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  2. Border Gateway Protocol - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Border_Gateway_Protocol

    Confederations can be used in conjunction with route reflectors. Both confederations and route reflectors can be subject to persistent oscillation unless specific design rules, affecting both BGP and the interior routing protocol, are followed. [28] These alternatives can introduce problems of their own, including the following: route oscillation

  3. BGP hijacking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BGP_hijacking

    BGPmon.net: A BGP specific monitoring system to detect prefix hijacks, route leakage and instability. Cyclops Archived 2008-06-28 at the Wayback Machine: A BGP network audit tool (prefix hijack, route leakage) by UCLA; NetViews: A Real Time BGP Topology visualization and IP Hijacking Detection tool by University of Memphis.

  4. GNU Zebra - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GNU_Zebra

    Zebra is a discontinued routing software package that provides TCP/IP based routing services with routing protocols support such as RIP, OSPF and BGP. Zebra also supports BGP Route Reflector and Route Server behavior. In addition to IPv4 routing protocols, Zebra also supports IPv6 routing protocols.

  5. Peering - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peering

    The multilateral peering is typically technically instantiated in a route server or route reflector (which differ from looking glasses in that they serve routes back out to participants, rather than just listening to inbound routes) to redistribute routes via a BGP hub-and-spoke topology, rather than a partial-mesh topology. The two primary ...

  6. Virtual Private LAN Service - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virtual_Private_LAN_Service

    The BGP4 Multi-Protocol (BGP-MP) extensions are used to distribute VPN IDs and VPN-specific reachability information. Since IBGP requires either a full mesh of BGP sessions or the use of a route reflector, enabling the VPN ID in a participating PEs existing BGP configuration provides it with a list of all PEs in that VPN.

  7. Default-free zone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Default-free_zone

    In Internet routing, the default-free zone (DFZ) is the collection of all Internet autonomous systems (AS) that do not require a default route to route a packet to any destination. Conceptually, DFZ routers have a "complete" Border Gateway Protocol table, sometimes referred to as the Internet routing table, global routing table or global BGP table.

  8. Route flapping - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Route_flapping

    Route flapping can be contained to a smaller area of the network if route aggregation is used. As an aggregate route will not be withdrawn as long as at least one of the aggregated subnets is still valid, a flapping route that is part of an aggregate will not disturb the routers that receive the aggregate. [1]

  9. Northern Lights Local Exchange Point - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Northern_Lights_Local...

    The Northern Lights Local Exchange Point (NLLXP) is a free Internet Exchange Point in Minneapolis, Minnesota, in the United States.The NLLXP public peering exchange is closely linked with the Northern Lights GigaPoP (NLG), [1] an Internet2 project of the University of Minnesota Office of Information and Technology: [2] the NLG is the regional Internet2 access point for research and educational ...