
Using Technician Interface Scripts
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routes [
<address>
| from
<peer address>
| find
<search pattern>
]
Displays information about routes received from BGP peers. Some information relates to
all peers; some is specific to the type of entry displayed. Following is a list of options you
can use with the
routes command.
The table includes the following information for each entry:
<address>
Displays only routes to the specified Internet network prefix
(network number). For example, show /jointfilesconvert/98282/bgp routes 192.32.0.0
shows all routes to 192.32.0.0.
from
<peer address>
Displays only routes received from the specified BGP peer. The
peer address is the same as the Remote Address entry in the show
/jointfilesconvert/98282/bgp peers table. For example, show /jointfilesconvert/98282/bgp routes from 200.1.2.3
shows all routes received from peer 200.1.2.3.
find
<search pattern>
Displays only routes that match the specified search pattern. For
example, the command show /jointfilesconvert/98282/bgp routes find 200.*.*.*
displays routes 200.1.5.0, 200.1.6.0, and 200.1.190.0.
Destination network IP address and the length of the prefix of the destination network in
the dot notation form x.x.x.x/n, where x.x.x.x is the Internet
address and n is the prefix length; for example, 200.4.0.0/16.
Author of address IP address of the peer that provided the route.
Best/Used indication BEST means that the route is the best BGP route to the destination;
USED means that the route is in the IP routing table.
Next hop IP address of the next hop route. This is the forwarding address for
the route.
Origin of route Ultimate origin of the route as follows:
INC Origin is undetermined.
IGP Network is interior to the originating Autonomous System (AS).
EGP Network is learned from EGP.
MED indicator If available, the value in hexadecimal of the Multi Exit
Discriminator (MED) for BGP-4 or the Inter-AS Metric for BGP-3
associated with the path.
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