Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


[RFC Home] [TEXT|PDF|HTML] [Tracker] [IPR] [Info page]

Obsoleted by:1163 EXPERIMENTAL
Network Working Group                                        K. LougheedRequest for Comments:  1105                                cisco Systems                                                              Y. Rekhter                                  T.J. Watson Research Center, IBM Corp.                                                               June 1989A Border Gateway Protocol (BGP)Status of this Memo   This RFC outlines a specific approach for the exchange of network   reachability information between Autonomous Systems.   At the time of this writing, the Border Gateway Protocol   implementations exist for cisco routers as well as for the NSFNET   Nodal Switching Systems.  A public domain version for "gated" is   currently being implemented.   Distribution of this memo is unlimited.1. Introduction   The Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) is an inter-autonomous system   routing protocol.  It is built on experience gained with EGP as   defined inRFC 904 [1] and EGP usage in the NSFNET Backbone as   described inRFC 1092 [2] andRFC 1093 [3].   The primary function of a BGP speaking system is to exchange network   reachability information with other BGP systems.  This network   reachability information includes information on the autonomous   systems (AS's) that traffic must transit to reach these networks.   This information is sufficient to construct a graph of AS   connectivity from which routing loops may be pruned and policy   decisions at an AS level may be enforced.   BGP runs over a reliable transport level protocol.  This eliminates   the need to implement explicit update fragmentation, retransmission,   acknowledgement, and sequencing.  Any authentication scheme used by   the transport protocol may be used in addition to BGP's own   authentication mechanisms.   The initial BGP implementation is based on TCP [4], however any   reliable transport may be used.  A message passing protocol such as   VMTP [5] might be more natural for BGP.  TCP will be used, however,   since it is present in virtually all commercial routers and hosts.   In the following descriptions the phrase "transport protocol   connection" can be understood to refer to a TCP connection.  BGP uses   TCP port 179 for establishing its connections.Lougheed & Rekhter                                              [Page 1]

RFC 1105                          BGP                          June 19892. Summary of Operation   Two hosts form a transport protocol connection between one another.   They exchange messages to open and confirm the connection parameters.   The initial data flow is the entire BGP routing table.  Incremental   updates are sent as the routing tables change.  Keepalive messages   are sent periodically to ensure the liveness of the connection.   Notification messages are sent in response to errors or special   conditions.  If a connection encounters an error condition, a   notification message is sent and the connection is optionally closed.   The hosts executing the Border Gateway Protocol need not be routers.   A non-routing host could exchange routing information with routers   via EGP or even an interior routing protocol.  That non-routing host   could then use BGP to exchange routing information with a border   gateway in another autonomous system.  The implications and   applications of this architecture are for further study.   If a particular AS has more than one BGP gateway, then all these   gateways should have a consistent view of routing.  A consistent view   of the interior routes of the autonomous system is provided by the   intra-AS routing protocol.  A consistent view of the routes exterior   to the AS may be provided in a variety of ways.  One way is to use   the BGP protocol to exchange routing information between the BGP   gateways within a single AS.  In this case, in order to maintain   consist routing information, these gateways MUST have direct BGP   sessions with each other (the BGP sessions should form a complete   graph).  Note that this requirement does not imply that all BGP   gateways within a single AS must have direct links to each other;   other methods may be used to ensure consistent routing information.3. Message Formats   This section describes message formats and actions to be taken when   errors are detected while processing these messages.   Messages are sent over a reliable transport protocol connection.  A   message is processed after it is entirely received.  The maximum   message size is 1024 bytes.  All implementations are required to   support this maximum message size.  The smallest message that may be   sent consists of a BGP header without a data portion, or 8 bytes.   The phrase "the BGP connection is closed" means that the transport   protocol connection has been closed and that all resources for that   BGP connection have been deallocated.  Routing table entries   associated with the remote peer are marked as invalid.  This   information is passed to other BGP peers before being deleted from   the system.Lougheed & Rekhter                                              [Page 2]

