Self-Study Guide: BGP Protocol Terminologies: Isp-A
Self-Study Guide: BGP Protocol Terminologies: Isp-A
BGP Stands for Border Gateway Protocol. It is one of the most important protocols to make Internet
work the way it works. It is used mainly in two scenarios:
Between ISP (Internet Service Provider) ISP connect with at least one or more of other ISPs
and exchange all of their Public IP Routing information. This makes possible the connectivity
around the globe for all the internet users.
ISP-A
ISP-D ISP-B
ISP-C
Between ISP and Enterprise Network Enterprises sometimes host some servers and services
within their premises which they want people to access using Internet. In such a scenario if they
want to advertise their Public IP network to 2 different ISP so that even if one ISP fails people
can come in to access the services from the second ISP. Note that it is not required if enterprise
wants to just use two connections for failover purpose when people inside the enterprise are
accessing internet.
ISP-B
ISP-C
BGP is one the most fine tunable protocol and can handle very large number of routes as required by
most ISPs. It is one of the major topics for CCNP and CCIE Certification. Hence, we summarized few of
the most commonly used Acronyms of BGP Protocol for you.
1. BGP:
Border Gateway Protocol; it is a protocol for Inter-AS communication.
2. ASN:
Autonomous System Number represents a group of devices under a single administration. ASN
can be any number from 1 to 65535.
3. BGP Peer:
A BGP speaking router that has established the neighbor relationship with other BGP Speaking
Router.
4. FSM:
Finite State Machine; BGP use FSM to make decisions with peers. FSM has six states.
5. BGP Speaker:
A BGP Running router is known as BGP Speaker.
6. eBGP:
BGP neighbor relationship between two different ASN is known as external BGP peering.
7. iBGP:
BGP neighbor relationship between two same ASN is known as internal BGP peering.
9. Neighbor Table:
A table created in BGP that keeps all the BGP speaking neighbor information.
11. NLRI:
Network layer reachability Information: A list of Length, prefix tuples.
14. Multihomed:
Connections from different ISPs can terminate on single customer site router.
18. Communities:
BGP Communities are tags that can be used by BGP to achieve some task. Communities can be
applied on incoming and outgoing prefixes.
19. MED:
Multi-Exit Discriminator; an attribute defining preferred path among multiple entry points into
an AS.
23. Weight:
A Cisco proprietary attribute for path selection. It has the value from 0 to 65535 and is
completely locally significant.
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