Again I only see a single neighbor, not dual homed, therefore two
default routes would suffice.  Your customer may have two providers but
that has no bearing on you a far as needing BGP though it seems to me
you would be the customer as the dual connected seems more likely to be
upstream but I obviously don't have the big picture..

 Dave

Alejandro Acosta wrote:
> 
> Hello,
>   Thanks for answering me.
>   I am using BGP because we have 2 Internet access and my customer
> has 2 providers too. Then, we have to use BGP
> 
> This is the BGP configuration
> 
>  neighbor xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx description eBGP with Mycustomer
>  neighbor xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx ebgp-multihop 2
>  neighbor xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx password 7 -----
>  neighbor xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx update-source Loopback1
>  neighbor xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx version 4
>  neighbor xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx maximum-prefix 8
> 
> I don't know why the packets that I am sending to my customer are
> not simetric in both links. However, the customer sends to me almost
> the same amount of traffic in both interfaces
> 
> Thanks
> 
> Alejandro
> 
> MADMAN wrote:
> >
> > First problem, BGP doesn't load share but with IOS you can source an
> > interface like a loopback, see BGP and loadsharing.
> >
> >   If you have two parallel paths to a single provider why are you doing
> > BGP???  Since you choose BGP I'll assume this is an Internet connection,
> > set up two default routes, ip cef global command and the configs you
> > have sent and you will have symetrical outgoing loadsharing.
> >
> >   Dave
> >
> > Alejandro Acosta wrote:
> > >
> > > Hi All,
> > >   This is my first message in the list.
> > >   I am running a BGP session with a customer. It has 2 serial links
with us
> > > (Each link of 2 Mbps). The customer and me have selected per-packet
sharing
> > > in order to balanced the link.
> > >   In this moment, the traffic that comes from the customer is very
simetric
> > > in both links, however, the traffic that is sent to the customer from
us is
> > > not simetric. As far as I know (if I am not wrong), if we are using
load
> > > balacing per-packet, the incoming and outgoing traffic should be very
very
> > > similar, right?. Why only the incoming traffic is simetric in this
moment.
> > >
> > > This is the configuration for both interfaces in my router:
> > >
> > > interface Serial2/0
> > >  description Link 1
> > >  bandwidth 2048
> > >  ip address xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx
> > >  no ip directed-broadcast
> > >  ip load-sharing per-packet
> > >  no ip mroute-cache
> > >  load-interval 30
> > >  no cdp enable
> > >  hold-queue 1024 out
> > > !
> > >
> > > interface Serial2/4
> > >  description Link number 2
> > >  bandwidth 2048
> > >  ip address xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx
> > >  no ip directed-broadcast
> > >  ip load-sharing per-packet
> > >  no ip mroute-cache
> > >  load-interval 30
> > >  no fair-queue
> > >  no cdp enable
> > >
> > > Any ideas?
> > >
> > > Thanks
> > >
> > > Alejandro Acosta
> > >
> > > P.D. I am using IOS 12.0(7)T
> > --
> > David Madland
> > Sr. Network Engineer
> > CCIE# 2016
> > Qwest Communications Int. Inc.
> > [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > 612-664-3367
> >
> > "Emotion should reflect reason not guide it"
-- 
David Madland
Sr. Network Engineer
CCIE# 2016
Qwest Communications Int. Inc.
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
612-664-3367

"Emotion should reflect reason not guide it"




Message Posted at:
http://www.groupstudy.com/form/read.php?f=7&i=29073&t=28960
--------------------------------------------------
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/cisco.html
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Reply via email to