RFC 1105                          BGP                          June 19893.1 Message Header Format   Each message has a fixed size header.  There may or may not be a data   portion following the header, depending on the message type.  The   layout of these fields is shown below.    0                   1                   2                   3    0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |        Marker                |          Length                |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |    Version   |     Type      |        Hold Time               |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   Marker: 16 bits      The Marker field is 16 bits of all ones.  This field is used to      mark the start of a message.  If the first two bytes of a message      are not all ones then we have a synchronization error and the BGP      connection should be closed after sending a notification message      with opcode 5 (connection not synchronized).  No notification data      is sent.   Length: 16 bits      The Length field is 16 bits.  It is the total length of the      message, incluluding header, in bytes.  If an illegal length is      encountered (more than 1024 bytes or less than 8 bytes), a      notification message with opcode 6 (bad message length) and two      data bytes of the bad length should be sent and the BGP connection      closed.   Version: 8 bits      The Version field is 8 bits of protocol version number.  The      current BGP version number is 1.  If a bad version number is      found, a notification message with opcode 8 (bad version number)      should be sent and the BGP connection closed.  The bad version      number should be included in one byte of notification data.   Type: 8 bits      The Type field is 8 bits of message type code.  The following type      codes are defined:Lougheed & Rekhter                                              [Page 3]

RFC 1105                          BGP                          June 1989                    1 - OPEN                    2 - UPDATE                    3 - NOTIFICATION                    4 - KEEPALIVE                    5 - OPEN CONFIRM      If an unrecognized type value is found, a notification message      with opcode 7 (bad type code) and data consisting of the byte of      type field in question should be sent and the BGP connection      closed.   Hold Timer: 16 bits.      This field contains the number of seconds that may elapse since      receiving a BGP KEEPALIVE or BGP UPDATE message from our BGP peer      before we declare an error and close the BGP connection.3.2  OPEN Message Format   After a transport protocol connection is established, the first   message sent by either side is an OPEN message.  If the OPEN message   is acceptable, an OPEN CONFIRM message confirming the OPEN is sent   back.  Once the OPEN is confirmed, UPDATE, KEEPALIVE, and   NOTIFICATION messages may be exchanged.   In addition to the fixed size BGP header, the OPEN message contains   the following fields.    0                   1                   2                   3    0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |    My Autonomous System      |   Link Type   |  Auth. Code    |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                                                               |   |                 Authentication Data                           |   |                                                               |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   My Autonomous System: 16 bits      This field is our 16 bit autonomous system number.  If there is a      problem with this field, a notification message with opcode 9      (invalid AS field) should be sent and the BGP connection closed.      No notification data is sent.   Link Type: 8 bits      The Link Type field is a single octet containing one of theLougheed & Rekhter                                              [Page 4]

RFC 1105                          BGP                          June 1989      following codes defining our position in the AS graph relative to      our peer.                       0  - INTERNAL                       1  - UP                       2  - DOWN                       3  - H-LINK      UP indicates the peer is higher in the AS hierarchy, DOWN      indicates lower, and H-LINK indicates at the same level.  INTERNAL      indicates that the peer is another BGP speaking host in our      autonomous system.  INTERNAL links are used to keep AS routing      information consistent with an AS with multiple border gateways.      If the Link Type field is unacceptable, a notification message      with opcode 1 (link type error in open) and data consisting of the      expected link type should be sent and the BGP connection closed.      The acceptable values for the Link Type fields of two BGP peers      are discussed below.   Authentication Code: 8 bits      The Authentication Code field is an octet whose value describes      the authentication mechanism being used.  A value of zero      indicates no BGP authentication.  Note that a separate      authentication mechanism may be used in establishing the transport      level connection.  If the authentication code is not recognized, a      notification message with opcode 2 (unknown authentication code)      and no data is sent and the BGP connection is closed.   Authentication Data: variable length      The Authentication Data field is a variable length field      containing authentication data.  If the value of Authentication      Code field is zero, the Authentication Data field has zero length.      If authentication fails, a notification message with opcode 3      (authentication failure) and no data is sent and the BGP      connection is closed.3.3 OPEN CONFIRM Message Format   An OPEN CONFIRM message is sent after receiving an OPEN message.   This completes the BGP connection setup.  UPDATE, NOTIFICATION, and   KEEPALIVE messages may now be exchanged.   An OPEN CONFIRM message consists of a BGP header with an OPEN CONFIRM   type code.  There is no data in an OPEN CONFIRM message.Lougheed & Rekhter                                              [Page 5]

