*Mar 1 00:15:26.607: BGP(IPv4 Unicast): Performing BGP Nexthop scanning for general scan *Mar 1 00:15:26.607: BGP(0): scanning IPv4 Unicast routing tables *Mar 1 00:15:26.607: BGP: Performing BGP general scanning *Mar 1 00:15:26.607: BGP: Regular scanner event timer The below is equivalent to the router doing the redistribution. Vice versa for EIGRP routes being learnt/neighborship coming back up. If this prefix was to stop being advertised in EIGRP or the EIGRP neighborship was to go down, then this would trigger updates or routes would become invalid to the router, router would then withdraw the route from its routing table, since it no longer exists in its routing table, bgp update messages to be sent about the relevant prefix(s) being redistributed. Yes if you are redistributing EIGRP in to BGP, any prefix's in the routing table that are EIGRP that are taken away or added (to the routing table) will be reflected in what BGP advertises Įxample: On your layer 3 switch, you have a prefix that is EIGRP begin advertised, subsequently advertised to the router doing the redistribution.
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