Dev,

Yes, using that command, it will use the lowest routerid as its preferred tie 
breaker path. Though, if all of your providers have different MEDs and you are 
using MEDs to engineer you traffic, your router should never have to tie break 
any traffic. Also any of the higher preference metrics will interfere with what 
you are trying to accomplish with a lower metric. Dani suggested changing the 
origin code so it wouldn't affect what you are trying to do with MEDs.

Everything else is dependent on how you want to manage your network.


Austin Wilson


From: devang patel [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, September 25, 2009 11:07 AM
To: Austin Wilson
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: Re: bgp best path compare-routerid implementation example

Hi...

So according to command it will select the path received from lowest router id 
right... so if you are sure about the path selection pattern then its good idea 
to use it...

And true that path selection change based on own network design...

is it good idea to set all received route attribute to particular origin code 
"i" as Dani showed in presentation... well again I guess answer will be depends 
on network design...

Thanks,
Dev
On Fri, Sep 25, 2009 at 11:50 AM, Austin Wilson 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Dev,


This is usually used to offset the oldest route metric. The problem is that 
when a link fails and comes back online, traffic can shift from one provider to 
another in the middle of your billing cycle. This then could mean you get 
double billed for that traffic. People use the command to basically turn off 
the oldest route metric and use the routerid (not peering ip) to make the last 
decision on where to send your traffic. This is commonly called "tie breaker" 
traffic. If a peer fails with this command enabled, when the peer comes back 
online, traffic should be restored to the original level before the failure.

A possible issue with this command is that if a local peer's route/session 
flaps it could have more of an effect on your network/router as it will always 
try move those routes back to the FIB. That's probably why they implemented 
this metric in the first place, the oldest route is the most stable. Another 
issue is that you are at the mercy of vendor's routerid when your router 
decides where to send your "tie breaker" traffic. Level3 gets most of this 
traffic since they have such low routeids.

There are ways to get around this problem and take back control of your tie 
breaker traffic. Dani did a pretty good tutorial on this issue and its located 
here:

http://nanog.org/meetings/nanog46/abstracts.php?pt=MTM3MiZuYW5vZzQ2&nm=nanog46

Basically he suggests using MEDs to change the tie breaker as part of a 
complete BGP traffic engineering solution. Doing the things listed there and 
elsewhere will mean you won't even have to use this command.



Austin Wilson


-----Original Message-----
From: devang patel [mailto:[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>]
Sent: Thursday, September 24, 2009 9:24 PM
To: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Subject: bgp best path compare-routerid implementation example

Hello Nanog,

I am looking for the *bgp best path compare*-*routerid* implementation
example? I know the function of it but looking for some scenario where its
been used...

Thanks,
Dev

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