Cisco - BGP - Configuring BGP on Cisco Routers v4.
Code: 3049
Lengt h: 5 days
URL: View Online
This course includes Cisco Training Exclusives
In this comprehensive course, you will gain in-depth knowledge of BGP, the routing protocol that is one of the
underlying foundations of the Internet. You will explore the theory of BGP, configuration of BGP on Cisco IOS
routers, and detailed troubleshooting information.
Our labs provide you with the skills needed to configure and troubleshoot BGP networks in both enterprise and
service provider environments. You'll also learn BGP network design issues and usage rules for various features
as well as how to design and implement efficient, optimal, and trouble-free BGP networks.
Skills Gained
Implement the correct BGP configuration to allow your network to act as an ISP
Configure BGP with multiple BGP connections to other autonomous systems
Configure a provider network to behave as a transit autonomous system (AS)
Configure, monitor, and troubleshoot basic BGP to enable inter-domain routing in a network scenario with
multiple domains
Use BGP policy controls to influence the route selection process with minimal impact on BGP route
processing in a network scenario where you must support connections to multiple ISPs
Configure BGP to connect the customer network to the Internet when multiple connections must be
implemented
Enable route reflection and confederations as possible solutions to BGP scaling issues
Optimize the scalability of the BGP routing protocol in a typical network
Who Can Benefit
Internet service providers
Networking professionals who need to connect to ISPs
CCIP and CCIE certification candidates
Individuals who need to understand how to configure Cisco routers for the BGP protocol
Course Details
Lab 1: Configuring basic BGP
Create BGP peerings
Advertise networks into BGP
Redistribute your IGP into BGP
Examine the effects of BGP auto-summarization
Summarize routes to your neighbor
Implement BGP TTL Security
Implement BGP Authentication
Lab 2: Configuring IBGP Peerings
Configure an IBGP peering with another edge router
Peering with loopback interfaces
Examine effect of BGP synchronization
Discover BGP next-hop behavior
Examine the effects of multihoming on path selection
Lab 3: Using AS-Path Filters and Regular Expressions
Filter updates to external routers
Manipulate path selection using AS-path filters and regular expressions
Lab 4: Using Prefix Lists
Filter advertised AS routes using prefix lists
Implement Outbound Route Filtering
Lab 5: Configure Route Maps for BGP Filtering
Configure a route map as a BGP filter
Lab 6: Configuring the Weight Attribute
Configure a second BGP peering for each router
Set a weight value for routes received from each EBGP neighbor
Monitor the resulting path choice
Lab 7: Configuring the Local Preference Attribute
Use the Local Preference attribute to control BGP path selection
Lab 8: AS-Path Prepending
Configure AS-Path Prepending to make one path into your AS look more attractive than the other
Lab 9: Configuring the Multi-Exit Discriminator (MED) Attribute
Use the MED attribute to influence the BGP path selection by routers in neighboring systems
Lab 10: Using the Community Attribute
Configure the community attribute in setting local preference BGP policies
Lab 11: Using Route Reflectors
Configure a hierarchical route reflector structure
Examine the effects of route reflectors on routing updates
Lab 12: Monitoring and Tuning BGP Resource Use
Examine the effects of BGP session establishment and route updates on router resources
Examine how timers speed BGP convergence
Set a maximum prefix value
Lab 13: Using Peer Groups
Place neighboring BGP routers into peer groups
Apply policy configuration to peer groups
Lab 14: Using Route Dampening
Configure and apply route dampening to external peers
Monitor the results when that peer's routes flap
Lab 15: Implement BGP for IPv6 (Optional)
2015-10-19 09:30:55.300000000
Lab 9: Configuring the Multi-Exit Discriminator (MED) Attribute
Use the MED attribute to influence the BGP path selection by routers in neighboring systems
Lab 10: Using the Community Attribute
Configure the community attribute in setting local preference BGP policies
Lab 11: Using Route Reflectors
Configure a hierarchical route reflector structure
Examine the effects of route reflectors on routing updates
Lab 12: Monitoring and Tuning BGP Resource Use
Examine the effects of BGP session establishment and route updates on router resources
Examine how timers speed BGP convergence
Set a maximum prefix value
Lab 13: Using Peer Groups
Place neighboring BGP routers into peer groups
Apply policy configuration to peer groups
Lab 14: Using Route Dampening
Configure and apply route dampening to external peers
Monitor the results when that peer's routes flap
Lab 15: Implement BGP for IPv6 (Optional)
Configure BGP to support IPv6
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