Device: Allied Telesis X908
Category: Network Router
Manufacturer: Allied Telesis
Size: 0.84 MB
Added : 12/16/2013
Number of pages: 52
Print the manual

Download

How to use this site?

Our goal is to provide you with a quick access to the content of the user manual for Allied Telesis X908. Using the online preview, you can quickly view the contents and go to the page where you will find the solution to your problem with Allied Telesis X908.

For your convenience

If looking through the Allied Telesis X908 user manual directly on this website is not convenient for you, there are two possible solutions:

  • Full Screen Viewing - to easily view the user manual (without downloading it to your computer), you can use full-screen viewing mode. To start viewing the user manual Allied Telesis X908 on full screen, use the button Fullscreen.
  • Downloading to your computer - You can also download the user manual Allied Telesis X908 to your computer and keep it in your files. However, if you do not want to take up too much of your disk space, you can always download it in the future from ManualsBase.
Allied Telesis X908 User manual - Online PDF
Advertisement
« Page 1 of 52 »
Advertisement
Print version

Many people prefer to read the documents not on the screen, but in the printed version. The option to print the manual has also been provided, and you can use it by clicking the link above - Print the manual. You do not have to print the entire manual Allied Telesis X908 but the selected pages only. paper.

Summaries

Below you will find previews of the content of the user manuals presented on the following pages to Allied Telesis X908. If you want to quickly view the content of pages found on the following pages of the manual, you can use them.

Abstracts of contents
Summary of the content on the page No. 1

Technical Guide
How To | Use Route Maps and Other Filters to Filter and Alter
BGP and OSPF Routes
Introduction
ISPs transport large volumes of data. They often have to pay large amounts of money to
transport their data through hired links, or through other providers' networks. Similarly, they
can also charge money for transporting other ISPs' data through their network.
Where significant amounts of money are involved, there are typically complex negotiations
involved, and agreements made

Summary of the content on the page No. 2

Introduction Contents Introduction ..................................................................................................................................................................................................................1 Related How To Notes................................................................................................................................................................................3 Which products and software version does it apply to?..

Summary of the content on the page No. 3

Introduction BGP: Route Map Filtering Example ..............................................................................................................................................................48 BGP configuration.........................................................................................................................................................................................48 Route map configuration.................................................................

Summary of the content on the page No. 4

BGP: Concepts and Terminology BGP: Concepts and Terminology Before moving on to look at the filtering processes, it is important to first have some understanding of certain aspects of how BGP works. The following sections describe:  BGP peers  BGP updates  Update attributes BGP peers Definition Within the BGP protocol, the exchange of routing information is carried out between pairs of routers. Two routers create a TCP connection with each other, and exchange routing information as specifi

Summary of the content on the page No. 5

BGP: Concepts and Terminology Update attributes As mentioned above, each BGP update message contains a set of attributes. These attributes describe some of the properties of the routes, and can be used in making decisions about which routes to accept and which to reject. Some of the attributes are: Origin How a prefix came to be routed by BGP at the origin Autonomous System (AS). Prefixes are learned from various sources such as directly connected interfaces, manually configured static route

Summary of the content on the page No. 6

BGP: Overview of the Available Filter Types BGP: Overview of the Available Filter Types The following sections describe the various types of filters that can be applied to BGP updates and the hierarchy of the filters. Filter types There are a number of filter types that can be applied to the BGP updates being exchanged between BGP peers: Distribute filters Distribute list can filter the routing information between the routing protocol (RIP, RIPng, OSPF, OSPFv3 or BGP) and its IP route table (

Summary of the content on the page No. 7

BGP: Overview of the Available Filter Types Difference and Relationship in BGP KEY WORD IN COMMAND DEFINABLE FILTER WAY TO APPLY FILTERING ACL access-list Yes Distribute list distribute-list Yes Prefix list prefix-list Yes Yes AS path list as-path Yes Filter list filter-list Yes Route map route-map Yes Yes DEFINABLE WAY TO APPLY FILTERING FILTER DISTRIBUTE LIST PREFIX LIST FILTER LIST ROUTE MAP ACL YES YES Prefix list YES YES AS path list YES YES Route map YES Examples for filtering BGP Update

