<html><head><style>body{font-family:Helvetica,Arial;font-size:13px}</style></head><body><div style="margin:0px"><span style="font-family:Helvetica,Arial;font-size:13px">Hello </span>Chriztoffer, </div><div style="margin:0px"><br></div><blockquote type="cite" class="clean_bq"><span><div><div>On Mon, 6 Jun 2022 at 13:20, Valery Lutoshkin <<a href="mailto:vpluto@gmail.com">vpluto@gmail.com</a>> wrote:
<br>> For example:
<br>> peer 1: <a href="http://1.1.1.1/32">1.1.1.1/32</a> 1:100
<br>> peer 2: <a href="http://1.1.1.1/32">1.1.1.1/32</a> 2:200
<br>> peer 3: <a href="http://1.1.1.1/32">1.1.1.1/32</a> 3:300
<br>>
<br>> If the last one was chosen, the result is <a href="http://1.1.1.1/32">1.1.1.1/32</a> 3:300
<br>>
<br>> If there is any way to collect all communities and attach them to the chosen prefix (like this: <a href="http://1.1.1.1/32">1.1.1.1/32</a> 1:100,2:200,3:300), would anyone please tell me how to do that?
<br>
<br>What is your use case for this "somewhat odd" request?
<br>
<br></div></div></span></blockquote><br><div>In some cases my users want to use the prefixes from one or two sources only. So they use route-maps to filter by community.</div><div>In my example, if the user wanted to get the prefixes from the peer 1 and filtered to accept 1:100 only, he loses the prefix <a href="http://1.1.1.1/32">1.1.1.1/32</a>.</div></body></html>