Hi, I would check the basics... do you have a route for the networks you are exporting? The cisco router has a route to the gateway of the exported networks. From where came the routes (from the router itself or you learn it from another procotol/peer)? On Mon, Apr 1, 2013 at 6:29 PM, <dspazman@epicup.com> wrote:
They were running a cisco router. They would do this:
show ip bgp neighbors X.X.X.X received-routes
And get:
Total number of prefixes 0
Apparently. I never saw it, but that is what they would tell me.
-----Original Message----- From: "Martin Kraus" <martin.kraus@wujiman.net> Sent: Monday, April 1, 2013 1:40pm To: dspazman@epicup.com Cc: "bird-users@bird.network.cz" <bird-users@trubka.network.cz> Subject: Re: Got to ask, any ideas?
On Mon, Apr 01, 2013 at 11:55:02AM -0700, dspazman@epicup.com wrote:
Yeah, it showed all 4 routes as exported.
The only thing else I could think of was there was a level 2 smart switch between the two routers (mine and theirs). I wouldn't think that would make any effect, as the machines could ping each other fine and establish a session fine.
How do you know they didn't receive those routes? Do you have output from their
#show ip bgp neighbor <ip>
#show ip bgp neighbor <ip> routes
mk
-- Christian Lyra PoP-PR/RNP