Summary of the content on the page No. 8

Hierarchy of the Different Filters Hierarchy of the Different Filters For distribute filters (ACLs), path filters, and prefix filters, the order of application is not important. If an update is denied by any given filter, it is discarded immediately, and is not run through any of the other filters. If an update is permitted by one filter, it is passed through to the next filter to be considered. At the end, you end up with the set of updates that all the filters agree should not be discarded

Summary of the content on the page No. 9

Hierarchy of the Different Filters Basic configuration This configuration gets the neighbor relationship established and some routes exchanged. AlliedWare Plus Create the second VLAN and associate port1.0.2 with it; assign IP addresses; and configure switch BGP. vlan database vlan 64 name v64 interface port1.0.2 switchport access vlan 64 interface vlan1 ip address 45.45.45.45/24 interface vlan64 ip address 64.64.64.64/4 router bgp 34567 redistribute connected neighbor 45.45.45.46 remote-as 345

Summary of the content on the page No. 10

Hierarchy of the Different Filters Confirming the neighbor relationship Check that each switch sees the interface route advertised from the other switch. On both the AlliedWare Plus and AlliedWare switches, use the command show ip route. AlliedWare Plus switch awplus#show ip route Codes: C - connected, S - static, R - RIP, B - BGP O - OSPF, IA - OSPF inter area N1 - OSPF NSSA external type 1, N2 - OSPF NSSA external type 2 E1 - OSPF external type 1, E2 - OSPF external typ

Summary of the content on the page No. 11

BGP: Configuring Distribute Filters BGP: Configuring Distribute Filters Distribute filters use ACLs (Access Control Lists) to filter particular routes on the basis of their prefixes. Distribute filters and prefix filters both filter individual routes out of BGP update packets. They are mutually exclusive. About ACLs From the point of view of route filtering, an ACL is one or more simple unnumbered filter entries, each with a prefix and an action of deny or permit. You can use any of the follo

Summary of the content on the page No. 12

BGP: Configuring Distribute Filters Using ACLs as filters When you have created an ACL, you can use it to filter incoming or outgoing update messages for a particular BGP peer, by using the following commands in BGP router mode for the AS. Filter incoming updates (received from a particular neighbor): awplus(config-router)# neighbor distribute-list  in Filter outgoing updates (destined for a particular neighbor): awplus(config-router)#neighbor distribute-list 

Summary of the content on the page No. 13

BGP: Configuring Distribute Filters 3. Renew the route exchange by shutting down the neighbor, then bring it up again. awplus(config-router)# neighbor 45.45.45.46 shutdown awplus(config-router)#neighbor 45.45.45.46 no shutdown 4. Check that the IP route table no longer includes 52.0.0.0/8. awplus(config-router)# do show ip route Codes: C - connected, S - static, R - RIP, B - BGP O - OSPF, IA - OSPF inter area N1 - OSPF NSSA external type 1, N2 - OSPF NSSA external type 2 E1

Summary of the content on the page No. 14

BGP: Configuring Distribute Filters 3. Check that the IP route table now includes all the routes. awplus(config-router)# do show ip route Codes: C - connected, S - static, R - RIP, B - BGP O - OSPF, IA - OSPF inter area N1 - OSPF NSSA external type 1, N2 - OSPF NSSA external type 2 E1 - OSPF external type 1, E2 - OSPF external type 2 * - candidate default B 45.0.0.0/8 [20/0] via 45.45.45.46, vlan1, 00:01:57 C 45.45.45.0/24 is directly connected, vlan1 B 52.0.