RFC 1105                          BGP                          June 19893.4 UPDATE Message Format   UPDATE messages are used to transfer routing information between BGP   peers.  The information in the UPDATE packet can be used to construct   a graph describing the relationships of the various autonomous   systems.  By applying rules to be discussed, routing information   loops and some other anomalies may be detected and removed from the   inter-AS routing.   Whenever an error in a UPDATE message is detected, a notification   message is sent with opcode 4 (bad update), a two byte subcode   describing the nature of the problem, and a data field consisting of   as much of the UPDATE message data portion as possible.  UPDATE   messages have the following format:    0                   1                   2                   3    0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                         Gateway                               |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |   AS count    | Direction     |         AS Number             |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |     repeat (Direction, AS Number) pairs AS count times        |   /                                                               /   /                                                               /   |                                                               |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |      Net Count                |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                        Network                                |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |      Metric                   |                               |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                               +   |       repeat (Network, Metric) pairs Net Count times          |   /                                                               /   /                                                               /   |                                                               |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   Gateway: 32 bits.      The Gateway field is the address of a gateway that has routes to      the Internet networks listed in the rest of the UPDATE message.      This gateway MUST belong to the same AS as the BGP peer who      advertises it.  If there is a problem with the gateway field, a      notification message with subcode 6 (invalid gateway field) is      sent.Lougheed & Rekhter                                              [Page 6]

RFC 1105                          BGP                          June 1989   AS count: 8 bits.      This field is the count of Direction and AS Number pairs in this      UPDATE message.  If an incorrect AS count field is detected,      subcode 1 (invalid AS count) is specified in the notification      message.   Direction: 8 bits      The Direction field is an octet containing the direction taken by      the routing information when exiting the AS defined by the      succeeding AS Number field.  The following values are defined.            1  - UP            (went up a link in the graph)            2  - DOWN          (went down a link in the graph)            3  - H_LINK        (horizontal link in the graph)            4  - EGP_LINK      (EGP derived information)            5  - INCOMPLETE    (incomplete information)      There is a special provision to pass exterior learned (non-BGP)      routes over BGP.  If an EGP learned route is passed over BGP, then      the Direction field is set to EGP-LINK and the AS Number field is      set to the AS number of the EGP peer that advertised this route.      All other exterior-learned routes (non-BGP and non-EGP) may be      passed by setting AS Number field to zero and Direction field to      INCOMPLETE.  If the direction code is not recognized, a      notification message with subcode 2 (invalid direction code) is      sent.   AS Number: 16 bits      This field is the AS number that transmitted the routing      information.  If there is a problem with this AS number, a      notification message with subcode 3 (invalid autonomous system) is      sent.   Net Count: 16 bits.      The Net Count field is the number of Metric and Network field      pairs which follow this field.  If there is a problem with this      field, a notification with subcode 7 (invalid net count field) is      sent.   Network: 32 bits      The Network field is four bytes of Internet network number.  If      there is a problem with the network field, a notification message      with subcode 8 (invalid network field) is sent.Lougheed & Rekhter                                              [Page 7]

RFC 1105                          BGP                          June 1989   Metric: 16 bits      The Metric field is 16 bits of an unspecified metric.  BGP metrics      are comparable ONLY if routes have exactly the same AS path.  A      metric of all ones indicates the network is unreachable.  In all      other cases the metric field is MEANINGLESS and MUST BE IGNORED.      There are no illegal metric values.3.5  NOTIFICATION Message Format   NOTIFICATION messages are sent when an error condition is detected.   The BGP connection is closed shortly after sending the notification   message.    0                   1                   2                   3    0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |          Opcode               |           Data                |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                               +   |                                                               |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   Opcode: 16 bits      The Opcode field describes the type of NOTIFICATION.  The      following opcodes have been defined.            1 (*) - link type error in open.  Data is one byte of proper                    link type.            2 (*) - unknown authentication code.  No data.            3 (*) - authentication failure.  No data.            4     - update error.  See below for data description.            5 (*) - connection out of sync.  No data.            6 (*) - invalid message length.  Data is two bytes of                    bad length.            7 (*) - invalid message type.  Data is one byte of bad                    message type.            8 (*) - invalid version number.  Data is one byte of                    bad version.            9 (*) - invalid AS field in OPEN.  No data.           10 (*) - BGP Cease.  No data.      The starred opcodes in the list above are considered fatal errors      and cause transport connection termination.      The update error (opcode 4) has as data 16 bits of subcode      followed by the last UPDATE message in question.  After the      subcode comes as much of the data portion of the UPDATE inLougheed & Rekhter                                              [Page 8]

