Help us improve your experience.

Let us know what you think.

Do you have time for a two-minute survey?

header-navigation
keyboard_arrow_up
close
keyboard_arrow_left
Juniper Apstra 5.0.1 / 5.0.0 User Guide
Table of Contents Expand all
list Table of Contents
file_download PDF
{ "lLangCode": "en", "lName": "English", "lCountryCode": "us", "transcode": "en_US" }
English
keyboard_arrow_right

Primitive: BGP Peering (IP Endpoint)

Release: Juniper Apstra 5.0
{}
Change Release
date_range 04-Nov-24

The BGP peering (IP endpoint) primitive creates a BGP peering session with a user-specified BGP neighbor addressed peer. You can use this to create a BGP peering session to a Layer 3 server running BGP connected to an Apstra virtual network.

The following parameters must be configured:

  • Neighbor ASN type (static, dynamic)
  • ASN (if Neighbor ASN type is static)
  • IPv4 AFI
  • IPv6 AFI
  • TTL - BGP Time to Live
    • When you set TTL to 0, nothing is configured and the device defaults are used.
    • When you set TTL to 1, Cisco NX-OS and FRR-based BGP (SONiC) render disable-connected-check. Otherwise, TTL values render ebgp-multihop on specific BGP neighbors.
  • Enable BFD - Enable BFD with interval: 1 sec, multiple: 3 sec
    • This enables BFD for the BGP peering. Multihop BFD is only supported for Junos, which is activated by default. For non-Junos devices, set TTL to 1.
  • BGP Password
  • BGP Keep Alive Timer (seconds)
  • BGP Hold Time Timer (seconds)
  • Local ASN - Configured on a per-peer basis. It allows a router to appear to be a member of a second AS by prepending a local-as ASN, in addition to its real ASN, announced to its eBGP peer, resulting in an AS path length of two.

  • IPv4 address of peer (if IPv4 AFI is enabled)
  • IPv6 address of peer (if Ipv6 AFI is enabled)

You can connect a routing policy primitive to a BGP peering (IP endpoint)

footer-navigation