Summary of the content on the page No. 15

BGP: Configuring Distribute Filters 7. Check that the IP route table no longer includes 52.0.0.0/8. awplus(config-router)# do show ip route Codes: C - connected, S - static, R - RIP, B - BGP O - OSPF, IA - OSPF inter area N1 - OSPF NSSA external type 1, N2 - OSPF NSSA external type 2 E1 - OSPF external type 1, E2 - OSPF external type 2 * - candidate default B 45.0.0.0/8 [20/0] via 45.45.45.46, vlan1, 00:00:08 C 45.45.45.0/24 is directly connected, vlan1 C

Summary of the content on the page No. 16

BGP: Configuring Distribute Filters 4. Check that the IP route table no longer includes 52.0.0.0/8. awplus(config-router)# do show ip route Codes: C - connected, S - static, R - RIP, B - BGP O - OSPF, IA - OSPF inter area N1 - OSPF NSSA external type 1, N2 - OSPF NSSA external type 2 E1 - OSPF external type 1, E2 - OSPF external type 2 * - candidate default B 45.0.0.0/8 [20/0] via 45.45.45.46, vlan1, 00:05:30 C 45.45.45.0/24 is directly connected, vlan1 C

Summary of the content on the page No. 17

BGP: Configuring AS Path Filters BGP: Configuring AS Path Filters To configure path filters we need to first understand something about AS path lists and how to use them. AS path lists Path filters use a construct known as an AS path list. An AS path list has a name and consists of one or more (unnumbered) entries. Each entry specifies:  which AS paths to consider.  whether the AS paths in question should be included or excluded from the list. The set of paths to consider is specified using

Summary of the content on the page No. 18

BGP: Configuring AS Path Filters Using AS path lists as path filters When an AS path list has been created, it can be applied to filter incoming or outgoing update messages for a particular BGP peer, by using the following commands in BGP router mode for the AS. Filter incoming updates (received from a particular neighbor): awplus(config-router)# neighbor filter-list in Filter outgoing updates (destined for a particular neighbor): awplus(config-router)#neighbor

Summary of the content on the page No. 19

BGP: Configuring AS Path Filters 4. Shut down the neighbor, and then bring it up again. awplus(config-router)# neighbor 45.45.45.46 shutdown awplus(config-router)#neighbor 45.45.45.46 no shutdown 5. Check that the IP route table does not have the BGP routes from the AlliedWare neighbor in AS 34568 any more. awplus(config-router)# do show ip route Codes: C - connected, S - static, R - RIP, B - BGP O - OSPF, IA - OSPF inter area N1 - OSPF NSSA external type 1, N2 - OSPF NSSA externa

Summary of the content on the page No. 20

BGP: Configuring AS Path Filters 9. Check that the AS path list shows the two filter entries: awplus(config-router)# do show ip as-path-access-list AS path access list list1 deny 23456 permit 34568 Another example An outgoing filter that uses 1. Create an AS-PATH list that denies empty AS Paths, but allows AS Paths that an AS-path list contain the AS number 34567. ip as-path access-list example deny ^$ ip as-path access-list example permit 34567 2. Apply this as the out route map for nei


Alternative user manuals
# User manual Category Download
1 Allied Telesis x908 User manual Computer Accessories 0
2 Allied Telesis 86241-02 User manual Network Router 2
3 Allied Telesis AR450S User manual Network Router 7
4 Allied Telesis AR440S User manual Network Router 10
5 Allied Telesis 86222-21 User manual Network Router 1
6 Allied Telesis AR415S User manual Network Router 124
7 Allied Telesis 86222-10 User manual Network Router 1
8 Allied Telesis AR442S User manual Network Router 4
9 Allied Telesis 86241-01 User manual Network Router 1
10 Allied Telesis AR750S User manual Network Router 20
11 Allied Telesis AT-TQ2450 User manual Network Router 32
12 Allied Telesis AlliedWare NetScreen Routers User manual Network Router 2
13 Allied Telesis AR400 series User manual Network Router 2
14 Allied Telesis AT-WR4662N User manual Network Router 2
15 Allied Telesis AT-PWR03 User manual Network Router 1
16 Sony BKS-R3202/R3210/R3220 User manual Network Router 77
17 Sony DVS-V3232B/V3232M User manual Network Router 3
18 Sony BVS-V3232 User manual Network Router 8
19 Sony DMX-WL1 User manual Network Router 6
20 Sony BVS-A3232 User manual Network Router 6