The peer tracking command enables BGP Peer Tracking. That is, you can configure BGP to fast detect the unreachable state of a peer and re-establish the connection between the local device and the peer.
The undo peer tracking command disables BGP Peer Tracking.
By default, BGP Peer Tracking is disabled.
Parameter | Description | Value |
---|---|---|
ipv6-address |
Specifies the IPv6 address of a peer. |
The value is a 32-digit hexadecimal number, in the format of X:X:X:X:X:X:X:X. |
delay delay-time |
Indicates the interval between when BGP detects the peer unreachable and when BGP tears down the corresponding connection. |
The value is an integer that ranges from 0 to 65535, in seconds. The default value is 0 seconds. |
Usage Scenario
In a network where BFD is unsuitable to be deployed, you can configure BGP Peer Tracking on the local device to implement fast network convergence by rapidly detecting the unreachable state of the peer.
A BGP peer is considered unreachable in either of the following situations:Prerequisites
The peer as-number command has been used to create a peer.
Precautions
IGP is configured with GR, and the BGP neighbor relationship is established based on IGP routes. In such a situation, when a node fails on the network and the master/slave switchover occurs on the node, IGP does not delete the routes from the node, and BGP neighbors cannot sense the fault on the node. Therefore, the BGP Peer Tracking function does not take effect.