[MLB-WIRELESS] OSPF BGP
Ryan Abbenhuys
sneeze at alphalink.com.au
Wed Jun 22 15:03:59 EST 2005
Did I miss something? Was the decision to use OSPF scrapped in favour of
BGP?
>http://www.melbourne.wireless.org.au/wiki/?BGP
>
>
>ivile01 at yahoo.com.au | ivile at ivile.bur.st
>http://bur.st/~ivile (waveguides) | http://ivile.bur.st |
>http://ivile.bur.st/ivile/64/ (my car)
>http://www.melbourne.wireless.org.au/users/?ivile
>----- Original Message -----
>From: "Brenton D." <ivile01 at yahoo.com.au>
>To: "Dan Flett" <conhoolio at hotmail.com>; "'Nigel'" <thenigel at hotmail.com>;
><melbwireless at wireless.org.au>
>Sent: Wednesday, June 22, 2005 2:10 PM
>Subject: Re: [MLB-WIRELESS] OSPF BGP
>
>
>> Ill put up a really basic sample config. On the Wiki
>> And ill have a part where you can add your own asn.
>> I was thinking that we should have a 5 number gap between each person
BGP
>> asn, just in case they have more than one router(like me).
>> so basically we have room for 1000 routers 64512 to 65534
>> which i doubt there will be more than 50 running bgp in the near
>> future.(as some only support ospf)
>>
>> so node fut would have the bgp asn 64515 (just leave the first few free)
>> fuu would have the bgp asn 64520
>> gho would have the bgp asn 64525
>> and so on... unless you have on the node page that they request a BGP
>> asn(s) from melb-wireless.
>>
>> ivile01 at yahoo.com.au | ivile at ivile.bur.st
>> http://bur.st/~ivile (waveguides) | http://ivile.bur.st |
>> http://ivile.bur.st/ivile/64/ (my car)
>> http://www.melbourne.wireless.org.au/users/?ivile
>> ----- Original Message -----
>> From: "Dan Flett" <conhoolio at hotmail.com>
>> To: "'Brenton D.'" <ivile01 at yahoo.com.au>; "'Nigel'"
>> <thenigel at hotmail.com>; <melbwireless at wireless.org.au>
>> Sent: Wednesday, June 22, 2005 1:48 PM
>> Subject: RE: [MLB-WIRELESS] OSPF BGP
>>
>>
>>> So, Brenton, cutting it right down, your BGP file looks like this:
>>>
>>> !
>>> hostname bgpd
>>> password XXXXX
>>> enable password XXXXX
>>> !
>>> router bgp 7675
>>> bgp router-id 10.10.129.145
>>> redistribute ospf
>>> redistribute connected
>>> !
>>> ! DAN's COMMENTS: you probably don't need redistribute connected as
>>> you've
>>> already declared your network
>>> ! In Quagga the routing protocol automatically redistributes any routes
>>> declared with the network statement
>>> ! Also, to be precise, the melbourne wireless network is entirely
inside
>>> the
>>> 10.10.0.0/16 supernet
>>> !
>>> network 10.0.0.0/8
>>> neighbor 10.10.128.97 remote-as 7676
>>> !
>>> access-list all permit any
>>> ! You probably don't need this access-list because you haven't
specified
>>> any
>>> route-maps
>>> log stdout
>>>
>>>
>>> That's as simple as a BGP file gets really - and if we weren't using
OSPF
>>> you could get rid of the redistribute ospf statement too. You only
need
>>> to
>>> add neighbor lines each time you directly connect to a new BGP
neighbor.
>>> BGP gets complicated when you have multiple routes/routers/subnets
within
>>> the one AS. If every node has their own AS it's quite easy.
>>>
>>> I'm considering writing a set of scripts that will automagically create
>>> Quagga/BGP config files from NVRAM variables or a very basic config
file,
>>> and that will exchange AS information with neighbors via DHCP. So
>>> basically
>>> you won't have to do anything (if you don't want to) except enter your
IP
>>> and AS addresses/numbers to start with.
>>>
>>> I'm thinking of running BGP at node GHO alongside OSPF. We should let
>>> GHO
>>> settle and make sure it's stable for a few weeks before we try
anything,
>>> but
>>> I think it would be worth testing.
>>>
>>> How about someone create a BGP-Trial wiki page where we write down our
AS
>>> numbers for our nodes? It should just be for testing, but it means we
>>> can
>>> test BGP in our own local clusters. It doesn't matter if ASNs within a
>>> cluster are contiguous or not - that's the beauty of BGP - you can
choose
>>> any number you want, so long as it isn't someone else's. We need to
>>> choose
>>> our numbers from the IANA Private Use ASN space - being 64512 to 65534,
>>> inclusive.
>>>
>>> Cheers,
>>>
>>> Dan
>>
>>
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