The stock 7206 that works with GNS3 also supports a full BGP feed. -mel beckman
> On Aug 8, 2016, at 6:02 PM, Mansoor Nathani <[email protected]> wrote: > > If you manage to run a CSR1000v on something like Virtualbox, with like 8 > GB of ram, you can actually work with a full IPv4 table. > > Check this video on how to set up CSR1000v with Virtualbox within GNS3: > > https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hkRZRAU7n7E > > >> On Mon, Aug 8, 2016 at 5:59 PM, Mel Beckman <[email protected]> wrote: >> >> The best way to learn BGP is using a network simulator such as GNS3. This >> way you can use industry-standard configurations and experiment with >> various failover scenarios. Http://gns3.org. There are tons of tutorials >> out there using Cisco BGP router syntax. >> >> >> >> -mel beckman >> >>> On Aug 8, 2016, at 2:05 PM, Lee Fuller <[email protected]> wrote: >>> >>> Hey, first post so sorry if it's misguided. I'm curious about the BGP >>> implementation in Google compute engine that allows you to define routing >>> policy using private ASN numbers. How similar is it in terms of learning >>> about BGP as a broader concept, or is it all smoke and mirrors? >>> >>> I'm not in a position where iBGP would benefit me in any other context >> than >>> learning so I'm keen not to bother if it's too abstracted from a real >> world >>> scenario. >>> >>> Lee Fuller (mobile) >>> >>> PGP Fingerprint: 4ACAEBA4B9EE1B3A075034302D5C3D050E6ED55A >>

