Click the Exhibit button.

You confirm that the R2 and R3 routers are receiving a BGP route to the 203 0.113.0/24 network, but both routers display the route as hidden.
Referring to the exhibit, which two actions solve this problem? (Choose two.)
Click the Exhibit button.
You confirm that the R2 and R3 routers are receiving a BGP route to the 203 0.113.0/24 network, but both routers display the route as hidden.
Referring to the exhibit, which two actions solve this problem? (Choose two.)
To solve the issue of the route being hidden on R2 and R3, it is necessary to configure a routing policy on R1 that sets the next hop for the 203.0.113.0/24 BGP route to the IP address that R1 uses for IBGP peering. This action ensures that the next hop is reachable within the IBGP group. Additionally, applying this routing policy on R1 as an export policy to the IBGP group is essential so that the updated next-hop information is correctly advertised to R2 and R3.
apply the policy to IBGP group to send it to IBGP neighbors
yes i agree you have to configure a policy to change the next hop and then apply it as an exposrt policy to the IBGP peers so BD are the correct answers
in the export policy, set as next hop self
B. Configure a routing policy on R1 that sets the next hop for the 203 0.113.0/24 BGP route to the IP address that R1 uses for IBGP peering. = configure a "then next-hop self" policy D. Apply the routing policy on R1 as an export policy to the IBGP group. = export that to ur iBGP peers so, B, D are correct, so, in other words, whoever picked B and C either isn't a network engineer, either is some certifications freak who just wants to have as many certs as possible and doesn't give a damn about the real world, and the trade of being a real network engineer, why I say that? cuz makes no darn sense, if you do as 'suggested' you'll be making some policies no-one uses as they're not applied anywhere........
Selected Answer: BD
i agree BD
CD, carefull