Your pasting is not formatting well. Makes it hard to help you. Mark.
On 15/Apr/15 20:23, Jonathan Call wrote: > OSPF/OSPFv3 are the IGP, which apparently are feeding back into IBGP: > With OSPFv3 enabled: 2001:db8:4000::1/128*[Direct/0] 1w0d 21:13:49 > > via lo0.1 [OSPF3/10] 1w0d > 21:13:44, metric 0 > via lo0.1 > [BGP/170] 00:00:18, MED 1, localpref 100, from 2001:db8:4000::2 > AS path: I > to fe80:db8:4000:1::3 > via ge-0/0/8.0 With OSPFv3 disabled: vr-1.inet6.0: 8 destinations, 9 > routes (8 active, 0 holddown, 0 hidden) + = Active Route, - = Last > Active, * = Both 2001:db8:4000::1/128*[Direct/0] 1w0d 21:10:41 > > via lo0.1 [OSPF3/10] 1w0d 21:10:36, > metric 0 > via lo0.1 Limiting IBGP to only export > directly connected routes would prevent this. It still does not > explain why router1 will mark the IPv4 loopback route it received as > hidden/unusable but the IPv6 loopback route is not. Jonathan Subject: > Re: [j-nsp] iBGP and IPv6 To: [email protected]; > [email protected] From: [email protected] Date: Wed, 15 > Apr 2015 18:02:30 +0200 On 15/Apr/15 17:43, Jonathan Call wrote: > Correct. The BGP route for the router's IPv4 loopback is marked as > hidden/unusable. It does not show up in show route extensive output. > Is this Loopback IPv4 address known by any other routing protocol, > e.g., an IGP? Mark. _______________________________________________ juniper-nsp mailing list [email protected] https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/juniper-nsp

