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RE: Getting a BGP table in to a lab
- From: Bill Nash
- Date: Wed Apr 20 20:50:08 2005
Zebra is a great option here, I use it to eat a routing table from
production routers, peer a perl Net::BGP daemon with it, and then do SQL
injections from there to instruct my netflow engine on baseline
subnetting for external networks, as well as provide AS clue for non-AS
aware netflow export segments.
- billn
On Wed, 20 Apr 2005, Scott Morris wrote:
None of the routers that are tested in the lab are capable of supporting a
full BGP feed....
If you just want to play with BGP stuff, you can use Zebra (unix) or go to
www.nantech.com and get their BGP4WIN program.
That may help you a bit more.
Scott
-----Original Message-----
From: owner-nanog@merit.edu [mailto:owner-nanog@merit.edu] On Behalf Of
Nathan Ward
Sent: Wednesday, April 20, 2005 8:35 PM
To: nanog@merit.edu
Subject: Getting a BGP table in to a lab
I'm trying to come up with a way to get a full BGP routing table in to my
lab.
I'm not really fussed about keeping it up to date, so a snapshot is fine.
At the moment, I'm thinking about spending a few hours hacking together a
BGP daemon in perl to peer with and record a table from a production router,
disconnect, and then start peering with lab routers.
Am I reinventing a wheel here?
--
Nathan Ward
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