3com S7906E Manuel De Montage

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BGP implements load balancing only on routes that have the same AS_PATH, ORIGIN, 
LOCAL_PREF and MED. 
BGP load balancing is applicable between eBGP peers, between iBGP peers and between 
confederations. 
If multiple routes to the same destination are available, BGP selects a configurable number of 
routes for load balancing. 
 
Figure 1-10 Network diagram for BGP load balancing 
 
 
In the above figure, Router D and Router E are iBGP peers of Router C. Router A and Router B both 
advertise a route destined for the same destination to Router C. If load balancing is configured and the 
two routes have the same AS_PATH attribute, ORIGIN attribute, LOCAL_PREF and MED, Router C 
installs both the two routes to its route table for load balancing. After that, Router C forwards to Router D 
and Router E the route that has AS_PATH unchanged but has NEXT_HOP changed to Router C; other 
BGP transitive attributes are those of the best route.  
BGP route advertisement rules 
The current BGP implementation supports the following route advertisement rules: 
When multiple feasible routes to a destination exist, the BGP speaker advertises only the best 
route to its peers. 
A BGP speaker advertises only routes used by itself. 
A BGP speaker advertises routes learned through eBGP to all BGP peers, including both eBGP 
and iBGP peers. 
A BGP speaker does not advertise routes from an iBGP peer to other iBGP peers. 
A BGP speaker advertises routes learned through iBGP to eBGP peers. Note that if BGP and IGP 
synchronization is disabled, those routes are advertised to eBGP peers directly. If the feature is 
enabled, only after IGP advertises those routes, can BGP advertise the routes to eBGP peers. 
A BGP speaker advertises all routes to a newly connected peer.