RFC 1105                          BGP                          June 1989      question as possible.  The following subcodes are defined:               1 - invalid AS count               2 - invalid direction code               3 - invalid autonomous system               4 - EGP_LINK or INCOMPLETE_LINK link type at other than                   the end of the AS path list               5 - routing loop               6 - invalid gateway field               7 - invalid Net Count field               8 - invalid network field   Data: variable      The Data field contains zero or more bytes of data to be used in      diagnosing the reason for the NOTIFICATION.  The contents of the      Data field depend upon the opcode.  See the opcode descriptions      above for more details.3.6 KEEPALIVE Message Format   BGP does not use any transport protocol based keepalive mechanism to   determine if peers are reachable.  Instead KEEPALIVE messages are   exchanged between peers often enough as not to cause the hold time   (as advertised in the BGP header) to expire.  A reasonable minimum   frequency of KEEPALIVE exchange would be one third of the Hold Time   interval.   As soon as the Hold Time associated with BGP peer has expired, the   BGP connection is closed and BGP deallocates all resources associated   with this peer.   The KEEPALIVE message is a BGP header without any data.4. BGP Finite State machine.   This section specifies BGP operation in terms of a Finite State   Machine (FSM).  Following is a brief summary and overview of BGP   operations by state as determined by this FSM.  A condensed version   of the BGP FSM is found in Appendix 1.   Initially BGP is in the BGP_Idle state.   BGP_Idle state:      In this state BGP refuses all incoming BGP connections.  No      resources are allocated to the BGP neighbor.  In response to the      Start event (initiated by either system or operator) the localLougheed & Rekhter                                              [Page 9]

RFC 1105                          BGP                          June 1989      system initializes all BGP resources and changes its state to      BGP_Active.   BGP_Active state:      In this state BGP is trying to acquire a BGP neighbor by opening a      transport protocol connection.  If the transport protocol open      fails (for example, retransmission timeout),  BGP stays in the      BGP_Active state.      Otherwise,  the local system sends an OPEN message to its peer,      and changes its state to BGP_OpenSent.  Since the hold time of the      peer is still undetermined, the hold time is initialized to some      large value.      In response to the Stop event (initiated by either system or      operator) the local system releases all BGP resources and changes      its state to BGP_Idle.   BGP_OpenSent state:      In this state BGP waits for an OPEN message from its peer.  When      an OPEN message is received, all fields are checked for      correctness.  If the initial BGP header checking detects an error,      BGP deallocates all resources associated with this peer and      returns to the BGP_Active state.  Otherwise, the Link Type,      Authentication Code, and Authentication Data fields are checked      for correctness.      If the link type is incorrect, a NOTIFICATION message with opcode      1 (link type error in open) is sent.  The following combination of      link type fields are correct; all other combinations are invalid.                      Our view         Peer view                      UP                DOWN                      DOWN              UP                      INTERNAL          INTERNAL                      H-LINK            H-LINK      If the link between two peers is INTERNAL, then AS number of both      peers must be the same.  Otherwise, a NOTIFICATION message with      opcode 1 (link type error in open) is sent.      If both peers have the same AS number and the link type between      these peers is not INTERNAL, then a NOTIFICATION message with      opcode 1 (link type error in open) is sent.      If the value of the Authentication Code field is zero, anyLougheed & Rekhter                                             [Page 10]

RFC 1105                          BGP                          June 1989      information in the Authentication Data field (if present) is      ignored.  If the Authentication Code field is non-zero it is      checked for known authentication codes.  If authentication code is      unknown, then the BGP NOTIFICATION message with opcode 2 (unknown      authentication code) is sent.      If the Authentication Code value is non-zero, then the      corresponding authentication procedure is invoked.  The default      values are a zero Authentication Code and no Authentication Data.      If any of the above tests detect an error, the local system closes      the BGP connection and changes its state to BGP_Idle.      If there are no errors in the BGP OPEN message, BGP sends an OPEN      CONFIRM message and goes into the BGP_OpenConfirm state.  At this      point the hold timer which was originally set to some arbitrary      large value (see above) is replaced with the value indicated in      the OPEN message.      If disconnect notification is received from the underlying      transport protocol or if the hold time expires, the local system      closes the BGP connection and changes its state to BGP_Idle.   BGP_OpenConfirm state:      In this state BGP waits for an OPEN CONFIRM message.  As soon as      this message is received, BGP changes its state to      BGP_Established.  If the hold timer expires before an OPEN CONFIRM      message is received, the local system closes the BGP connection      and changes its state to BGP_Idle.   BGP_Established state:      In the BGP_Established state BGP can exchange UPDATE,      NOTIFICATION, and KEEPALIVE messages with its peer.      If disconnect notification is received from the underlying      transport protocol or if the hold time expires, the local system      closes the BGP connection and changes its state to BGP_Idle.      In response to the Stop event initiated by either the system or      operator, the local system sends a NOTIFICATION message with      opcode 10 (BGP Cease), closes the BGP connection, and changes its      state to BGP_Idle.Lougheed & Rekhter                                             [Page 11]

