Are there any tricks to getting Cisco BGP up to 2607:FE10:FFFF::1 and ::2 ? The route-servers are closing our BGP sessions as soon as we open them. -Bradley VISI ######################################################################## To unsubscribe from the MICE-DISCUSS list, click the following link: http://lists.iphouse.net/cgi-bin/wa?SUBED1=MICE-DISCUSS&A=1
On Sun, Nov 13, 2011 at 03:57:10PM -0600, Bradley Urberg-Carlson wrote:
Are there any tricks to getting Cisco BGP up to 2607:FE10:FFFF::1 and ::2 ? The route-servers are closing our BGP sessions as soon as we open them.
Make sure you are talking IPv6 BGP over an IPv6 connection. (You can pass IPv6 routes over an IPv4 BGP session, which everybody supposedly supports, but mostly doesn't work).. Also make sure to pass IPv6 routes inside the correct address family as well. Also, make sure you don't over filter on IPv6, ie. allow BGP protocol back into your router. Your router isn't listening to BGP connections trying to connect from 2607:fe10:ffff::1... $ telnet 2607:fe10:ffff::6 bgp Trying 2607:fe10:ffff::6... telnet: connect to address 2607:fe10:ffff::6: Connection refused telnet: Unable to connect to remote host It is pingable from there though. I should be able to connect on the BGP port.. -- Doug McIntyre <merlyn@iphouse.net> -- ipHouse/Goldengate/Bitstream/ProNS -- Network Engineer/Provisioning/Jack of all Trades ######################################################################## To unsubscribe from the MICE-DISCUSS list, click the following link: http://lists.iphouse.net/cgi-bin/wa?SUBED1=MICE-DISCUSS&A=1
participants (2)
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Bradley Urberg-Carlson
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Doug McIntyre