BGPI. (Book Browser).The present protocol of choice for interdomain routing in the Internet is the Border Gateway Protocol Border Gateway Protocol - (BGP) An Exterior Gateway Protocol defined in RFC 1267 and RFC 1268. Its design is based on experience gained with Exterior Gateway Protocol (EGP), as defined in STD 18, RFC 904 and EGP usage in the NSFNet backbone, as described in RFCs 1092 and 1093. , or BGP (Border Gateway Protocol) The routing protocol that is used to span autonomous systems on the Internet. It is a robust, sophisticated and scalable protocol that was developed by the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF). . Internet service providers Internet service provider (ISP) Company that provides Internet connections and services to individuals and organizations. For a monthly fee, ISPs provide computer users with a connection to their site (see data transmission), as well as a log-in name and password. use BGP to inform each other which IP address goes where. BGP is also useful for end-user organizations that want reliable connections to the Internet through two or more ISPS ISPS - Instruction Set Processor Specifications. Operational hardware specification language. Successor to ISPL. ["Instruction Set Processor Specifications", M.R. Barbacci et al, IEEE Trans Computers, C-30(1):24-80 (Jan 1981)]. . It's the only protocol that can deal with a network of the Internet's size. It's also the only protocol that can deal well with multiple connections to unrelated routing domains. In the event of a network outage, BGP recomputes the path so packets can avoid the problem area and keep flowing. O'Reilly's latest release, BGP by lljitsch van Beijnum, contains. everything network administrators need to know to run BGP fur regular IPv4 routing in all but the very largest networks. BGP is a guide to all aspects of BGP: the protocol, its configuration and operation in an Internet environment, and how to troubleshoot it. The book also describes how to secure BGP and how BGP can be used to combat Distributed D enial of Service (DDOS See denial of service attack. ) attacks. The examples throughout the book are for Cisco routers, but the techniques discussed can be applied to any BGP-capable router. |
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