Dell S5148F-ON OS10 Enterprise Edition User Guide Release 10.3.2E-R1 - Page 192

Multiexit discriminators, Origin

Page 192 highlights

Multiexit discriminators If two autonomous systems connect in more than one place, use a multiexit discriminator (MED) to assign a preference to a preferred path. MED is one of the criteria used to determine best path-other criteria may also impact selection. One AS assigns the MED a value. Other AS uses that value to decide the preferred path. Assume that the MED is the only attribute applied and there are two connections between AS 100 and AS 200. Each connection is a BGP session. AS 200 sets the MED for its Link 1 exit point to 100 and the MED for its Link 2 exit point to 50. This sets up a path preference through Link 2. The MEDs advertise to AS 100 routers so they know which is the preferred path. MEDs are nontransitive attributes. If AS 100 sends the MED to AS 200, AS 200 does not pass it on to AS 300 or AS 400. The MED is a locally relevant attribute to the two participating AS - AS 100 and AS 200. The MEDs advertise across both links-if a link goes down, AS 100 has connectivity to AS 300 and AS 400. Origin The origin indicates how the prefix came into BGP. There are three origin codes-IGP, EGP, and INCOMPLETE. IGP EGP INCOMPLETE Prefix originated from information learned through an interior gateway protocol. Prefix originated from information learned from an EGP protocol, which next generation protocol (NGP) replaced. Prefix originated from an unknown source. An IGP indicator means that the route was derived inside the originating AS. EGP means that a route was learned from an external gateway protocol. An INCOMPLETE origin code results from aggregation, redistribution, or other indirect ways of installing routes into BGP. 192 Layer 3

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Multiexit discriminators
If two autonomous systems connect in more than one place, use a multiexit discriminator (MED) to assign a preference to a preferred path.
MED is one of the criteria used to determine best path—other criteria may also impact selection.
One AS assigns the MED a value. Other AS uses that value to decide the preferred path. Assume that the MED is the only attribute applied
and there are two connections between AS 100 and AS 200. Each connection is a BGP session. AS 200 sets the MED for its Link 1 exit
point to 100 and the MED for its Link 2 exit point to 50. This sets up a path preference through Link 2. The MEDs advertise to AS 100
routers so they know which is the preferred path.
MEDs are nontransitive attributes. If AS 100 sends the MED to AS 200, AS 200 does not pass it on to AS 300 or AS 400. The MED is a
locally relevant attribute to the two participating AS — AS 100 and AS 200. The MEDs advertise across both links—if a link goes down, AS
100 has connectivity to AS 300 and AS 400.
Origin
The origin indicates how the
prefix
came into BGP. There are three origin codes—IGP, EGP, and INCOMPLETE.
IGP
Prefix
originated from information learned through an interior gateway protocol.
EGP
Prefix
originated from information learned from an EGP protocol, which next generation protocol (NGP) replaced.
INCOMPLETE
Prefix
originated from an unknown source.
An IGP indicator means that the route was derived inside the originating AS. EGP means that a route was learned from an external gateway
protocol. An INCOMPLETE origin code results from aggregation, redistribution, or other indirect ways of installing routes into BGP.
192
Layer 3