Can you explain what you mean?How should I change my scripts?I think it will be a good workaround when I simply use functions instead of filters, so I can bypass some parameters.protocol bgp 'peer-neo' {
ipv4 { export where filter_common_ipv4_out( "peer-neo" ); };
}
function filter_common_ipv4_out( string remote_peer_name ) {
if remote_peer_name = 'peer-neo' then .....;
}It is stupid because i define the peer-name twice.But for now it will do the job relatively easily.I have over 40 peers, so I have to write the function / filter for common use.Am Mi., 8. Apr. 2020 um 19:39 Uhr schrieb Maria Matějka <maria.matejka@nic.cz>:Hello!
Currently not supported. Is simple exact match enough for your purposes? This may be simply added to the filter language.
MariaOn April 8, 2020 6:47:49 PM GMT+02:00, Michael Rack <mail@michaelrack.de> wrote:Hi Guys,if i am in the EXPORT-Routine, how can i access the "protocol-name" of that instance that is currently using my function?If I rely on "proto" I get the protocol-name where the route comes from. That is not what I want.protocol bgp 'peer-neo' {
ipv4 { export filter filter_common_ipv4_out; };
}
filter filter_common_ipv4_out() {
if proto = 'peer-neo' then .....;
}How can I match for 'peer-neo' ?Thank you.Michael.
--
Sent from my Android device with K-9 Mail. Please excuse my brevity.