After some changes in the routing policy, it is noticed that the router in AS 45123 is being used as a transit AS router for several service providers.
Which configuration ensures that the branch router in AS 45123 advertises only the local networks to all SP neighbors?
A)
B)
C)
D)
A . Option A
B . Option B
C . Option C
D . Option D
Answer: D
Explanation
By default BGP advertises all prefixes to external BGP neighbors. This means that if you are multi-homed (connected to two or more ISPs) then you might become a transit AS. For example, ISP 2 in AS 200 can send traffic to your router in AS 100 to reach ISP 3 in AS 300 because you advertised prefixes in ISP 3 to ISP 2.
This is what will be seen in the BGP routing table of ISP2:
In order to prevent this we have to ensure that your router only advertises prefixes from its own autonomous system. One of the method to solve this problem is using Filter-list with AS-PATH access-list:
R1(config)# ip as-path access-list 1 permit ^$
R1(config-router)#neighbor 192.168.12.2 filter-list 1 out
R1(config-router)#neighbor 192.168.23.3 filter-list 1 out
It ensures that we will only advertise prefixes from our own AS. The ^$ regular expression ensures that we will only advertise locally originated prefixes. We should apply this filter to both ISPs.
Latest 300-410 Dumps Valid Version with 213 Q&As
Latest And Valid Q&A | Instant Download | Once Fail, Full Refund