Refer to the exhibit. R1 and R2 use IGP protocol to route traffic between AS 100 and AS 200 despite being configured to use BGP. Which action resolves the issue and ensures the use of BGP?
Refer to the exhibit. R1 and R2 use IGP protocol to route traffic between AS 100 and AS 200 despite being configured to use BGP. Which action resolves the issue and ensures the use of BGP?
BGP (Border Gateway Protocol) is designed to exchange routing information between different autonomous systems (ASes). The issue in the given scenario is that R1 and R2 use IGP (Interior Gateway Protocol) protocols like EIGRP and OSPF instead of BGP, despite BGP being configured. This problem occurs because the administrative distance (AD) of BGP has been manually set to 100. By default, eBGP (external BGP) has an AD of 20, which is lower than any IGP, making it preferred over IGP routes. To solve this issue, the distance commands under both BGP AS 100 and AS 200 need to be removed, restoring the default AD value and ensuring BGP routes are preferred. Therefore, the correct answer is to remove the distance commands under BGP AS 100 and AS 200.
I think the correct answer is C. Remove removal commands under BGP AS 100 and AS 200.
R1 & R2 establish EIGRP on segment 10.10.10.0/30
I don't know any answer is correct... Even after changing the AD for BGP, it is still better than the OSPF AD of 110...
C is correct answer, Remove distance 100 command from both router
C. Take BGP 100 out... Ebgp 20 is preferred.
Why only under AS 100? I think the correct answer is C
Selected Answer C
The question is unclear eBGP = 20 so it will be the preferred
But its AD is overwritten to 100 using distance command. Removing the distance command brings eBGP Ad back to 20. So BGP will be installed in the routing table.
I think the aswer is C, but only removing the distance 100 between neighbors 100 and 200
100 %% option "C"
it´s C