RFC 1105                          BGP                          June 19895. UPDATE Message Handling   A BGP UPDATE message may be received only in the BGP_Established   state.  When a BGP UPDATE message is received, each field is checked   for validity.  When a NOTIFICATION message is sent regarding an   UPDATE, the opcode is always 4 (update error), the subcode depends on   the type of error, and the rest of the data field is as much as   possible of the data portion of the UPDATE that caused the error.   If the Gateway field is incorrect, a BGP NOTIFICATION message is sent   with subcode 6 (invalid gateway field).  All information in this   UPDATE message is discarded.   If the AS Count field is less than or equal to zero, a BGP   NOTIFICATION is sent with subcode 1 (invalid AS count).  Otherwise,   the complete AS path is extracted and checked as described below.   If one of the Direction fields in the AS route list is not defined, a   BGP NOTIFICATION message is with subcode 2 (invalid direction code).   If one of the AS Number fields in the AS route list is incorrect, a   BGP NOTIFICATION message is sent with subcode 3 (invalid autonomous   system).   If either a EGP_LINK or a INCOMPLETE_LINK link type occurs at other   than the end of the AS path, a BGP NOTIFICATION message is sent with   subcode 4 (EGP_LINK or INCOMPLETE_LINK link type at other than the   end of the AS path list).   If none of the above tests failed, the full AS route is checked for   AS loops.   AS loop detection is done by scanning the full AS route and checking   that each AS in this route occurs only once.  If an AS loop is   detected, a BGP NOTIFICATION message is sent with subcode 5 (routing   loop).   If any of the above errors are detected, no further processing is   done.  Otherwise, the complete AS path is correct and the rest of the   UPDATE message is processed.   If the Net Count field is incorrect, a BGP NOTIFICATION message is   sent with subcode 7 (invalid Net Count field).   Each network and metric pair listed in the BGP UPDATE message is   checked for a valid network number.  If the Network field is   incorrect, a BGP Notification message is sent with subcode 8 (invalid   network field).  No checking is done on the metric field.  It is upLougheed & Rekhter                                             [Page 12]

RFC 1105                          BGP                          June 1989   to a particular implementation to decide whether to continue   processing or terminate it upon the first incorrect network.   If the network, its complete AS path, and the gateway are correct,   then the route is compared with other routes to the same network.  If   the new route is better than the current one, then it is flooded to   other BGP peers as follows:    - If the BGP UPDATE was received over the INTERNAL link, it is not      propagated over any other INTERNAL link.  This restriction is      due to the fact that all BGP gateways within a single AS      form a completely connected graph (see above).    - Before sending a BGP UPDATE message over the non-INTERNAL links,      check the AS path to insure that doing so would not cause a      routing loop.  The BGP UPDATE message is then propagated (subject      to the local policy restrictions) over any of the non-INTERNAL      link of a routing loop would not result.    - If the BGP UPDATE message is propagated over a non-INTERNAL link,      then the current AS number and link type of the link over which      it is going to be propagated is prepended to the full AS path      and the AS count field is incremented by 1.  If the BGP UPDATE      message is propagated over an INTERNAL link, then the full AS      path passed unmodified and the AS count stays the same.  The      Gateway field is replaced with the sender's own address.6. Acknowledgements   We would like to express our thanks to Len Bosack (cisco Systems),   Jeff Honig (Cornell University) and all members of the IWG task force   for their contributions to this document.Lougheed & Rekhter                                             [Page 13]

