BGP Conditional Advertisement

BGP Conditional Advertisement – it let the impression of a very complex task. Actually you will find it very easy to implement once you understand it.

In simple words I would say  that BGP conditional advertisement it’s a feature that let you advertise a prefix to one of your neighbors if mandatory condition is satisfied. To implement this feature you must configure at least two of the following three maps:

– Advertise-map -> this contains the selected prefixes which will be advertised if the mandatory condition is satisfied
– Exist-map -> condition to be satisfied (e.g. advertise the prefixes in the “advertise-map” only if the prefixes in this condition exist)
– Non-exist-map -> condition to be satisfied (e.g. advertise the prefixes in the “advertise-map” only if the prefixes in this condition doesn’t exist)

Let’s take an example. We have the following topology:

We have here a simple topology, with eBGP peering between R1 – R2 and R2 – R3. Each router has a Loopback interface with the following IP addresses:

R1 – L0 – 1.1.1.1 /24
R2 -L0 – 2.2.2.2 /24
R3 – L0 – 3.3.3.3 /24

These interfaces are advertised into BGP and they have full reachability:

R2#sh ip bgp sum | b Nei
Neighbor        V    AS MsgRcvd MsgSent   TblVer  InQ OutQ Up/Down  State/PfxRcd
10.10.12.1      4   100       5       4        0    0    0 00:01:27        1
10.10.23.3      4   300       2       2        0    0    0 00:00:24        0
 
R2#sh ip bgp | b Net
   Network          Next Hop            Metric LocPrf Weight Path
*> 1.1.1.0/24       10.10.12.1               0             0 100 i
*> 2.2.2.0/24       0.0.0.0                  0         32768 i
*> 3.3.3.0/24       10.10.23.3               0             0 300 i
 
R2#sh ip route bgp
     1.0.0.0/24 is subnetted, 1 subnets
B       1.1.1.0 [20/0] via 10.10.12.1, 00:04:02
     3.0.0.0/24 is subnetted, 1 subnets
B       3.3.3.0 [20/0] via 10.10.23.3, 00:04:02

Task

An easy task would ask you to solve something like if 1.1.1.0 /24 is NOT in the BGP table of R2, then R2 should advertise its 2.2.2.0 /24 to R3.

Solution

Let’s analyze this request a little bit. The prefix to be advertised or not, depending of the satisfaction of the condition, is 2.2.2.0 /24. According to what I said before about the necessary “maps” for BGP conditional advertisement, this prefix will go into the “advertise-map”. R2 is the only router you need to configure to accomplish this task.

conf t
access-list 2 permit 2.2.2.0 0.0.0.255
route-map ADVERTISE permit 10
match ip address 2

OK, we have the advertisement map. What about the condition? The task request that 2.2.2.0 /24 should be advertised if 1.1.1.0 / 24 does NOT exist in the BGP table of R2. Using logical deduction we can say that “non-exist-map” is what we need to configure.

conf t
access-list 1 permit 1.1.1.1 0.0.0.255
route-map NOT-EXIST permit 10
match ip address 1

Let’s add everything together in BGP:

conf t
router bgp 200
neighbor 10.10.23.3 advertise-map ADVERTISE non-exist-map NOT-EXIST

Verification

On R2 check the BGP table:

R2#sh ip bgp | b Net
   Network          Next Hop            Metric LocPrf Weight Path
*> 1.1.1.0/24       10.10.12.1               0             0 100 i
*> 2.2.2.0/24       0.0.0.0                  0         32768 i
*> 3.3.3.0/24       10.10.23.3               0             0 300 i

We have the 1.1.1.0 /24 prefix in the BGP table. According to our task, 2.2.2.0 /24 should be advertised if 1.1.1.0 /24 does NOT EXIST. By analogy, if 1.1.1.0 /24 EXIST, the 2.2.2.0 /24 should NOT be advertised. You see? It’s just a tricky words game.

R2#sh ip bgp neigh 10.10.23.3 adv | b Network
   Network          Next Hop            Metric LocPrf Weight Path
*> 1.1.1.0/24       10.10.12.1               0             0 100 i
 
Total number of prefixes 1

We advertise only one network. The 2.2.2.0 /24 is not advertised to R3:

R3#sh ip bgp | b Net
   Network          Next Hop            Metric LocPrf Weight Path
*> 1.1.1.0/24       10.10.23.2                             0 200 100 i
*> 3.3.3.0/24       0.0.0.0                  0         32768 i

To check that the conditional advertisement really works, stop R1 from announcing 1.1.1.0 /24 in BGP. You can just shutdown the interface.
Check if the L0 of R1 is in the routing table / BGP table of R2:

R2#sh ip bgp | b Net
   Network          Next Hop            Metric LocPrf Weight Path
*> 2.2.2.0/24       0.0.0.0                  0         32768 i
*> 3.3.3.0/24       10.10.23.3               0             0 300 i

1.1.1.0 /24 is not in the BGP table of R2, then 2.2.2.0 /24 should be advertised to R3:

R2#sh ip bgp neigh 10.10.23.3 adv | b Network
   Network          Next Hop            Metric LocPrf Weight Path
*> 2.2.2.0/24       0.0.0.0                  0         32768 i
 
Total number of prefixes 1

On R3:

R3#sh ip bgp | b Net
   Network          Next Hop            Metric LocPrf Weight Path
*> 2.2.2.0/24       10.10.23.2               0             0 200 i
*> 3.3.3.0/24       0.0.0.0                  0         32768 i

Remember that usually in the exams, the tasks related to BGP Conditional Advertisement are more word tricks than complex. As an example, base on the above topology, resolve the following:
– If 1.1.1.0 /24 and 2.2.2.0 /24 are both in the BGP table of R2, both prefixes should be advertised to R3
– If 1.1.1.0 /24 is not in the BGP table of R2, then 2.2.2.0 /24 should not be advertised to R3
– If 1.1.1.0 /24 and 2.2.2.0 /24 are not in the BGP table of R2, then none of them should be advertised to R3

If you don’t understand the trick, let me know and I will explain.


Published by

Calin

Calin is a network engineer, with more than 20 years of experience in designing, installing, troubleshooting, and maintaining large enterprise WAN and LAN networks.

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