RFC 1105                          BGP                          June 1989                                Appendix 1BGP FSM State Transitions and Actions.   This Appendix discusses the transitions between states in the BGP FSM   in response to BGP events.  The following is the list of these states   and events.       BGP States:            1 - BGP_Idle            2 - BGP_Active            3 - BGP_OpenSent            4 - BGP_OpenConfirm            5 - BGP_Established       BGP Events:            1 - BGP Start            2 - BGP Transport connection open            3 - BGP Transport connection closed            4 - BGP Transport connection open failed            5 - Receive OPEN message            6 - Receive OPEN CONFIRM message            7 - Receive KEEPALIVE message            8 - Receive UPDATE messages            9 - Receive NOTIFICATION message           10 - Holdtime timer expired           11 - KeepAlive timer expired           12 - Receive CEASE message           13 - BGP Stop   The following table describes the state transitions of the BGP FSM   and the actions triggered by these transitions.Lougheed & Rekhter                                             [Page 14]

RFC 1105                          BGP                          June 1989   Event                Actions               Message Sent   Next State   --------------------------------------------------------------------   BGP_Idle (1)     1            Initialize resources           none             2   BGP_Active (2)     2           Initialize resources            OPEN             3     4                   none                    none             2    13           Release resources               none             1   BGP_OpenSent(3)    3                    none                    none             1    5            Process OPEN is OK            OPEN CONFIRM       4                 Process OPEN Message failed   NOTIFICATION       1   11            Restart KeepAlive timer       KEEPALIVE          3   13            Release resources               none             1   BGP_OpenConfirm (4)    6            Complete initialization         none             5    3                   none                     none             1   10            Close transport connection      none             1   11            Restart KeepAlive timer       KEEPALIVE          4   13            Release resources               none             1   BGP_Established (5)    7            Process KEEPALIVE               none             5    8            Process UPDATE is OK          UPDATE             5                 Process UPDATE failed         NOTIFICATION       5    9            Process NOTIFICATION            none             5   10            Close transport connection      none             1   11            Restart KeepAlive timer       KEEPALIVE          5   12            Close transport connection    NOTIFICATION       1   13            Release resources               none             1   --------------------------------------------------------------------   All other state-event combinations are considered fatal errors and   cause the termination of the BGP transport connection (if necessary)   and a transition to the BGP_Idle state.Lougheed & Rekhter                                             [Page 15]

RFC 1105                          BGP                          June 1989   The following is a condensed version of the above state transition   table.   Events|BGP_Idle BGP_Active BGP_OpenSent BGP_OpenConfirm BGP_Estab         |  (1)   |    (2)   |     (3)    |      (4)      |      (5)         |-------------------------------------------------------------    1    |   2    |          |            |               |         |        |          |            |               |    2    |        |     3    |            |               |         |        |          |            |               |    3    |        |          |      1     |       1       |         |        |          |            |               |    4    |        |     2    |            |               |         |        |          |            |               |    5    |        |          |    4 or 1  |               |         |        |          |            |               |    6    |        |          |            |       5       |         |        |          |            |               |    7    |        |          |            |               |       5         |        |          |            |               |    8    |        |          |            |               |       5         |        |          |            |               |    9    |        |          |            |               |       5         |        |          |            |               |   10    |        |          |            |       1       |       1         |        |          |            |               |   11    |        |          |      3     |       4       |       5         |        |          |            |               |   12    |        |          |            |               |       1         |        |          |            |               |   13    |        |     1    |      1     |       1       |       1         |        |          |            |               |         --------------------------------------------------------------Lougheed & Rekhter                                             [Page 16]

RFC 1105                          BGP                          June 1989References  [1]  Mills, D., "Exterior Gateway Protocol Formal Specification",RFC904, BBN, April 1984.  [2]  Rekhter, Y., "EGP and Policy Based Routing in the New NSFNET       Backbone",RFC 1092, T. J. Watson Research Center, February 1989.  [3]  Braun, H-W., "The NSFNET Routing Architecture",RFC 1093,       MERIT/NSFNET Project, February 1989.  [4]  Postel, J., "Transmission Control Protocol - DARPA Internet       Program Protocol Specification",RFC 793, DARPA, September 1981.  [5]  Cheriton, D., "VMTP: Versatile Message Transaction Protocol",RFC1045, Stanford University, February 1988.Authors' Addresses   Kirk Lougheed   cisco Systems, Inc.   1360 Willow Road, Suite 201   Menlo Park, CA 94025   Phone: (415) 326-1941   Email: LOUGHEED@MATHOM.CISCO.COM   Jacob Rekhter   T.J. Watson Research Center   IBM Corporation   P.O. Box 218   Yorktown Heights, NY 10598   Phone: (914) 945-3896   Email: YAKOV@IBM.COMLougheed & Rekhter                                             [Page 17]

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp